THE CHRISTIAN SUN. IN ESSENTIALS, UNITY ; IN NON-ESSENTIALS, LIBERTY; IN ALL THINGS, CHARITY. Volume XXXIII. SUFFOLK, VA., FRIDAY APRIL 16a 1880. .Xiiiribt'f 10. THE MARBLE CROSS. by franklin w. fish. A plain whit* atone, a mound of green, A aimple roae-tree blooming foi^ A name that ia but arldom Beer.; An age, a date, ia "hat ia there. Yet underneath ia buried all A heart’a devotion, true loye’a truat, A form too early turned to dnat, And doae beaide the churchyard’a wall, Where grow the lichen and the moas. And tiny ferna, ao quaint and arnall, There stands a lonely marble croai. An idle brook runs murmuring bv,— l The woodland’a morn and even Bong— A passing atranger’a casual sigh, That never moves the bosom long ; Perhaps a field-flower kindly thrown By some young band in lieu of tears, Through all these long and weary years, Is all the tribute it has known. While far away another weeps, Brooding upon the silent stone. There were two hearts, but one has flown; Two buds there w^-e, but one has gone. The untimely Irost, too early blown, Blighted the flower it touched upon. It withered hs the lily dies At the first chill that autumn gives, To every geulle thing that lives And while he looked in dumb surprise The criinsou fled Iroin closing lips Love Faded From the aiure eyes, Though lingering 'till their last eclipse. Alone he watches still, and waits, Between the sunset and the daw n, •Till death shall ope the pearly gates To all who wander here forlorn. And in a garden Far above, Where never Frost can enter in, Because it knows not grief or sin, He hopes at last to clasp his love, To rear the lily on his breast, To hear the som of the mother I e..itii. Land is cheap, and there is a : wide area that awaits the tiiier. The I back may ache, and the skin boater in the sun, but the bread can be made j without fear of failure, if the laborer | will be faithful to his ealiiiig. It ! needs less wisdom and forethought : than patient industry, and the man with a common mind may eat his harvest in peajp."—Ex. CULTIVATION OF ONE ACRE OF PEANUTS. Spread forty cart loads (or more j will not hurt) of woods mould. Fal low or flush as for corn. Sow broad cast twenty bushels of agricultural lime, and harrow in well. Lay off in furrows with shove! plow three feet apart. (This is to break the ground for roots to strike in.) Then, with single turning plow, run on.each side of furrow about six inches from it to make a ridge, open ridge, as for corn from one and a half to two inches deep. Drop two shelled kernels eighteen inches apart. Care should be taken, in shelling the lints, not to break tlie thin skin. Cover lightly. Plant between the 1st and 120th of’ May. The drier the land, the better. 1. Cultivate wheu peas show one and a half to two inches above ground. | Side down with single plow its close | as can be done without cutting roots , of plants. 2. Weed with hoe as for corn when necessary. 3. When plants begin to run, throw earth to them with double shovel plow, running once on each side of row. 4. Bun tooth cultivator between rows, as occasion may require, to keep down grass. o. Haul earth to each bunch with hoe before pens begin to run too much, and have grass taken from around the plants by hand, ltun single plow between rows to drain off water from the peas.—ReHgious Her ald. Kicking Cows.—I have tried all itho various ways to prevent cows I from kicking while milking, and have found none more harmless, easily np ! plied and as effectual as the Dutch or Holland method, which is to take a | small rope about four feet long, aud put it once around both hind legs, just above the gambrel joints, with a slip knot; draw tight enough to bring both legs firmly together; wind the rope two or three times between tho legs, around this rope or noose, draw ' ing it tight, aud fasten the rope by a j half hitch. In North Holland this is ! pract ised on all the cows at every milk j ing. (They are driven to the milking d, where stakes are driven