?>plttteii The Angel in a Maiden's Eyes. BY TItOS. MACKELI.KR. Once methought I saw an angei Smiting in a maiden's eyes, And my heart was captive token, Like a city by surprise. Then it seemed another angel Springing upward from my heart, From mine eves looked on the other, And beheld its counterpart. At tllf> mnmnnt nf tKn nr?wn*inr? From her lips no whisper ^11* And before her I sat silent, Rapt in a delicious spell. Love, awaiting in my bosom, Dove, of pure impulses born, Lighted up my happy pathway, Like a sun of summer morn. Marked for mine the gentle mniden With the angel in her eyes; Years agone we linked oup fortunes By indissoluble lies. I'm Dreaming, Love, of Thee. BY ALLIE VERNON. The stars aro shining brightly In the blue vault above, And spirits breathing lightly, Are whispering tales of love. I hear the tones of angels? A joyous melody; But I heed not their sweet music, I'm dreaming, love, of thee. The breeze is softly sighing As it fans my cheek and brow, And the flowers arc replying In strains so rich and low, I hear the brooklets murmur, In tones of fairly glee; But I heed not their sweet music, I'm dreaming, love, of the. 'lint nuii Unutiur. THE GHOST RAISER. ? Mv Undo Bcagley, who commenced his commercial career very early in the present century as a bagman will toll stories. Among them he tells his Single Ghost Story so often, that I am heartily tired of it. In self-defence, therefore, I publish the tale, in order that when next ? the good, kind old gentleman otfcrs to bore us with it, everybody may say they know it. I reihember every word of it. One fine autumn evening, about forty years ago, I was travelling on horseback from Shrewsbury to Chester. I felt tolerably tired, and was beginning to look out for some snug wav-aide inn, where I might {>ass the night, when a sudden and vioent thunder-storm came on. My horse, terrified by tliift-lightning, fairly teok the bridle between his teeth, and started off with me at full gallop through lanes and cross-roads, until at length I managed to pull him up near the door of a neat-looking country inn. "Well," thought I, "there was a wit in your madness, old boy, since it brought us to this comfortable refuge." And alighting, I gave him in charge to the stout farmer's boy who acted as ostler. The innkitchen, which was also the guest-room, was large, clean, neat and comfortable, very like the {)(v:isunt hostlery described by Izjuie Walton. There were several travellers already in the room?probably like myself driven there fe- ; lieved to l>o real."?Houtehould Words. Personalities.?An eccentric parson in the Old Dominion, who is known by the Bomewhat unique name of Servant Jones, once dined with a Mr. Owl. Mr. Owl placed beforo his guest tho mortal remains of a fowl whose bones formed the depris of a former repast. The parson was called upon to ask a Meaning, which he dii in the following manner: ' Lord of love, Look down from above, And bless the Owl That ate the fowl, And left the bones For Servant Jones." Zackly 8a The man that now-a-daya will write And not pre-pay hi* letter, Is worser than the heathen are, What don't know any better? And if you take a fine tooth oomb, And rake down "all creation," You could not find a meaner man In this here mighty nrtion. ? # " Good as the Wheat," or " 8even up" for a Wife. * In the State of Tennessee, tliere is a certain village boasting of a tavern, three Btores, and four groceries, where, from morning till night and from night till dawn, a person entering the town may find, in the tavern, stores, or groceries aforesaid, one or more groups of persons playing cards. Gambling there is reduced to a science?tho history of tho four kings is thoroughly studied and from the schoolboy to the gray-headed veteran, from the miss in her teens to the mother of a largo family, they are initiated into the mysteries of high, low, jack, game ; right and left bowers; tho honors and tho odd trick. Ono of the best players in the village was Major Smith, tho tavern keeper ; or, as he expressed it, tho proprietor of the hotel; a widower, who like " Jeptha, Judge in Israel, Hau a dnughter passing fnir." Fanny, the daughter, was ono of the prettiest girls in Tennessee, and therefore one of the prettiest in the world; for we here digress in order to lay down as ipsi dixit, that Tennessee women, in point of benutv, are matchless. The sweetheart of Miss Fanny was a young farmer, residing in the neighborhood, whom we will designate by the name of Hob. It happened that one day beforo harvest tho young man was detained in tLe village, and found him, as usual, at thft hotel, seated between tho Major and his daughter. After a desultory conversation between the two gentlemen, on the state of the weather, the prospects of the approaching harvest, and such important staples of conversation, the Major asked Robert how his wheat crop promised to yield. In reply, ho was told that the I young farmer expected to make at least one hundred bushels. The Major appeared to study for a moment, then abruptly proposed a game of old sledge or " seven up," the stakes to be his daughter Fanny against the crop of wheat. This, of course the young man indignantly refused, because he could not bear the idea that the hand of her he loved should be made the subject of a bet, or that he should win a 1 wife by gambling for her, and, perhaps, | because he knew tho old man was " hard I to boat," and there was a strong probabili itv of his losing l>oth wheat and wife. It was not until the Major, with his j usual obstinacy, had sworn that unless ho i won her he should never have her, that the young man was forced reluctantly to i i>layThe table was nlaeed. the enndlo In tho I cards produced, and the players took their I seats, with Miss Fanny between them to j watch the progress of the game. The ) cards were regularly shuffled and cut, and J it fell to tho Major's lot to deal. The first hand was played, and Robert made gift to his opponent's high, low, game. Robert then dealt, the Major begged ; it was given, and the Major again made three j to his opponent's one. . 44 Six to two," said Miss Fanny with a sigh. The Major' as ho dealt the cards, winked knowingly and said? I 'T am good for the wheat, master Bob." The old man turned up a trump?it was a spade. Fanny glanced at her fnther's had?her heart sunk ; he held three, eight spot, and tho king! She then looked at Robert's hand, and lo ! he held the ace, queen, duee, and jack, or knave. She whispered Robert to beg?he did so. "Take it," said the Major. Robert led his duce, which the Major took with his three spot, and followed by playing the king ; Robert put his queen upon it. The Major supposing it was the young man's last trump, leaned over the table, and tapping the last trick with his finger said? 44 That's good as wheat." " Is it ?" asked Robert, as he displayed to the astonished Major the ace and jack yet in his hands. 44 High, low, jack, gift, and the game," shouted Roliert, 44 Oou !" ejaculated Fanny. 44 Good as wheat," added Robert, as he flung his arms around her neck and kissed her. In due time they were married, and after that, when anything Ov*cured of a pleasing nature to the happy couple, they could express their emphatic approbation of it, by the pharase, 44 Good as Wheat." ihtiihint HWnhinn An Infidel. Walking one day in the village where 1 was laboring, I met a man who I knew openly avowed himself an infidel. After the usual salutations, I said to him, "Well, Mr. B., what is the condition of your soul, this morning 1" Ilis answer was, "Oh ! I am an infidel." "I know that, Mr. B., but as a man of reflection, who understands what infidelity is, you will not pretend to me that you know the Bible is not the word of (iod." After a few moments' reflection, he replied, "I acknowledge that I do not know that it Is not, but 1 do not Ixdjftve it is." "Well, Mr. B., if the Bible should not be the word of G.kI, can you jfep sure that there will not l>e just such a state.of retribution beyond the grave as the Bible describee. "No, I am sure of nothing beyond the grave, but I do not l?elieve there will l?e any retribution." "Then, Mr. B., your reason compels fron to admit, that you cannot know, hut iving and dying as you are, you will go to hell, and t>e as miserable there to all eternity, as the Savior represented the rich man to he." "It is true I can be certain of nothing beyond the f^rave, whether I shall exist at all there, or if I do, what will be my condition is a mere matter of conjecture." "Keep thia in inind, Mr. B., when you lie down and when you rise up, that you do not know but that you shall go to hell when you die, and if you can reat with the possibility of such an end, your mind is differently constituted from mire." We parted, and he went about his business, but, as I afterwards learned, neve/ enjoyed any peace until he indulged a hor>e in Chrat. # V In a few weeks he united with the Baptist Church. Infidels do not reflect how baseless their schetan is. It keeps them from the consolation of the hope of a blessed immortality, and gives them nothing in return.? Surely their rock is not our rock, our enemies themselves being judges.? Winner's "Incident a." ?^ 9 m I can do nothing with that Girl, she learns nothing. A lady, an old Sunday School teaelior, was much struck with the strong faith diu tTAireine pauencc 01 poor mary 31 , a young girl of eighteen years of age, whom she was induced to visit, hearing that she was in great wast, and suffering from a most painful kind of scrofula. Finding Mary could read but imperfeclJg, and had little knowledge of the Old Testament though well versed in the promises of the New, which was to her a neverfailing source of comfort, always applied when any one bewailed her sad state, the lady inquired, "Mary, who taught you what you have learned ?" Mary answered, "I had no education except two years at a Sunday-School, when T was al>out ten years old; but I had a hasty teacher, who always said slm could do nothing with me, for I learnt nothing. I was always slow at answering, "I was so often in pain, but said nothing about it, for I w.;s afraid the teacher would tell me not to come again, if she knew how bad I was. She often praised the other children, when I would have-answered just tho same, if she had given me a moment's time. After a while I a kinder teneher came of a morning, then I gave up going of an afternoon. I did j not like to be scolded." Mary add.'d, "when I became too ill to go to school at all, I put in my pence for a Testament, after I had learnt at school, I was soon able to read it, though no ono thought I could do so well." Mary died in perfect peace and joy, two years since. The hasty teacher,whose name was not remembered, never knew that she had been allowed "to do any thing with Mary," and that Mary had learned to be wise unto salvation.?Sunday-School Journal. 3UrirnltnrnL w Work for the Month. Tiik Plantation.?Attack the tcccdi viyoroutly, ami cut them down withoul mercy, both on the plantation and in the garden. Remember that no land, however rich, can grow good farm crops and weeds at the same time, and that it cost/ as much to raise weeds as it dbes to make corn or cotton. Millets, Oats, Rye, Wheat, Ac, will now be ready to cut in many sections. In stacking your small grain, 01 straw, elevate it above the ground on a platform of rails resting on wooden block? or large flat "rocks." Both Cotton and Corn will need vigorous working this month, and the latter should bo ready t< " lay by" the latter part of the month.? The Pumpkin crop must be attended to this mouth, as earlv as possible, or it will 1m> too late. Sow IVas, either among the corn, in spots not rich enough for cotton or corn. Tiik Gakdrn and Orchard.?Sow, foi w inter use, a full crop of green-glazed, sugar-leaf, drum-head or Savoy Cabbages, protecting the beds well from the sun,and giving them a plentiful supply of water when necessary. Carrrots may also be sown, in deep, rich soil; also, Tomatoes, Radishes, Snap Beans, Ac., Ac. Plant a full crop of Okra?transplant Celery, Cal>bages, Tomatoes, Egg Plants, Ac. Spring Onions may now be taken up. Choose a dry day for the operation, clean the bulbs from earth and ull loose, outer skins, remove them to the house and dry them on the floor of an airy room. When well cured, tio them in ropes or buuehes, and hang up until wanted for use. Set out slips of Sweet Potatoes, as recommended. You need not wait for a " rainy day" to transplant anything, if you will follow the directions given for " grouting." Plant the seeds orCucumbers, Melons, Gherkins, Ac., for a late crop. Gather your ripe Irish Potatoes, and try the method of preserving recommended by our friend Moore ?we have no doubt it would succeed well, and hope to see it tested fully. In the Orchard, it will be well to look to trees newly planted out, which should be well mulched, and liberally watered in the dryAflf u'AflthAr4 inat ulmid oim/lAmn T*? ?.v.,v, JU. TV OUIIUVnil, 1I*AH overladen with fruit should l>o relieved of a portion of their burden. Pick off all the small ill-formed specimen# that encumber the branches?thin out the fruit where it is crowded too close, and prop up the limtm where necessary, with crotched or forked stick, putting a soft, thick piece of cloth in the crotch to prevent the branches from chafing with the wind. Keep all weeds and suckers down in the orchard, stir the ground and cultivate it with lov crops that need the hoe, and do not neglect to mulch all high headed nn 1 lanky tree#?those trained properly, with low, spreading heads will furnish shade for themselves, and for mulching you may substitute a good wheel-barrow load of well-rotted manure, to be dug in about the roots!?Southi. n Cultivator, How to make Bacon Plenty. Messrs. Editors: The present higli pri ccs o! meat sticuui cause trie planters of the South to reflect, and see if tney cannot devise some plan to remedy the evil. I know a planter whose cotton crop amounted to about $3,000, and he pays this year from Ave to six hundred dollars for meat; and I have no doubt that thousands of others do the same, in proportion to the amount of their crops. Now, gentlemen, I propose the following remedy r In the first place, every planter should raise a sufficient quantity or corn, and neVf?r lu> mulor nAAAftiltv r%f lin ?? then, if possible, enclose enough land to keep his hogs in, and not permit them to run at large, to become wild or be killed up by hi* neighbor's negroes. In the next place, make a boiler aa follows : get two planka, each ten feet long, two and a half Met wide, and two inches think : then a '-lis " ' *' &? 'i L _ make the bottom and ends of sheet iron, I by nailing it on the planks; set this boiler on two rows of bricks, about ono foot high from the ground, with a chimney for a tlue. This boiler can be heated with a very small quantity of wood. Into this boiler put your corn, cotton seed, pump- 11 kins, peas, cabbage leaves, turnips, potatoes, kitchen slop, and every thing that a ' hog will eat, and boi! them together, eve| ry day, occasionally tluowiner in a littlo ni|; " I notice in your last numt>cr, an enquiry for a remedy for the heaven in hor- r sen. I will give you, in my opinion, the c bent remedy now known, which in simple > and will be of use to uny one that owns a hcavey horse. Feed on cut hay, and add two parts Indian meal to one part of 1 shorts, (bran) adding to each feeding a table-spoon full of ginger. This I have used as a remedy for ten years, and find that a horse so fed will work and do as well an though his wind was sound."? Cultivator. j PROSPECTUS OF THE I SOUTHERN CULTIVATOR. \ Volume X, For 1862. l DR. DANIEL LEE, D. R3DMLND, Editor. Assistant Editor. j The southern cultivator u issued every month, and is exclusively devoted to Agriculture, Horticulture, Flon- ' culture, Doinest5? and Farm Economy, Til- ' j lage and iiunl .miry, the breeding and Rai v ' ing or Domestic Animals, Poultry and Bees, t and the gcnerolo routine of Southern Plant* t iiiK' and Farming. I The new volume for 1852, will be iaaued > on a royal octavo sheet of 32 pages, with < Acre Fiue Paper awl Hmuti/ul //- t lustration*! It will contain a ntuch greater i amount of matter than heretofore?will di*- ? cuss a greater variety of topics, and will lie t in every respect the ir?t Agricultural jmucr j in the South ! and equal to any in the I moil FRIENDS OF SOUTHERN AGRICUL- ' TURK!! i An the Cultivator waa the First Journal ea- I tnbliahed in tho Cotton Crowing States, exclusively devotee to the intereataof the Plan- \ tcr; and it haa over been an earnest and consistent advocate of those interests, we con- i fidcntlv hope that, having fostered and aus- ! r tnined it so far, your cordial and generous snjs- j port will still be continued. Planters, Farmers, Gardeners. Fruit Grow- j ? era, chock lvalue re, muraenien. end *11 eon- t nected in any way with the Cultivation of b the soli, will find the Southern Cultivator replete with new and valunhle information ; and f richly worth ten timea the trifling auni at a which it ia afforded. h TERMS OF THE CULTIVATOR: One copy, one year $1 00 b Six Copiea 6 Twelve Copiea 10 e Twenty-five Copiea 90 a Fifty Copiaa 97 50 One Hundred Copiea 75 WM. 8, JONES, I iblleher. a Augnata, Ga. 9 t * salt and ashes, nnd have several troughs 1 close by the boiler, and feed your hogs ' every night with this food?and my word ; for it, we shall soon be able to bo export- I ers, instead of importers, of bacon and j pork. The same quantity of food given to hogs f cooked as abovo will raise and keep fat i three times as many as when given to t them in the ordinary raw state. All this 1 can Ik) done by a boy ten years old, who, 11 by attending to your hogs in this way .will J make you more money than two of your t best field hands can in the cotton field.? | Try this for two years, nnd if you do not t succeed, come to roe and I will pay all ( your losses incurred in the experiment. 1 1 have also a plan for feeding workhorses, which I consider much better and J more economical than the usual method, ^ and by which they will do more work,and , keep in better order, during the plow ing t season?which plan, if I thought it would * interest the readers of the Cultivator, I t would give in another communication. 1 O. D. Mitchell. 1 Cedar Grove, Miss., May, 18'22. Southern Cultivator. j _ ] Many fanners cut Wheat too late, (wai- 1 ting until it is dead ripe) and still more' | permit the grain to remain a long time in ' the field iu small stacks after it is harvest- j 1 I ed. Both practices are wrong. Wheat , intended for seed ought to Ihj fully rinc t before it is cut; but that which is to bo j ground into flour should not stand so long. ! The proper time to cut it is in the "doughy state," (out of the milk,) but not hard or flinty. Where one ha# many acres to harvest, it is difficult to avoid cutting some a , little too early, or a great deal too late. So soon as the straw is sufficiently cured r the crop should be housed, stored away iu a barn, or thrashed. Wheat straw is worth half the price of hay, if the grain be cut at the right time, and the straw properly saved from rain, dew and runnliiliiv Wltorn - .. MX.v ^VAM it% uiicaii, any (our or five dollars n ton, the saving of wheat straw for forage need not command mush care. But at the South, where first rate hay is rarely worth less than seven- i , ty-fivo cents or one dollar per 100 11*., the ' . steins and leaves of all the cereal grasses , should be preserved fivin damage by ex. posure to the elements, and used for win| tering stock. Sheep are kept all winter ; on straw alone, by the large wheat grow, era in Western New York; and so are mares and colts and cattle. (Jood barns, . sheds and stables are not so common ns . they ought to be, and nc farmer who has ^ the means to make these useful buildings I , should l>e without them. They will pay a high interest on their cost, greatly ocon( omizc fodder, and operate to improve our , live stock.?Cultivator. ( , Heaves.?" Bellowsod" Horses. Messrs. Editors : I have notices! several i very interesting articles in the Cultivator, < ujK>n the various subjects, but have not ' as yet, seen anything recommended as a cure for 44 Bellow sed " Horses. I would 1 Ihj very much obliged if any gentleman would publish a remedy for the nlwve j mentioned disease, as there are several horses in uiy neighlnirhood afflicted with it. Very Respectfully, B. J. H.vvks. Lexington, S. C., May, 1852. Remark.?We suppose our correspon! dent alludes to the disease generally known I as "//caer*," for which a writer in the Boston Cultivator gives the following rem THE GREAT BRITISH QUARTERLIES AND BLACKWOOD'S MAGAZINE. I HPORTANT REDUCTION IN THE RATEH OF POSTAGE ! 1 LEONARD MCOTT & CO., No. 54 Gold St., New York. Continue to publish the following British 'eriodiculs, viz; ^ VheLondonQuarlerly Rerirte (Conservative) Vhe Edinburg Rn iew (Whig), r rhr North British Review (Free Church), Vhe. Westminster Review (Liberal), and ti llackwuxVs Edinburgh Magazine (Tory). 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I Graham" will eontinuo to he 'HIE FA- ' I rORIT OF THE ITBI.ir. both In Ho ?f 1 tetorlal and literary ehnrnetor while th?\ I I xllrnordinnry ihercaae of the amount of LI . ading matter will inaare It a atill wider || Ceplra 8 dollar* Two rnp(<-a?4, It Ivc rnpic* . 10;dollr.ra Eight eo ia J | ollare ami Tan o?p?aa for 20, dollar* ami 1 \ n extra eopv to the pcraon Mailing th<> lub of ten aqborlbara. | i fJEORE R (IR All AM, I Na. 184 Cheatuut Street, Philadephia Pa. I I