i ..„, *^.., . ... ::, V 1 , P 1 ,'>, e r 1 , I.i • i / s if ' :,' ifi , „ i ~ ~, i „ I, , . . . , , ~. ,• ii... ~ ,. ifl eii.,,, , . 1 , ..!, I . ~ ..,-,,, .. . . . , . , F , g ;.4 ' lit 44 if a \....,; ~...,,,,,„ ~,, , „.. , 0. j,, , . ~ WILLIAN BREWSTER,I EDITORS. SAM. CE WHITTAKER, citicct voettp.. Good News From Home, Good news front home, good news for me, Has come, across the deep blue sea, Front friends that I have left in tears, From friends that I've not seen for years ; And since we parted long ago My life has been a scene of wo— But now a joyful hour has come, For I hove heard goad news from home. Chorus—Good news from home, &c. No Father's near to guide me now, No Mother's tear to south my brow, No Sister's voice falls on mine ear, No Brother's smile to give me cheer, But the' f wander far away, My heart is full of joy to.day, For friends (across the ocean's foam) Have sent to me good news from home. Chorus—Good news from home, &e. When shall I see that cottage door, Where I've spent years of joy before, 'Twos then I knew no grief or care, My heart was ever happy there ; Tho' I may never see it more, Whcre'er on earth I chance to roam, My heart will be with those at home. Chorus—Good news from home, hr. clect The Sex Feminine. A pleasant, cheerful, lively, generous ; charitable•minded woman is never old.— Her heart is as young nt sixty sr seventy as it was at eighteen or twenty ; and they who are old at sixty or seventy are not made old by the ravages of passion and and teeliegs of an unsocial, an ungenerous nature, which have clinkered their minds. wrinkled their spirits, and withered their souk They are made old by envy, by jealousy, by hatred, by suspicions, by un charitable feelings ; by slandering, scan dalizing, ill.bred habits; which, if they avoid, they preserve their youth to the very last, so that the child shall die, as the Scrip. tures say, a hundred years old. There are many old women who pride them selves on being eighteen or twenty. Prid• is an old passion, and vanity is gray as the I mountains. They are old women that have Ins It of either. They see dry, dull, c Id, indifferent. They want the wellj spring of youthful affections, which is al ways active, always engaged in labor of love which is calculated t t promote and distribute enjoyment. Old wiman, old lady, old grim face, or old gripe, or any other nickname with the epithet old prefix ed to it, is as commonly applied by chit. erai to bad tempered mothers, or aunts, as pretty kind, s veet, dear, and other youthful epithets, are instinctively appli ed to the good humored grandam with her wrinkled face. 'I here is an old age of the heart, which is possessed by many who have no suspicion that there is any thing old about them; and there isa youth which never grows old, a Lave who is ever a boy, a Psyche who is ever a girl. What Some Men and Women Are. A London Review, in answer to the' question. 'What .s man says : 'Chemi cally speaking, a man is forty five pounds of carbon aid nitrogen, diffused through five and a half pailfuls of water." In answer to the question, 'What is wo man ?' a bachelor wng says : 'Mechani cally speaking, a woman is one hundred pounds of flesh and blood, two pounds of silk, ten pounds of cotton, and one pound of whalebone, with an indefinite amount of fuss and featlurs. Theodore Parker, the somewhat unbe- I fleeing divine, taking a vegetable view of man, maintains that his cultivation is as noble and praiseworthy a science us the cultivation of a cabbage l end, taking nn animal view of the mat ter, we may add that man is undoubtedly "the paragon of animals ;" for he can do what no other animal can—that is, snuff tobacco, chew tobacco, and, after sufficient practice, swallow tobacco juice. We do not believe that even a polecat, by any amount of pfactice, could overcome its nat ural disgust for tobacco in any shape.--- ,Monthly Rainbow. A LADY IN COMMA'AD.--It will be re membered that Lieut. MosToomaav, of the United St ates army, not long since lost his life in the service, in Oregon. Ills death left his widow, formerly Miss. NOR THROP, of Akron, Ohio, and one child, in comparative penury, as is generally the case with those who devote their lives to their country's service. She returned, and Gen JEssue, with the kindness of heart and chivalry which characterise brave soldier, immediately gave to her, it is stated, the t•ust of Fort Grotiot, now occupied by t, garrison, a duty which she can fulfil, and the pay of which is very fair. la' Rubies and babies are the emblems of love—especially the babies. ' Fling Away the Razor. Each hair is furnished with a distinct gland, elaborately and beautifully complete. Under the facial are innumerable nerves, immediately connected with various organs of the senses, ramifying in every direction and performing most important functions. This hair, when in full growth, forms a natural protector to the nerves, and also holds, as it were, in suspension, a quantity of warm air through which the cold air in breathing passes, and so becoming rarefi ed or tempered, enters the lungs without giving to their delicate texture that severe shock which nrises from the sudden ad mission of cola, so often the forerunner of fatal disorders. Any one putting his fin gers under the hair of his head will there feel warm air. The hair also wards off east winds and prolific sources of toothache and other pains, and so tends to preserve those useful and ornamental appendages, the teeth. It is said that an intimate connection ex ists between the moustache and the nerves of the eye and that many diseases of the eye are traceable to shaving. Who has not li•It his eyes smart under the applica tion of a dull razor May not the shaving, by depriving the lungs of the male of their natural protec tion, and by exposing them to the unin terrupted action of cold air, tend to wea ken the chest, end that weakness being transmitted in an increasing proportion from generation to generation, at length inducing consumption and consumptive tendency Persons who wear their hair under their chins, do not except in rare cases, suffer from sore throats. There is in the crypt of Hyde Church a vast pile of bones, which were gathered many years after a battle fought upon the seashore, between the Danes and Saxons, about one thousand years since; and a mong them the skulls of aged warriors, finely developed the teeth in many of which are so perfect, so beautifully sound, and so firmly embeded in their socke.s that you cannot move them. The owners of these teeth wore beards; and the writer remembers witnessing, several years ago some excavations on the site of the priory at Spalding when many stone coffins were dug out, whose inmates had, almost with out exception, sound, entire and elegant ,sets of teeth. Did not beards grow on their chins? Shaving occupies, on an average, fif teen minutes. A tnan who shaves every morning for 50 years, thus employs in that upwards of 380 days, 12 hours each. Is this a profitabie application of our fleeting moments ? The face exposed to a miscroscope im mediatelyafter shoving presents a most unsightly appearance the stumps assum ing the forms of marrow bone sawn trans versely. Did not teachers of the faculty approve of moustaches—and are they not of opin ion that they play a most important part in the animal economy ? Is it probable that by unduly stimulating thelgrowth of hair by shaving, we draw too largely on, and so cause an unnatural action of the nerves, producing an injurious effect, no matter how slight on the brain ? Dtd not patriarchs and sages of old wear beards, and were they not remarkable for lorgevity, as well as for being exceed ingly fine-looking fellows. h not shaving a bore—and does not a man, while undergoing the operation, look extremely ridiculous ? And if it is right to rasp the chin, why not the eyebrows and the head also Does it not appear foolish to shave on a cold morning that which nature has pro vidt dto protect us against the cold ? Do we not despite and hold too cheaply a be hilicent arrangement, and infringe a nutu. ral law, when we cut oft what Providence says no plainly shall grow ? for the more a man shaves the more the hair grows, e ven to the hour of his death. The head shall become bald but the face will nev er! In conclusion, when man was created he had given him a beard, and who will dare to sty that it mos not a good gift ? Turn to the first chapter of Genesis, and you will find that God saw everything that ho had made, and behold it was very good.— London Times. C.NILDHoori.---Oh how beautiful is child hood, how trusting in love, how pure in faith ! Why, why must these early dreams so soon depart? Why must the earth stain fall upon the spirit, aud rob it of its bright visions and confiding trust? Why must the care gloom settle upon the sunny brow, and branding heart ? Oh 'tis sad 'tis very sad to think how saon life's joy. one hours are o'er, how soon its cores, and sorrows, and little iisappointment, falls coldly on the enthusiastic spirit. " LIBERTY AND UNION, NOW AND FOREVER, ONE AND INSEPARABLE. " HUN'T'INGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 1856. - - Prof. Julius Caner Hannibal's Lectures SIXTH SERIES-NO. XXIV. DEAR CONGREGASIIUNA LIR You will hnd de words from which I distract my discord d is ehening, in de piece ob newspaper dat come round de pound obsassengers dat Anty Clawson fotched from market lass Saturday nite. It am do lass claws ob a poetical infusion by some body, and sez— "Den Spring comes tripping o'er the arf And sweetly docks the plain." Ob come. my ignumrent frens, dis poet speaks in metifor ; metifor means dubble intender, as we say in French, and am a license 'lowed to poets, case dey aint all rite in de hed and can't spoke like common sense people no more den you can play a tune on a hand organ when you turn do crank backwards. I don't tink, my stingy hearers, dat dese lines was ritten dis sea son, kase Miss Spring aint been tripping long here yet. l'in afraid she and ole Win ter hab had some diffaculty and do ole ho. rey headed, icy-hearted rainscallion had tripped her up and smashed her nose, jis as she was ready for a start lass week ; but she will recubber; do warm sun of April will open her wild lushus eyes, and she will smile like a tickled wench by de time May sets, and den de nrf will team wid new life like a role oh ripe Dutch obese. Oh, how dis 010 heart ob mine will lepo wid joy when I can again loose mysefl for an hour or two in the cantfines ob Bohoken and loaf upon de hills, and snuff de hell expiring air, and sup lager beer. I lub to git up ob a morning and go out to meet Miss Spring do poet talks 'bout. If you watch de course ob events, you will notice do strange foe dat nature, or Spring, or whoeber It am, don't work none while you am a looking of her, darfore I tink she works du ring de time, for you can see from day to day what progress she 'sakes. Fast she goes to work like a good housekeeper and lays down leer carpet till nll the Jul . look cubborecrtvid a fresh green bazo; den she goes on to lay in her patterns like a fats rate artist, only better; and den you will see de fields cubbered wid butter cups, dandylions, clover, timothy and thistles ; den she works—in her boarders of rich wild rosys, white red and pink ; den de hollyhawks rears day heads side by side wid do sunflower, and de geraniums and cockscomb strut pp like a new firm 1)e 4 o'clocks came den and ant de only flow er dat keeps bank hours; den de trees break out wid a green rash, bud and leave, and creation goes on ober ,gin. It am amusing to watch de flowers 'while dry am growing. Dey all start jis alike from the ground, and,if you plant a sunflower 'long side ob a Jonny-Jumper, for de lust few days you can't tell de tudder from which ; putty soon de sunflower start up and lebe Jonny far behind, den Jonny stretch up he head and strain his legs, and swell up he body to try to catch up wid de sunflower, but in three days he sees it's no use ; all de monure de gardener citn lay around hint dont make no difference; he can't cope with he nabor ; he can look up at him and say "go on ole Mr. Sunflower ! after you hub done growin what am you good for ? You aint huff so beautiful as ate; your big yel ler seedy head wid only a few lobes around de edges, look like de bawld hed of Horace Greely, while I bear fifty lively, blue, yel ler, purple and white flowers dat nm con sidered a'hcart's ease' to those who will stoop to learn my worth." Now all dose facs, my discontented frens, teaches us a lesson. It shows dot we nm all useful and putty, if we only tink so, and darfore when you see a man start in life under a full headway and you hear on all sides of his wonderful success, don't envy him,. don't feel unhappy bekase he outstrips yap, wait and see what he turns out to be in de end, see if he torus out to be more useful or ornimental to society dan dose in humbler spores, who have not had haft his opportunity to do good, and from whom but little am expected. Dere am anudder consolation to de low ly, dey don't feel de keen blast of adversi ty so bitterly, darfore de same wind dat Wows down de sunflower nebber fuzes de Jonny Jumper. hence, 010 Massa Bar num am de sunflower. His golden riches towered above de heads ob all his nabors, and he was marked out by his lofty posi tion. He smiled and nodded to all who looked up and fluttered him, until an eusor ly blast floored him and he fell like a dead cornstalk. Pm like do Jonny Jumper, berry lowly, berry beautiful and berry sas sy. Nobody Links enough ob me to seek Inc out or put wore dan a tin sixpence in de gasser, and hence when I full I won't bob far to go to find a landing place. My frens, don't tuke me for a pattern by no manner ob means, but you loose nothin by being lowly; retnembe‘de delicious strawberry am found almost on the ground de watermilion and de mushmilion on the arf ; peaches and oranges grow on low tree, darfore, nebber trample a lowly born ting till you tarn its use and character. Go to work yourseffs ! be up and washed wid de lark ; be content lvid your lot, and be hon est in all tinge and you will be jis as good as any man and a good deal better. Somebody pass round dat sasser. The Way Dennis MoKan Proposed to Satisfy Widow Johnson. A son of the emerald Isle, whom we shall call Dennis McKan, had long absen• ted himself from the confessional, but a few days since he appeared before the Priest and confessed to sundry transgres• sions. But the Priest was not satisfied, and something like the following dialogue passed between them; Priest—" Now Dennis, 1 fear you have not confessed all, so you had not better hold anything back but make a clean breast of it, and tell me all. Come, out with it, Dennis—" Well then, yer worship, if I must be after tellin' ye all about it, I stole the widder Johnson's pig—an' that's a fact, yer worship." Priest—wl hats a mighty sin, Dennis, and you must make satisfaction to the widow." Dennis---" And plane yer worship, I don't know him at all—an' that's a fact I don't." Priest---" Make restitution, satisfy the widow Johnson." Dennis•--"An' faith I don't know hitn its meself that don't know him a hit, now, and that's true what I am tellin ye yer wor ship." Priest—" Make her recompense : pay for the pig, Dennis; pay Mrs. Johnson for the pig." Dennis---“Och by me sowl, and is that you mane now Sure, I can't do it, for I've ate him, and I have not a hap'orth for meself and the childer ; so what will be the trouble about. it, yer Riverence if I don't pay her " -• Priest- "You will be before the judge. merit Dennis—l shall be there, too, to ac cuse yon•--tbe widow Johnson will also be there." Dennis---"An' what will I do ? will the pig be there too." Priest---" Yes, Dennis, the pig will be there surely." Dennis—“Och, murther ! what will I do thin. yer worship ? Fiax, and I have it yer Riverence. I'll give her up the pig thin an there, yer worship, an' so I will and troth that sam'll be after satisfying her intirely." A CrrEAP floT Cen.—We commend' the following plan of starting plants for early use to the attention of all farmers who are not provided with is hot bed. It is an excellent plan for starting cucumber and melon vines, whether late or early It is from a correspondent of the Rural New Yorker. "After leveling down the top of the heap of horse stable manure, where it was heated and em-crud with rich turf ta ken from the edge of the barnyard, cut into squares of five or six inches, and pla ced grass side down. I planted my seeds in these pieces of turf so that each piece would make a hill ; then when it was tima to transplant, I just removed each piece of turf to a place prepared for it in the gar den without disturbing the pants the least. I never saw plants grow so fast before, and not one of them was injured by the bugs, while some planted in the usual way were destroyed by them. For the conve nience of transplanting, I should think that turf would be better than loose earth to put on any hot-bed," A SUM FOR Tescrisas.—'Sally Jones, have you done that sum I set you P , No thir. I can't do it.' 'Can't do it ! I am ashamed of you.— W hy, at your ago I could do any sum set think, thir, I know a thum you can't thipher,' , Well, Sally, let's hear it, and we'll see.' QE ith thith, thir; if one apple cauthed the ruin of the whole human rathe, how many thuch will it take to make a barrel of tinder?' 10" The mingling of the races has tin. doubtedly materially aided the development of the American people, We have, in one common stock combined, the steadiness of the Englishman, the impulsiveness of the Irishman, the artistic talent of the French. man, and the profundity of the German. In short, we are 'ix great people," and growing. KT. Quaint old Fuller says. “Let him who expects one class of society to prosper in the highest degree, while the other is in distress, try whether one side of his face can smile while the other is pinched." FINNEY AND THE BOATMAN.—An anec dote is told of Finney, the revivalist, and a canaller, to the effect : He was "holding forth" in Rochester, and in walking along the canal one day, came across a boatman who was swearing furiously. Going up he confronted him, and abruptly asked— 'Sir, do you know where you are go ing 1' The unsuspecting boatman innocently replied that 'he was going up the canal on the boat •Jonny Sands." 'No, sir, you are, not,' continued Fin ney, 'you are going to hell faster than a canal boat can convey you.' The boatman looked at him in astonish ment for a minute, and then returned the question. 'Sir, do you know where you aro go. ing ?' 'I expect to go to heaven.' 'No sir, you are going into the canal !' And suiting the action to the word, took Finney in his arms and tossed him in the 'murky waters, where he would have been drowned had not the boatman relented and fished him out. A DREADFUL EARTHQUAKE IN JAPAN.-- The schooner "Page" which recently ar rived at San Francisco front Japan, bro't truly distressing intelligence. It is repor ted that the city of Jeddo was destroyed by an earthquake on the 11th of Novem ber, and that one hundred thousand hou ses were demolished, and thirty thousand human beings were buried beneath the ruins. According to the best authorities Jeddo, the capital, had a population of one million. The entire empire of Japan is 600 miles long and 100 wide, and is corn posed of islands. The total population is estimated at 30,000,000. In the chief is land, Niphon, there is said to be one of the richest gold mines in the world. There are also terrific volcanoes; the earthquakes therefore, are by no means of rare occur rence. It will be remembered that one took place a short time since by which a Rusaian frigate. was Jcutreyed. LEr CJIIL'REN SING —A II children can learn to sing if they commence in season. I do not say that all will have the same sweet voice of the nightingale—for some have naturally sweet, mild and soft voices when they talk, while others speak in loud strong and masculine tones. The same is true in regard to singing. In Germany, every child is taught to use Its voice while young. In their schools, all join in sing ing as a regular exercise, as they attend to the study of geography; and in their sing ing in churches, it is not confined to a choir, olto set apart from others, perhaps in the corner of the house ; but there is a vast tide of incense going forth to God from every heart, which can give utterance to this Inn,gunge from the soul, Children, sing ! yes, sing with your whole hearts.— David sang before the Lord, and it is meet that you should do the same; and thus curb your angry feelings by singing sweet and cheerful songs. CRlrThe subject of impressions at first sight was being talked over at the supper table, when the lady that presided ~ o'er the cups and tea,' said she always formed an idea of a person at first sight, and gene rally found it to be correct. 'Mamma,' said her youngest son in a shrill voice, that attracted the attention 01 all present. 'Well, my dear,' said the fond 'anther, 'what is it want to know,' said Young America, 'what was your opinion of me when you first saw mot' '•Class in midd le.aged geography ; stand up. What is a pyramid pile of men in a circus, one a top of the other.' 'Where is Egypt ?' 'Where it tillers was.' 'Where's that young vagabone 'Dunn°, sir.' 'Go down foot. Next. What is a bay?' Abay issirisavastbod yofstill waterbou nd brnumerouscapeship,hlande,promenterries, withonlyoneoutlettothesesir." 'Good ! go up head. and stop shocting wads at your sister's face.' Hon. Thomas Benton has written a letter, in which he states his intentton of retiring from public life. 116`Lorenzo pew's prediction as to the flood on the 27th, has proven a failure. Postponed, an account of the weather, perhaps. It is said that the grand jury of Wash ington city have ignored the bill against Mr. Rust, of the Rouse, for asssulting Mr. Greely of the New York Tribune. At Pittsburg, the ice on the Ohio river broke up on Saturday, without dantas, , c to the ship. ping. Navigation is now open, milli ten feet of water in the channel. Unknown Tongues—the Bird. The best known of animal tongues, are, of course, the most perfect among them— those of birds It would be a long list, were we to mention but half of the curi ous literature, that of old and of late has been written on this subject. Pallas Ath ens herself gave the knowledge of the language of birds of Tiresias, to console him for the loss of his eyes. Helenus of Troy, Tholes and Nlelampus claimed to possess it. Solomon, who had wisdom ex ceeding much, and spoke of beasts, and of fowls, and of creeping! things, and of fishes, it is reported to have understood the meaning of every bird's song. Pliny even gives, in his Natural Flistory, an unfailing receipt for the obtaining of such wonderful knowledge; and King Dag, who was a !mister of the science, kept sparrows, which brought him the news of the world from every country on earth,-•- Gerbert of Seville, the great christ inn mas ter of the Black Art, learned to explain the flight and notes of birds ; and Bene dict IX., who rose to the Holy See at the early age of twelve years, knew their voice, and could tell from it what had hap pened today, yesterday and the day be. fore, anywhere through the wide range of Chistendom. It is not long since a Ger man scholar studied the language of geese and issued proposals for the directory of their idiom. Two adventurous French. man Dupont de Nemours and Pirerquin de Gembleux, carried out the unfinished plan, and actually published works on the language of animals. It has been a favor- ite task of many authors to set the songs of birds to music, and to give their mertnin2- -a scheme which 'rhos. Gardener, in his music of Nature, has more fully developed. THE PRESIDENCY —Horace Greely, in ' a late letter from Washington to the "I'ri busic says :-•-"Douglass is openly announ ced us a candidate in the Presidential elec tion, and he says himself that his name will be before the Cincinnati Convention. Fremont is not a Cdtholic as reported, but to of Huguenot descent. and was long sine confirmed as a member of the Episcopal Church. Letters favoring his nomination are flowing in from all quarters. His friends urge four points is his favor: he is a new man, fresh from the people ; his past life shows him to be possessed of backbone ; he is opposed to slavery ag• gression and is in favor of Free Territor ies; and he favors the Pacific Railroad.-- Bunks declines the nomination. Bewnrd is earnestly advocated by many persorm but it is doubtful whether he will accept. McLean, Chase; Hale and Wilmot all have warm friends and supporters. But the motto with every one is, "success to prin ciples rather than men." larma's WORK IN THE GARDEN. In the Middle States, during this month we think, notwithstanding the severe win ter we have pasted through, garden °per, ations may be undertaken us yoon us the frost is out of the ground and the soil can be wrought advantageously. The follow. ing hints are good and seasonable, CADBACIE—PIants in Glasses —See that your gardener raises the glass of your hot. beds containing cabbage plants every fair day. to harden and inure the plants to the open air, the better to prepare them for transplantation as soon as the weather be comes mild and settled enough, which in ordinary seasons is from the middle to the :20th of the month in the middle States. PLANTING nuT.—lf you have been for. tunate enough to have raised cabbage plants in hot-beds, under glass, make your arrangements to manure, dig and pulverize your beds preparatory to their reception,' as soon as the weather becomes sufficient ly settled and warm. Recollect that the cabbage is a hearty feeder, and therefore manure the ground with a liberal hand. If the manure be barnyard manure, a cover ing of throe or four inches indepth will be gratefully appropriated by the plants, while I in product and size you will be amply re- munerated for such generous feeding. If you intend to manure with Peruvian pm. no—and that is the only kind for garden culture we would recommend—you should at least apply a quantity equal to 400 lbs. But let whatever manure that may be used the bed should be top-dressed with a mix ture composed of five parts leach ashes, one part salt and one part plaster. In digging in the manure, the person should turn in full spade deep and thoroughly rake when ' ever ho has spaded up three feet of ground, to save the necessity of treading on it while raking. The distance of plants apart should be VOL. XXI. NO. 16. governed by variety, If the small kind, they may be from 2 to 2} feet apart in the rows; if the large kind, not less than 3 ft. The rows of either large or ■mall cabbage should stand three feet apart. If the plants be intended to be used as coleworts, and not suffered to head, they may stand 18 in ches apart in the row; or where intended to be used both as coleworts and head cab bages, the plants may be 12 inches apart, using every alternate for coleworts, and permitting the other to run into head cab bage. SOWING LETTUCE Sean—Planting Out —As soon as the weather is settled ■nd the ground can be got in good order, prepare a part of your border facing the south as re commended for cabbage seed. Any plants which may be of sufficient size may be set out to head about the 20th of this month. Lettuce seeds should be sown at intervals of two weeks apart throughout the season. By such arrangement a continued supply of crisp-heads may be secured. TomAToes—Egg Plants—Red Pep pers.—Sow seeds of each of these in boxes and place the boxes in warm southern ex posed windows to produce plants to be set out when all danger from frosts are over for early crops. If placed in pots an oys -1 ter shell or piece of broken crockery should be put over the hole in the bottom to insure drainage. as stagnant mixture is apt to in jure, if not destroy the health of plants, If n box be used, bore a hole in the bottom a ' bout one inch in diameter, and cover as recommended for the pots. The earth used to fill the pots or boxes, to produce the plants, should bee rich mould fertilized with organic manure of some kind, so as ' to secure an early and vigorous growth of plants. The fertilizatton of the soil may be encted by dissolving half an ounce of guano in water to each large sized pot or or box, If the latter does not contain over 200 square inches. The solution to be poured over the surface—or the same ef fect may be produced by tasking a decoc tion of 7 parts of fresh horse dung and 1 part soot, and watering three or four times with it. POTATOES.—As soon as the weather in open and the frost is entirely out of the ground is the time to prepare the ground for and to plant potatoes for art early crop. Select the driest and most exposed bed in ynur garden—a light and sandy mould if possible. Manure it broadcast, with half the manure you intend to apply, dig that in to the depth of the spade, rake finely ; then lay ofl rows 4 inches deep, 3 feet a part, then strew the residue of the manure along the rows and cover. '1 hen give the bed a broadcast dressing of a mixture com posed of 6 parts ashes, 1 part plaster, and 1 part salt; taking care to give the drills a full dusting. The vines, when they first come up. should receive another dusting, as also at each working, and once after be ing laid by, until the vines go out of bloom. As to the working of potatoes, it is suffi cient to say that they must be kept clean of weeds and grass and the earth open from the time that the plants are 3 or 5 inches high till laid by. The dusting of the pre scribtld mixtures must be done in the mot, ning, while the vines are wet, so that por tions of the mixture may adhere to them. With regard to sets, they should be out so as to have two eyes each. As each cut is cut it should have the wound rubbed in plaster or ashes, and put away in a cool I dry place, where they could not be subjec ted to freezing. If cut two or three days before planting, so much the better. Preservation of Wheat from Weevil. Numerous remedies have been proposed to protect wheat from the ravages of the weevil, but most of them have been imprac ticable or too expensive. M. Cailat, in France, recommends the use of tar as a cer tain and economical agent for their destruc tion. He says : ..The efficacy of tar in driving away the weevil and preserving the grain, is an in- contestable fact. My father had, a long, time ago, his granaries, barns, and the whole house infested with these insects so much so that they penetrated into all the chests and among the linen. He did place an open bask, impregnated with tar in the barn, and then in the granaries--at the end of some hours the weevils were seen climbing along the wall by myriads, and flying in all directions from the cask. On moving the tarred vessel from place to place, the premises wore in fl few days com pletely cleared of these troublesome and pernicious guests. The agriculturist who wants to get rid of weevils, may, as soon as he perceives their presence, impregnate the surface of some old planks with tar, and then place them as required in his gra naries. Care must be token to renew the tar from time to time in the course of thu year to prevent the return of the insects.