The globe. (Huntingdon, Pa.) 1856-1877, July 12, 1865, Image 1

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liobt.
HUNTINGDON, PA.
Vor the Globe.]
Lines on the Death of John A. Delman,
Co. C, Penna. Light Artillery.
All who knew this youthful soldier,
Knew that he was brave and good;
None in battle fierce or bolder—
There he firm, undaunted stood.
When they offered to detail him—
"No," said he, "I will not stay ;"
No persuasion could detain him,
tie must join the dead affray,
T~Vhere the bullets showered around him—
!Perforated were his clothes;
At Antietam there they-found him,
Timing death to meet the foo.
At Chancellorsville, hie next engagement,
Escapeannburt ; discharged, returned.
The foe again our State invaded,
A helping hand again he turned.
When, Lie service no more needed,
In six months came home again;
But his country's call he heeded,
Rallied round the flag again.
At Cedar Creek was prisoner taken
And carried to that horrid den
To meet the pinching of starvation,
At Salisbury in an open field.
There they lay without a shelter,
Comrades dying all around ;
lie with others and John Fletcher,
Dug them berths beneath the ground
Then when starved and almost frozen
The rebels asked him to enlist .
In their army to induce him,
But be firmly did resist.
'No," said he, "liut you may shoot me,
II will ne'er desert my flag;
'Starving, dying for my country,
But I no'er will serve your rag!"
"Then he was paroled and rescued,
'By a furlough to come home.
To Baltimore they then transferred him,
But died, alas! on return.
But it is a consolation,
That he died in.Chriatien hands,
'Though the effects of the starvation
Quite destroyed his ndble mind.
Now, his honored dustlies. buried
In cemetry of Loudon Park.
With pride his deeds shall be remembered—
:, Though 'tie bard with him to part.
• J. L. A.
Alexandria, Pa., June 26, 1865.
The - President and the South Caro
lina Delegation.
'lnteresting Account of the Interview
On Saturday afternoon, a delegation
.from South Carolina, consisting of the
following named persons, had an in.
Lerview with the President, by ap
pointment : Judge Frost, Isaac E.
Holmes, George W. Williams, W. H.
Gilliland, J. A. Steinmeyer, Frederick
Richards, William Whaley, James H.
Taylor, R. H. Gill and Joseph A.
Yates.
The President said it was his inten
tion to talk plainly, so there might be
.no misunderstanding. Therefore it
were better they should look each oth
er full in the face, and not imitate the
-ancient augurs, who, when they met
one would smile at their suc
cess in deceiving the people. He said
if this -Union was to be preserved, it
must be on the,principle of fraternity,
both the Northern and Southern States
maintaining certain relations to the
government. ,A State cannot go out
of the Union, and therefore none of
them having gone out, we must deal
with the question of' restoration and
not reconstruction. He suspected that
he 'was a better State rights man than
some of those now present.
31r. Holmes—You always claimed
to be. [Laughter.]
The President replied—Re always
thought that slavery could not be sus
-Wined outside the Constitution of the
United States, and that whenever the
experiment was made it would be lost.
Whether it could or could not he was
for the-Union, and if slavery sets itself
alp to control the Government, the
Government mast triumph and sla
very perish. The institution of slavery
- made the issue, and we might as well
meet it like wise, patriotic and honest
men. All institutions must be subor
dinate to the Government, and &a
-very has given way. He could not, if
he would, remand it to its former sta
tue. Ho knew that some whom ho
-now addressed looked upon him as a
great people's man and a radical ; but
'however unpleasant it might be to
them, he had no hesitation in saying
that before and after he entered public
life he WWI; opposed to monopolies, and
perpetuities and entails. For this be
used to be de,nouwed as a demagogue.
When they had a monopoly in the
south in slaves, though ho had bought
and held slaves, ho had noversold one.
From the Magna Charta we had deri
ved our ideas of freedom of speech and
,iibe,r.ty of the press and unreasonable
searches, and that private property
should not be taken for public uses
without just compensation. Ho bad
$2 CO
1 00
WILLIAM LEWIS, Editor and Proprietor.
VOL. XXI.
these notions fixed in, his mind, and
was therefore opposed to this class of
legislation. Being providentially
brought to his present position, he in
tended to exert the power and influ
ence of the Government so as to place
in power the popular heart of this na
tion. He proceeded on the principle
that the great masses are not like
mushrooms about a stump which wet
weather supplies. Ho believed this na
tion was sent on a great mission to
afford an example of freedom and sub
stantial happiness to all tho Powers of
the earth. The Constitution of the
United States, in speaking of persons
to be chosen as representatives in Con
gress says: "The electors of each State
shall have the qualifications requisite
for electors of the most' numerous
branch of the State Legislature." Here
we find a resting place. This was the
point at which the rebellion commen
ced. All the States were in the Union,
moving jn harmony; but a portion of
them rebelled, and to some extent par
alyzed and suspended, the operations
of their governments. There is a con
stitutional obligation resting upon the
United States Government to put down
rebellion, suppress insurrection and to
repel invasion: The slaves went into
the war as slaves, and came out free
men of color. The friction of the re—
bellion has rubbed out the nature and
character of slavery. The loyal men
who were compelled to bow and sub
mit to the rebellion should, now that
the rebellion is ended, stand equal to
loyal men everywhere. Hence the
wish of restoration and trying to got
back the States to the point at which
they formerly moved in' perfect har
mony. He did not intend to serve any
particular clique or interest. He world
say to the delegation that slavery is
gone as an institution; there was no
hope that the people of South Caroli
na could be admitted into the Senate
or in the House of Representatives un
til they bad afforded evidence by their
conduct of this truth. The policy, now
that the rebellion is snppressod, is not
to restore the State governments
through military rule, but by the peo
ple. While the war has emancipated
the slaves, it has emancipated a larger
number of white men. Ho would talk
plain.
The. delegation said that was what
they desired.
The President continued—He could
go to men who had owned fifty or a
hundred slaves and who did not care
as muchfor the poor white man as they
did for the negro. Those who own the
land have the capital to employ, and
therefore some of our Northern.friends
are deceived when they,.living afar off,
think they can exercise a greater con
trol over the freedmen than the South
ern men who have been reared where
the institution of slavery prevailed.
Now he did not want the late slave
holders to control the negro votes
against white men. Let each State
judge of the depository of its own po
litical power. He was for emancipa
ting the white man as well as the
black.
Mr. Holmes asked—ls that not al
together accomplished ?
The President replied that he did
not think the question was fully set
tled. Tho question as to whether the
black man shall be engrafted in the
constituency will be settled as we go
along. He would not disguise the fact
that whilo he bad been persecuted and
denounced at the South as a traitor,
he loved the groat mass of the South
ern people. He opposed the rebellion
as its breaking out and fought it every
where; and now ho wanted the princi
ples of the Government carried out
and maintained.
Mr. Holmes intorrupted by saying—
We want to get back to the same po
sition as you describe, as we are with
out law; no Courts arc open and you
have the power to assist us. •
The President replied—The Govern
ment cannot go on unless it is right.
The people of South Carolina must
have a Convention and amend their
constitution by abolishing slavery,
and tbis must he done in good faith ;
and. the Convention or Legislature
must adopt the proposed amendment
to the Constitution of the United
States which prohibits and excludes
slavery everywhere.'
Ono of the delegates said—We are
most anxious for civil rule, for wo have
had moro than enough of military des
potism.
The President, resuming, said • that
as the E.xecutive ho could only take
the initiatory steps to enable them to
do the things which it was incumbent
upon them to perform.
Another of the delegates remarked
that it was assumed in some parts of
this country that in consequence of the
rebellion, the Southern States bad for
feited their rights as members of the
confederacy, and that if they were re-
stored it could only be on certain con
ditions, one of which was that slavery
shall be abolished. This could be done
only through a convention.
Tho President repeated • that the
friction of the rebellion had rubbed sla
very out, but it would bo better to so
declare by law. As one of the dele
gates had ju . st remarked that tho con
stitution of South Carolina did not
establish slavery, it would be bettor to
insert a clause therein antagonistic to
slavery.
Judge' Frost said—The object of our
prayer is the appointment of a Cover
nor. The State of South Carolina will
accept these conditions, in order that
law and order may bo restored, and
that enterprise and industry may bo
directed to useful ends. We desire
restoration as soon as possible. It is
the part of wisdom to make the best
of circumstances, Certain delusions
have been dispelled by the revolution;'
among them, that slavery was an do
ment of political strength and moral
power. It is very certain that the old
notion respecting State rights, in the
maintenance of which those who, in
South Carolina made the rebellion, er
red, has ceased to exist. Another de
lusion, namely, that "Cotton is King,"
has also vanished in the mist. We are
to come back With these notions die- '
pelled, and with a new system of labor.
The people of South Carolina will cor
dially co-operate with the government
in making that labor• effective, and el
evating the negro as much as they can.
It is, however, more the work of time
than the labor of enthusiasm and fa
naticism. The people of the South
have the largest interest in the ques
tion. We are willing to co-operate for•
selfish, if for no higher reasons. We
have taken the liberty, encouraged by
your kindness, to throw out sugges
tions by which the policy of the gov
ernment will be most surely and ef
fecti rely subserved. I repeat that the
now system of labor is to be inaugura
ted by @obeli, sound and discreet judg
ment.---. The 11 e2YOCF; m•Ct-, itrnorant
their minds are much in play with lib
erty. They are apt to confound lib
erty with licentiousness. Their great
idea is, I fear, that freedom consists in
exemption from work. We will take
in good faith and carry out your in
tentions with zeal and the hope for the
host, and none will rejoice more than
the people of the South if emancipation
proves successful. Freedom to the
slave is freedom to the master, provi
ded you can supply a motive to indus
try. The people of South Carolina,
from their fidelity to honor, have sub
mitted to great sacrifices. They en
dured all. - We aro defeated and con
quered by the North, who are too
strong for us. The same good faith
Which animated them in the contest
will not be found wanting in their loy
al pledge of support to the govern
ment. There may- grow out of this
blessings which you have not foreseen;
and some pleasant rays now illumine
the horizon. I suppose the oath of
allegiance will be taken with as much
unanimity in South Carolina .as any
where else, and we will submit to the
condition of things which Providence
has assigned, and endeavor to believe,
"All discords of harmony not understood,
AU partial evil, universal good."
We cheerfully accept the measure
recommended; and would thank you
to recommend, at your convenience, a
Governor to carry out the wishes you
have expressed.
President Johnson asked the dele
gates to submit whom they would pre
fer as provisional Governor.
To this they replied that they had a
liSt of five men,viz: Aiken, McElhanoy,
Boyce, Col. Manning (late Governor),
and B. F. Perry. All of them were
spoken of as good men, but had been
mere or less involved in the rebellion.
Mr. Perry was a district judge in the
confederacy until within a few week's
of its collapse, and it was said he had
always boon a good Union man and of
strict integrity. The people certainly
would respect him, and he could not
fail to ho aceeptAle.
Tho President said ho know Benja•
min Perry very well, having served
with him in Congress. There was no
spirit of vengeance or vindictiveness
on the part of the Government., whose
only desire was to restore the relations
which formerly existed. lie was not
now prepared to give them an answer
as to whom he should appoint, but at
the Cabinet meeting on Tuesday next
he would repeat the substance of the
interview, with a . hope LW - the restora
tion which the gentlemen present so
earnestly desired.
The delegates seemed to be much
pleased with the proceedings, and lin
gered for some time to individually
converse with the President.
ta^When whiskey's in, stomach's
out, as the drunkard said when he
felt "sick."
HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1865.
-PERSEVERE.-
Republlsb,l by Request.
TRAMP, TRAMP, TRAMP
In the prison cell I sit,
Thinking, mother, dear, of you,
And our bright and happy home so far away,
And the tears they fill my eyes
Spite of all that I can do, .
Tho' I try to cheer my comrades and be gay,
CLIORIIS-
Tramp, tramp, tramp, the boys arc marching,
0, cheer (Ili comrades they will come ;
And beneath the starry flag
We'shall breathe the air again,
Of the freehand in our own beloved home.
In the battle front wo stood
When their fiercest charge they made,
And they swaiit us off a hundred men or more
But before we reached their lines,
They wore driven back dismayed,
And we heard the cry of vict'ry o'er and o'er•
So within the prison cell,
We are waiting for the day
That shall come to open wide the iron door,
And the hollow eyes grow bright,
And the poor heart almost gay,
As we think of seeing home and friends once
more.
Value of an Ideas
"A penny for your thoughts," says
the old saw, and the valuation was
doubtless full compensation for those
that occupy some mon's minds. But
thoughts are worth more than a penny
nowadays, and the ideas mihich are
suggested by thought represent mil
lions. The man who got the idea of a
clothes•wringer made money; Wilson
of thO sewing machine, which bears
his name; Horace Thayer, who makes
the blacking boxes with wooden bot
toms; the inventor of the swinging
eigar-lighte'r which we see in every
store; all these can bear testimony to
the value of ideas, as connected with
articles in daily use, relating to the
improvements or entire supersession
of them by better ones. No one
should be deterred from putting his
ideas into some tangible shape from
the supposition that the field of in.
vestigation has been exhausted. "My
son," said a dying farmer, "there is a
treasure bidden in our fields, set to
- Zttru tic tvz - :I L
but found no gold; instead, upon the
year ensuing the fields that had been
so thoroughly upheaved returned a
thousand fold the seed that had been
sown. It is thus with icleas-thought
breeds them, and from them may
spring the one golden beam which all
men seek. Some men's ideas run
upon perpetual motion; these arc idle
dreamers seeking to accomplish what
the laws of nature forbid; but others,
more practical, turn their attention to
the arts, to the sciences, and to real
progress. These are they Who shall
win rewards. Not pence, but pounds;
not shillings but dollars, attest in hun
dreds of instances the value of an idea
as applied to improvements in the arts.
Scientific American.
"THE SHORTEST WAY TO THE
—Somo twelve years ago, Napoleon,
Ind., was celebrated for two things—
one for the carousing propensities of
its citizens, and the other for the great
number of cross roads in its vicinity.
It appears that an Eastern collector
had stopped at Dayton to spend the
night, and get 3orno information re
specting his future course. During the
evening he became acquainted with an
old drover, who appeared posted as to
the geography of the country, and the
collector thought ho might as well in
quire in regard to the best route to
different points to which ho was des
tined.
"I wish to go to Greenfield," said the
collector; "now which is the shortest
way ?"
"W - 611, sir," said the drover, "you
had better go to Napoleon, and take
the road leading nearly north."
The traveller noted it down.
"Well, sir, if I wish to go to Edin
burg?"
"Then go to Napoleon and take the
road west."
"Well, if I wish to go to Vernon ?"
"Go to Napoleon and take tho road
sou th west."
"Or to Indianapolis?" added the col.
lector, eyeing the drover closely, and
thinking he was being imposed on.
"Go to Napoleon, and take the road
northwest."
The collector looked at his note
book—every direction had Napoleon
on it. He began to feel his dander
rise and ho turned ofreo more to the
drover with,
"Suppose, sir, I wautod to go to the
devil?"
Thodrovor never smiled, but scratch•
ed his head, and after a moment's
hesitation said :
"Well, my dear sir, I don't know of
any shorter road you can talc() than
to go to Napoleon/'
1363-.11 your wife paints, and you slap
her face for it, what town does your
ungallant act resemble? Bat-ou-rouge,
to be sure.
~.
(•fe: 'Al'z'.; I': ~. _ , --',.'%''.; 1: - ., - - - ;'1. .
ti>. ..,.• 4 \
I ' '
.. .
\ •': , I E '.•
' , I • , 9%.
,•.:.!,
The Pyramid of Drink. I
"Wo-tro-hic--tvon't you help mo up ?
No•no•htc—l can't help you up, bar—
But I'll lay—bin—down alougsido of you."
The operation of drink, in its vari
ous degrees, may be represented by a
pyramid, thus :
6 •Tipsy.
5. Very Fresh. ** T. Very Tipsy
4. Fresh. *'.":'* 8. Drunk
OEM
3. Lively. ****** 9. Very Drunk
=
2. Comfortable ******** 10. Beastl3
=
1. Sober. *********** 11. Deadly
.SOBRIETY. - The sober moments
which immediately succeed to dinner
arc the most miserable in existence.—
The languor, the sense of utter ineffi
cacy, mental and bodily, are dreadful.
Ayer a few glasses you ascend the
first step of the pyramid, and become
comfortable. In this state you aro not
much disposed to talk. There is a
tranquil luxury in your feelings, and
a reverie comes on, which if you drink
no more, is likely to terminate in sleep.
A philosopher seldom passes this
point except in company.
Drink on, and step up to lively. - 2
Now yoft begih to talk : and your re
marks are smart and pertinent. You
have the reasoning power in high per
fection. This may be considered as a
mental aurora, announcing that the
scone of fancy is about to rise from the
"purple wave."
Pansu.—`hero is more fire and color
in your ideas now,Jor the sun is risen.
You grow more eloquent and less log
ical. Your jokes are capital—in your
estimation. Your perceptions still
tolerably clear, beyond yourself.
VERY Fansm—Your conVersation is
more colored. Your eloquence is im
passioned, and you overwhelm your
companions with a flood of talk. You
begin to suit the action to the word.
Ideas not quite coherent, but language
nrsv.—Now on the top of the py
ramid you begin to grow giddy. Ges
tures very vehement, and epithets very
much exaggerated. Argumentative
but not rational. Words considerably
abridged, and ideas lamentably dim.
VERY Tirsy.—You find out that you
have a turn for vocal music, and re
gale your friends with a song. Speech
ify in incoherent, language, and evince
a most decided tendency to mischief
and locomotion. Proud as a peacock,
stout as a lion, and amorous as a dove.
DRUNK.—Per;ersely quarrelsome,
and stupidly good natured. Dealing
much in shake and knock-downs.—
Tongue stammering, and feet very un
steady.
VERY DRUNK.—Abortive efforts to
appear sober. See everything double.
Balance totally lost, you drift 'about
like a ship in a hard gale. Vocabulary
reduced to a few interjections. -
BEASTLY.—Head and stomach topsy
turvy. Eyes fixed and glaring. Utter
incapacity of speech and locomotion,
accompanied with an indistinct yet
horrid consciousness of your situation.
DEAnr.y.--An apoplectic sleep, And
confused dreams of the devil, or your
creditors.
LADY ETIQUETTE(?).—The author of
"Sketches in Paraguay" gives us this
fragrant morsel : Everybody smokes
in Paraguay, and nearly every female
above thirteen years of ago chows. I
am wrong. They do not chow, but
put the tobacco in their mouths, keep
it there constantly, except When eat
ing, and instead of chewing roll it
about with their tongues and suck it.
Only imagine yourself about to salute
the rich red lips of a magnificent little
fiche, arrayed in satin and flashing
diamonds; she puts you back with one
delicate hand, while with the fair to
per fingers of tho other, she draws
forth from her mouth a brownish black
roll of tobacco, quite two inches long,
looking like :a monstrous grub, and
depositing the savory morsel on the
rim of your sombrero, puts up her
face, and is ready for your salute.
I have sometimes seenover,doli--
oath foreigner turn with a shudder of
loathing, under such circumstances,
and get the epithet of el savaco (the
savage) applied to him by the offended
beauty for this sensitive squeamish
ness. However, one soon gots used to
this iu Paraguay, whore yoli are per
force of custom obliged to kiss every
lady you are introduced to; and one•
half you meet are really tempting
enough to vender'you reckless of con
sequence; you would sip the dew of
the proffered lips in the fa.ce of a to•
bacco battery—even the double dis
tilled "honey dew" of old Virginia.
VZ-"Joining hands in matrimony"
—a custom originated by pugilists
shaking hands before they fight.
TERMS, $2,00 a year in advatice.
Gail Hamilton in her direct and for
cible, 'but not always elegant, style,
sometimes advances sentiments which
wo cannot approve; but the following
practical view of religion commends
itself to every one who desires to live
a truly. Christian life :
"We want a religion that softens the
steps, and tunes the voice to melody,
and fills the eye with sunshine, and
checks the impatient exclamation and
harsh rebuke; a religion that is polite,
deferential to superiors, courteous to
inferiors, and considerate to friends; a
religion that gess. into a family, that
keeps the husband from being spiteful
when dinner is late—keeps the wife
from fretting when the husbandtraeks
the newly-washed floor with his mud
dy boots, and makes the husband mind
ful of the scraper and the door-mat—
keeps the mother patient when the
baby is cross; amuses the children as
well as instructs them; promptly looks
after the apprentice in the shop, and
the clerk behind the counter, and the
student in the office, with a fatherly
care and motherly love, setting the
solitary in families, and introducing
them to pleasant and wholesome so
ciety, that their lonely feet may not
bo led into temptation. We want a
religion that shall interpose continual
ly between the ruts and gullies and
rocks of the highway of life, and the
sensitive souls that are travelling over
them.
ED=
"We want a religion that bears hea
vily, not only on the exceeding rascal
ity of lying and stealing—a religion
that banishes short measures from tho
counter, small baskets from the stalls,
pebbles from tho cotton bags, clay
from the sugar, chiccou from. the cof
fee,- otter-from butter, beet juico from
vinegar, alum from bread, strychnine
from wine, water from milk, and but
tons from the contribution box. Tho
religion that is to save the world will
not make one half a pair of shoes of
good leather and the other of poor . lea
_ther_so_thatAke.first_shall redound to
the maker's credit, and the see - o - fid - o
his cash; nor if the shoes be promised
on Thursday morning, will it let
Thursday morning spin mit till Satur
day night. It does net send the little
boy, who has come for the daily quart
of milk, to the barnyard to see - the
calf, and seize the opportunity to skim
off the cream ; nor does it surround
stale butter with fresh, and sell the
whole for good; nor sell off tho slack
baked bread upon the stable-boy; nor
'deacon' the apples.
The religion that is to sanctify the
world pays its debts. It does not bor
row money with little or no purpose
of repayment, by concealing or gloss
ing over the fact. IL looks Upon a
man who has failed iu trade and con
tinues to live in luxury, as a thief. It
looks upon him who promises to .pay
fifty dollars on demand, with interest,
and neglects to pay fifty dollars on de
mand, with, or without interest, as a
WHEN WHEAT SHOUI.D 'BE OUT.—
There is a difference of opinion among
farmers as to the proper time for cut
ting wheat. Those who have investi
gated the matter are convinced-that
.rain should be taken off before the
heads are fully ripe, and the following
reasons aro given : Wheat is composed
of gluten, starch, and bran. Gluten is
the nourishing quality of the grain,
Makes the flour stick together in - the
hands of the baker, and gives weight
to the grain and there is the - greatest
quantity of gluten in the grain just
- when' the straw is yellow two or three
joints from the ground, the head turns
downward, and you can squeeze a
grain between your fingers without
getting any milk from ft. Every clay
the wheat stands after this stage of its
ripeness, the gluten decreases in quan
tity and the bran increases in thick
ness.
SOME ONE speaking of a beautiful
girl with enthusiasm, said he was al
most in love with her, though her un
derstanding was by no moans
`Pooh I." said Goethe, laphing, "as if
`love had anything to do with under
standing. We love a girl for very dif
ferent things than understanding. We
love her for her beauty, her youth, her
mirth, her contidingeese, her charac
ter, with its faults, caprices, and heav-
en knows what other inexpressible
charms; but we do not love her under
standing. Her mind we eeteeni (if it
is briiliant),and it may greatly elevate
her in our opinion; nay, more, it may
enchain us when we already love.
But heir understanding is not that
whi,ch awakens and inflames our pas
sions." What a brute Goethe wash
21*-A lady, speaking of the gather
ing of lawyers, to dedicate a tfew court
house, said she supposed they had
gone "to view the ground where they
must shortly lie,"
NO. 2.
Work Day Religion.
TAE -IQ3E3M,
JOB PRINTING OFFICE,
THE ' u GLOBE JOB: OFFICE" . to
_l_ the moot complete of any In the country, and poet
Bosses the meet ample fectlltles for promOYcginf
the but style, everyvariety o r Job .P3lo[ll - 04 Pbit fq
HAND BILLS, .
• PROGRAMMES,
BLANKS,
PQSTENS,
BILL !MAD
GARDE ;
CIRCULARS,
BALL 1101afg,
LABELS, &C.., &C . ., &AS
CALL AND 7 , AMINE OPERICCP7B OP Imlay
AT LEWIS' BOOK, BTA'iIOKKB't h hXUSIO STORE
FARMER AND 'HOUSEKEEPER;
SUMMER Fauna {Fool) FOR "firE'
HEALTE.—Acids promote the sepal's,
tion of the bile .from the blood; which'
is then passed from the system, thus•
preventing fever, the prevailing disea.
see of summer. All fevers are bilious,
that is, the bile is in the blood. Whafr
ever is antagonistic of fever is cooling..
It is a common saying that fruits are'
"cooling," and also berries of every de
scription. It is because the acidity
which they contain aids: in separating,
the bile from the blood, that is, aids .
purifying the blood. Hence the great
yearning for greens and lettuce, and
salads in the early spring, these Wag:
eaten with vinegar; hence, 'also, thee
taste for something sour—for lemons.
—on an attack of fever. But ttis
ing the case, it is easy to see that we
nullify the good effects of fruits arid
berries in proportion as we eat them
with sugar, or even sweet milk or'
cream. It we eat them in their natu
ral state—fresh, ripe, perfect—it is al
most impossible to eat too many—to'
eat enough to hurt us—especially if we
eat them without taking any liquid. •
REMEDY FOR SORREL.—A correspon.
dent of the New York Farmers' CIA,
writing from Wisconsin asks : What is
the best method of ridding the soil of .
sour grass, vinegar plant, or sorrel, , as
it is called by these names—there are•
many farmers troubled with it, and a.
great many ways and plans have been ,
tried.
To which Solomon Robinson replies
Have you tried dressing the land with:'
caustic lime, at the rate of thirty bush
els of the powdered lime, freshly shili , -
ed, to the acre, spread upon the our-'
face with wheat seed, and harrowed in-:
the same time ? Have you "tried wood
ashes, a pint upon each hill of corn or
potatoes ? Have you tried deep fall
plowing, so as to turn up some of thet
strong clay of the subsoil, and letting
that pulverize in winter, and them
seeding it to timothy and clover in the.
spring? Afterward, top-dress the•
every autumn
rass with manure free.
_ _
rom .1 sera, arditgiliFifithlimei7
ashes, or finely powdered clay—the de- •
brie of an old brick yard is good—and -
if some of these remedies won't cure.'
your land, you may as well emigrate,
To CURE WORMY Timm—The fol—
lowing recipe is published in the New'
York Evening Post :
With a large gimlet or augur bore
into the body of the tree, just below
where the limbs start, in the places,.
groove inclining downwards. With a
small funnel pour a shilling's worth of
,quicksilver into each groove. Peg it
up closely, and watch the result, Had
it been done when the sap had first ,
started on its upward circuit it would
have boon more efficacious—yet even'
now it will greatly abate-the nuisance. ;
The plan was first died for a wormy
apple tree by Samuel Jones, Esq., 4
Canaan, Columbia, N. Y., and wit
entire success, It is believed that, fel!'
from damaging the trees, it will evert'
add to the foliage. In the ease above'
mentioned the cure was surpassing,•
not only the fruit tbecoming perfect
and beautiful, but the very leaf seemed
to,grow larger and far more dark and
glossy.
SURFACE MANURING. For many
years it has been advocated and provt
ed by the most indisputable evidence'
that surface manuring of the land ies
the best mode to apply dung in a gen- -
eral sense, and that some of our best
farmers had adopted it with respect to
many of their crops.
We notice in a late-number of they.
Genesee Farmer, a short communists=.
tion from that intensely practical far ,
mer, John Johnston, on this subject ;
in which be sustains, in a few wordi
all that has been said in its favor, to
wit: "I have used manure, only as a,
.
top dressing, for the lest twerity-84
years, ip4 40 think one load U 404 10
that way is worth far more that! ttq
plowed under our stiff land."
To PRESERVE SMALL FRIIITS
OUT COOKlNG.—Strawborries, raspberz
ries, blackberries, cherries, and peach
es can be preserved in this manner
Lay the rips fruit in broad dishes, and
sprinkle over it the same quazitity
sugar used in cooking it. Set it in the
sun or a moderately heated Oved, - hni
til the juice forms a thick syrup" with
the sugar. Pack the fruit in tumblers,
and pour the, syrup over it: Paste
writing paper over the glasses, and
set them in a cool, dry place. Peaches
must bo pared and split, and cherries
stoned. Preserved in this Manner,
the fruit retains much more of its fin ,
.
vor and healthfulness than woke&
A Mar.—Whitewash cattle
borsestalls, and the inside of hog,pene
and heneries, as it renders them more
healthy, and prevents the animals and
fowls Trope being infested with filthy
and 4oublesome vermin.