The Montrose Democrat. (Montrose, Pa.) 1849-1876, February 28, 1872, Image 1

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• :•-..ntitevi a . NICHOL* - -
„ t ilismarwisk , wart, Itedttleti;"efiCtiiitfitir,'Dye•
Ltpdetit, tiftleco.ranty
art.cles,Pateot ileCtlnes, Perrameriand'TolletAct
rsrprescrtpthme carcfally cockponaded.."
ek,BlocktAlttotlvV".?m. • t•-
IL" Busse,. • , - 4 . Utt..7 : lcy.s.
11 r,el , *, ll rit. - • • 11- ,
OIL D. A. LATIIIIWP.
Ad.t.t.t.n. Kma . nto Taena as. BATfill, at Msetot
Chestnut strait. Call and cossalt la all Ch
nmlci
Illssases.•: ,
Voatrosraitt:lt'"(l.—ltal—tr.
e-117 JAR
t i t lrlAr •w° o lll ,l o °- f lO- tP IE9 804dm
' bQkq hTVR. olen,
UonroVi _ ABA — Nazu•L
' '
-
-" 113 E; LDWIEII,
Arran:my - sad Cowziort JO LAW, Great hind. Peon
sylvanta.
B. L. BALDBIN,
Ayres = at valli
UOltra•C, August 33, '
t:. • -:LCK13111.11-ail.ESIEL
it Homers at UV, OCICI , No. Vi La than - aims Avenue,
Scranton. Ps. Practlee Is the revere Contts o l'Li•
ulna eel Saegnehatatta Cantata'
r. & Loom,
St, antes. Sept. fth..1371...—tt
W. I. CUOSSUON.
.httorney at Law, °Mee at the Court llotttq to Ibe
easetzdtxtottefa °Mee.W::A.CSOStrtli.
Notarose, Sept. 6th, IS7l.—d.
NcKswzis, Pa C. riIMMO?,
111c1LENZIV, turnicwr.
In Dry Goode, Clothing, Ladies and /Masts
des Shnes. also, agents for the great American
Tessand Coffee Company. [Montrose,
DI& W. W. SIKITH,,,,
f 100915 91:bladrtoMfii.; or.xidem 92st of tbe
fter499,9an printing, ante. OMee honer from 9A. 39.
to 4 P. ■. Montrose, Mon, 1871—tf
'THE 84111113E8ilat Ws; Hat!
°barley Morris Is the barber. who madame yoar bee to
nrder: Cots brown, black and grirelei Asir, lb hls
urbeejuet up stairs. These you will ell Mut., peer
• Stereo store. below MeHeuzies—jast ate door..
_Montrose, June T.lB7l.—tr C. M0R111.9.
J. U. & A. IL IacCOLLITEI,
Arroosors -sr Ulm Omni me the -Cask. Montrose
Pa. SlontfOß.TfeJ:.ll.Ms ,"j n U
J. D. VA!II.,
Forcer celiac rifletibtiat sato Setifnivit, nu permanently
leaned hicreelfttlXicittozeSPCl where be will prompt.
1, attend to all =lister bleftfolbssina with which he may
to faceted. Orllce and ceetderiee crest of the Coast
Ilesse, - near Fitch 4Preteen's eke.
Febetattrslo7l.
LAW OFFICE' •
Yrrcil WATitiN, ittallteT l saLaw, at the Olt once
or Hawke- at 67te.1411antrose, Pa. .
.k P. Fara. • • , :.[Jan• ' 71 4. w. w, ":/T•cog•
CII ARLES 111.251'0DDAUD.
Dealer to floats, atfitStotat, Thu and Caps. Leather and
Eindtoga, StiltittereetOstAlttor below Boyd's Store.
Work meth, to tittle, art4l repairing 4one neatly.
Ileutrose. Jan. t. mu. r •
{staiigo nuEssma::
Shop In the new Postoffler
who
where be wni
6e found reedy to attend all who may want anything
In hie line. Mootroee, Ps. Oct. IS, ISO.
01114;,911V:=DAVVON; 4 4 "
TEITSICTAN & SURGEON, t•adcn kits senders to
3 4 1V II I=n . 11 of G o r i t=%V e ciAlp i fiff4o , ! . t.r .
sopt:lst, 180.— tf
A. 0. WAIWEN,
ATTORNEY Aar LAW. ficanliy. itaerrebttop
-led F , .111.; ,attpuled tn• - er d
~.nor below Dares State. , Hantre , e.Pa. [An. 1. •GQ
1111. C. SITITON,
.
Auctionear„ and Insurance Agent,
aal esti • i Friendswills. Pa.
F. S. GILIIERT, •
"Z‘vi.aticia3:eor.
Great. lbend, Pa
I GG
avgl CP
• „.'.."..A31111
Btiotioaoor.
- Aug. 1, Ar 69. „ Itroaktra, Ts
J01L.% 411101FE1, 5, : -
/MiIIIIO7..ZAIILETAILOII, Montrose, Pi. Shop over
Chandler's ttore.._Atiorderslllled to Ann-rata styba.
Caning done on alai/Snake. sad warranted to St.
:I.lsiiiitilik ideIAUFACTIMEM4'..
• e assuraret, MOntmle. ra: tae M
I
STROVICO: Cs 'BROWN,
IPIVUL '.A1221;213. AC
Mildness attandedtoprumpaly.anlalt terms. Orrice
Ant deo; natibmt *Hal:arose Ilotol.r. WIM.I tide a
Inglaie,4veatto. lloatscor,4 i
Ittatuies &noun, 4.luar.r.s Ilavll.
„ 4113EiL TIIIMEIELI6 , - . ,
timat..iii.; cberacibi
Li q ueti.:Tiont4 two:kr. stags. Varnlslies,Wln • w
fibiss. Groceries, GlassWitre.-Wall and Window Pay
warottnan.ware, Lamps, Kerosene. Machinery 011%
ttasiii4‘lGtans, Anommition,_ lUdscs„ - Opectatlel
l i ltaatoniaane7 Goods, Jawalryi:Portn itc.- 4
bob= Sane eine most .I:matrons. extensive; and
waluatdo collections o, Goods In Sannetanno Co.—
. slabllsbcd ,„_ .111ontrore, Pa.
IV:rSEMMILE,
rgoisiztor AT LAW,'- taco -Over tbe4lore et • /1...
patbrop,tn the pea mock:- yinitrsrae,r. lartf69
DU. W.:L. 104PWILIDIVis •
ITTISICLAN liullGtol4, lenders prate/Coma
serriedto the 'citizens of Ecmtrote end rietatty—
Office et - hlerisideace, au the corner Gene &ire it
roc Fosihdry, ' 2 - . 1_ t - b45m.1..1t201:
L.
. ,
DP I E. L.
. GAlltujillggi ,
rtilradiSr- and iVISCLEON; licantinae. ii 'it. : bin.
especial attentlup•So dlaessca ,of Itio Mart - Ind
Dan:■ and all dorglealdta: Vette ovettr. D.
Dean.. !lords... B=lo Dlitel. 1 .- Vang.l.lDo).
H UNT siicorx
VVhoteeate &
DARDWARE, IRON,'
BUILDER'S.HAILDWAII,E,
• -
BINE DAIL; COMITERSDNr& BAILENICEs
RAILROAD & ALISINOADTPLIES;
FABRIAGE AMER& fatEISTE 'AND .
-BOXES. HOLM X7JlrB and WABZIERS,
PLATED DA-NDB. MALLEABLE
IBODA4IIII23S.BPDEES.- ,, ;
FELLOEB. SEAT SPINDLEB, BOWS &r:
ANVILS, VICES, STOCKS Ltd DIES, aSUOWB
CIBCCLAiC AIAMKEES.SLUKIKSMU2I7I4•44.
ATM
C LILLSAWS,BSLT/Ka.
' TACKLE BLOCES„ PLASTER PARIS .
R .
1/141211:: =LEM RIMIDSTONES.• •
FRESeIi WiNIItOW OUSS:LEATIIITZEnIatnNSIS
I• - SABISSNKVKA".P.. .
C rant* 10/tircli %ISO a: - 'if
IRMO .11110 1 11'
, PAPPlgzEiNonrx#o.itert44 2 l- , ,:, ,
CEtiviitaint.r. Speed ilia Doable It
bats ntd,G,eett New York StatelTallas4Aretmfue2
OhlitNaSonalftioilums t heldat.Mmik
1161,41 e 7 • •
int titiallnnerit,:liarytituiralid 14.141211,111taiP:
The
end inils shoSq.mpeietalan4eni mut
the re rum* toed =named n a metre tarty,
tent ef !ate Fithtne, eaMez . al!T !leartnii:Agn gi#
The ofiteclitefi lit ctkitediastatitti.tram: a. We
epee; to 'tide a Wehrle et. mellan; step; lam Inds*.:
lag Itself' to:l34o'We" atnt tight anil m e hoitr bm _
• tlne &Urn! apparatusle nerreet hro hraU,aa,ane
y)atent nib-tine, •Is bbyatle de be the etreaßeek'
retehneintmVateld;end yen eau delheeetem %hang
pereenr tellable in rreallall ,
fil4/51,8 Mn161,-
WONDER' 9 In 170117c9.;41tArei:: Pi;
Junior?'" ell.— 0 whom tow rop-1115.
to cotlD'that nave givetiiLiwavlK 0 litratrfer...
Pa., the midden eadaltlf the isle'of noto ,
ed nlooB,llol9llloolh4llon6ardfooloctimaikebefotict
p.eotaltiee•lo thibutdoestandtWall avant It . lter
1b°41 4 ag4dOrtMa itt,i,Vdt. to TeCtiVe ,
ue,ta.• Xl47l.2.o.*.Propfletat.
prior Syrup utile gore of . ; • -
iJ u biontrose N0v.1,1,71.
~ ` ~OC~S . `~DYIiCY:
.-PHAVILDIAN SONGS;
Some - roue" -prosumably , a missionary
.'Yom the*Madras Presidency;: but Ceittlitt
,ly a saholarand 4philanthropist,,lM4*,
halted in the Cornhill . "Mar,zine7 .
'per - on'Tirmitlien 2tilltraorigs, which. de ! ',
serves tha.attelition,of. all who are inter-'
'idea.lioetr,y, in theology, Orin the
ChaN4erof the, peoples of,,lndia;, :We
Elate seen nothing Of ancliiiseinating iu
terest fora longjittie;>-The paper-. itself
iti : i?t girt important*, and we intend
by and yto dissent from one Of its main
.conclusions;, It it, is gemmed es it were
with tmnslahOnslrom. songs which, as
we preitisanretl f . iires'fidk- songs : „known to
all the -:people -of Dravidian -stock, the
pat race of thirty Millions which speak
Tamil,
,Telotigoo, or :Operate; The:songs
; Were originally'coinpoied;:sio doubt: by
rhapsodists; the wandering minstrels wild
main over India, and,: .sitting : under' .
the trees,. chant - the popular 'epics and
hymns in high - pitched wailing voices like
sentient•Bolian harpers in the ears of. en- 1
chantedliiiiiniiiiida,whe sit or squat in
their white robes';' immoral e. far hours
Elie When, on. the oeburrence of some
really poetic pasasage or lofty appeal to.
God,: they rise for a Moment, fluttering,
quivering,: almost weeping • with exeite
ment and delight. Valmiki, the Indian
Heiner, was one of these ; and
Ilicrugh theyhave lost some of their ; old
faculty, - and theiriniprovisations are , no
loriger_epies they have gained, we suppose
from some change in their Mods of obser
--ration; a terrible pioficiencY in Satire, and
hit the popillartinemiesiand more espec
billy the 'English, with the aim of Beran
ger Or DeMuSset.' Whatever their origin,
hon - veer, certain of the hymns have be
come with -the Dravidians nations, house
hold words. "No one. will be quoted I
which does not pass from 'motif h to month,
or has not heen, gathered from the road
side
or,tempie gate.- Same' of - these we
give Were collected and -printed - in the
Curanese character by a German 'Mission- I
ary a few year's
they
; otherwise it is tot
known that they have.ever been printed,
even by the puttees of the country. They
are the property; of a minstrel caste,
known in Tamil as the - Satani, in Telugu
as the Chatale, and in Caranese as the
Dasiara," and in Bengalceas the Nothoks.
i,•rhe:s:are,bir kt l e d down from generation
to generation, entirely rira.vore, and from
the minstrels hare passed into public use."
More note worthy.. songs to become • the
songs ota peopie do not exist, nor could
we produCe evidence so conclusive as to i
the depth of a chase' which divides the
"'indef.) frop.the Western habit of mind, I
of tlie,radieal difference existing between
their daily thoughts. Theltritish soldier
aliOstsilksamongthese
teal-,,Aftay.rntSkialled ab
spinte:lv in,capab*af- underequitijfkg, :tar
inoro-of --enjoying; a song like 'largely
sold in the Tanta country and taught to
all the, children of the
,morethouglirru z.z.
ntit'iiieeisarily• cif me - iiaci.-LtatherB,-..!
W*. D. Lvir...
"God supreme and great
Dsrelbinot m Mortal flesh, nor bath he frame
Of substance elemental lie Is not
Confined in what the simple calla sod—
In Hut:lfara. and the minor host.
The Godhead is not even mind itself;
'Tis he, the Unereate, who khoWeth
Who neer began and never bath an end.
"But will that God bow down and dwell with
man—
Abide luthingklliallialk no , Wiltir-Or T
Therm not one, hut some, and separate
lie bath no end, nor had.begiuninp r • ,
Is one,ltan 'aiiite. , To Won elope • -
Should mortals offer prise and ,pra'yer: Poor
- - tools
"Just bow-to idoisr7they cannot discern ;1 ,
The high& things. As when Some treakly.man
WhO cannot iralk a Mile, is umeil , to pace -
Suck distant:a as lie can; do fools/mime
An image., Not to them theperfect bliss
Of knowing inner tkinpi. The wise man with
That God, the Outnistient essence, tills allaPace
And tinwAle: l 4nbat tru4 itir:end.l In
All thliti There is no God but be.
It thou wouldst loiship in the noblest way
Bring flowers-in th 7 band.. Their nattitsrtni:
COntentment, justice, wisdom.: Offer them
To titst,gp . mt escsntee—th eir setTet&God.
No stone can image God.. To bow to it
Is not to worship. Our wont rites connot,
Avail to compass the riward'or blip - '
That truederotites gives totbose who know."
The Sason'soldier, if a devout man,
might eo use the words oftanAsiatie king
audlioet tliattie Would eipreis nearly the,
same thoughts; bat of himself he would
be mute - and incapable, except when the
ichdi'were:presented. in the well accustom
ed wdrda ofAbe , Pealmist, of comprehend,.
iog them. Depitition and - habit p the
Dravidian, too; but be his another aid, the
habit of meditationkfrorkwbiett thirwriz
te6 dtall - eicatkliuoteterlincitin - a Din
doo of any Elias 'abielntely -free.?7 Indo- . ,
lent, Or rather fond of-sitting, with a keen
brain, 'nit-hob - 11s; no newipapels; ntd.f.sto
intents outside his village, deviling in "a
conntry.where patent is -always ,oppres
sise;tetto- 110 mastered except Zby Abel
scorn, kite inisnilery Weary 'orianall 'ex
citements, end Still oppressed by that fear
Of the -unknown, itesve deem, once
tormenter) all the Asiatic, races—though
the..slOngothis shaken it :off the Jim
deo, had or good: meditates ale - 48On; the
*hence and whither.. The great problems
of life interest him rie peline.trinte.rest the,
Englishman, gel he. embraces 'any
that}Sht, a ny afigma which seems to give
bita, relief, vith, : a grip of which :the
Western mind, distracted by many inter
esttp - seerristly - ixtpalile, Ire
;firmly Wig'', 070 muse of that lextraor
, dintpyflear conception.of sin; its ".ditinct
from crime, at winchidlll.indea races ap t .
pear to have =kid...though it' b' not a
Imminent feature itt thetroreedef tbiir
iqqpse reluctance to give , unsereinonial,-
'0
a 'straw may save, and Say their
'equally intgts9 istnistand,efscorA of
the very sites titey'yerwill 'omit;
llengal the meditation, has riuiltetl., in . a •
Peri:44off 60 of ieggnatiop; Ofriien
who can'ted no eeitaitity,
it were with 'gleams - tot satirk 'llron,ght ;
Ind among:the' -Pravislianii, biers' uottl4 -
seem to - be ailrekilt - ithpretsitaii='-cino'cif
. deep, .initnevable --tuu) 'Most -melancholy
certainty::Me destilly Ten,
ape tbans ittnatusitary tbelift4 ifalk
He, heart:lore .14 is aid . '
.
, 'ant frstp-mw .
,t;Mtrbitthile =eaten,
Hoy many'yet Ms/ be no Man mitynav
10,thli alone I kullej. MO know h 1! teat.:
2 That trouble emit embitters all the way.
;ts .yelgtiLt? b more than I can bear, but thou
MODITROE,
- 'OM% God, VhOLOPC# didst-bim ' liagord
pt elephants the 41tft,„enuat Aftl ma now
A. plea sed jam' , W./ire:hp:l,f prayet—omy eoul en
Chorea 0 Vishnic help Groat 'save
N'teretched Wad like mine!
• ' ~Thuou boldest up the earth and wave,
. i , ,•• Oh', send thy help In time!
'),Onst . Lord; my boyish, 'years were one long
lumgh they seemed to pass In play. For
4 ,y ;
Ii p but pain, In that It brings dlidaht -
Or od pod holy things. This very day
0 happy Isaresimua, hear my prayers,
awls . , from thy hew, on me bestow
The help that nnw to crave I humbly dare.
_ help and Seim before from life I go.
Moro& 0 Vishnu, help I &c. .
'But now, In sin and feebleness extreme,
Distress and pain are harder still to bear,
!cannot bear such woe For, like a stream,
It snrges overhead. Dost thou not care,
Purandall Villuila, In whose eye
All mm are one and equal I On tby throne,
0 king of birds; bow swiftly lost thou fly,
Lat, hear. with Joy, and take me for thy own.
' Choru,. 0 Vishnu, help t &c."
That help comes nevertheless through
prayer is strongly asserted in all these
hymns, more especially in the most re
markable of all, in .whieh the singer rises
to a lofty poetry both of thought and of
expression.. After sadly recounting in
low, wailing distichs, the sins the dead
has committed, the Rhapsodist goes on :
"Prayer. What though he sinned so much,
Or that his parents sinned?
, What though the sins' long score
Was thirteen hundred crimes?
Oh! let.tben every ono
Fly swift to Basva's feet.
Clurrut. Fly swift.
"The 'chamber dark of death
, Shall 'open to his soul,
The seas shall rise in waves,
Surround on every side.
But yet that awful bridge;
No thicker than a thread,
Shallstaid both firm and strong,
The fawning dragon's mouth
Is shut—lt brings no fear.
The Palaces of Heaven
Throw open all their doors,
Chorus!. Open all their doors.
"The thorny path is steep,
Yet shall his soul go safe
The silver piller stands "
' So near—be touches it,
He may Approach the wall.
The golden wall of heaven
f The burning piller's flame
bhallhave no belt for him.
Mere& Shall have no heat.
"Finial, OD, lel ns never doubt
That all bis sins are gone—
. That Damara for Hires,
Slap it be well with him.
Chorus. May it be
- Let htl he wet (with him.
Chorus Let all be
The doctrine of the highest Christian
minds, that thbyrefoge from earth in near
ness to the .Creator, is quite familiar to the
Drayidians, thongh sonic of the songs
contain an elaborate and subtle system of
morality. Heye areltro verses from one
of iltdOn im wadi the eiirisrian
Do initalt t hers as you would they should
do unto y very distinctly taught:
"The man who is rich, but his wealth gives not
Is worse than ha outcast indeed.
So he wise would poison's food. I wot,
Is worse than On outcast Indeed.
Who shuns not the hypomite's fearful lot
Is worse than Outcast indeed.
But 14 who would puff his good deeds one jot,
No outcast no vile in his greed.
- ' Chorus. Pariahs dwell, Sm.
"The man who his promise forgets to keep,
In Pariah rilLage should dwell,
Who *nes not hie rod i.e drain" to reap,
In Pariah 'tillage should dwell.
The man who ertn,lle, yet at eight can sleep,
In Pariah village should dwell.
Then he who in blood his right lianddare steep,
No Pariah binder In hell.
Chorus Pariahs dwell, .Ste."
The absolute prohibition of lying is the
more remarkable, became it is foreign to
the wholegenins of Hindooism, a creed
whose - philosoithie essence is that God
maybe lying tbroughont,and that enmity
be;illnsion, npd also because it, is the
Command which .Pall these races find it
hard to obey. A llindoo will turn celi
bate, or self-torturer, will resolve never to
speak. or never stand upright, and will
flever break,his TOW, but the resolve to
speak the truth always involves too sus
tained n strain; upon his mental energies.
We must quote one more poem, though
the proprietor of the "Cornhill" will real
ly hate a fair case of piracy to allege
n last tha "Speetatorf in which deep
religions feeling, feeling like that of the
best Onakers townrds Clod, and the best
Portjloyalists towards Christ, is mingled
with a. subtle Worldly humor which Eng
lish ,liymns of late years bare become
hopelessly devoid.
It is wonderfully diffi
cult, We abouhladd, to a Hindu° in his
highest and most ecstatic moments to
avoid a sly, hit at his woman kind, . There
is the Chiucethin spirit in the very laws
of Mono , _and; it is to th is momentdoubt-
Jul Wbellter the awful custom of Suttee
had not its root in a grim chuckle, that
imam' it no widow could „rejoice in her
"szuslatacriumcara
"If tliou sbouldst Imre a wife,
Trouble is thine,
If none should hless'your lire,
Trouble is thine,
If neither !rise nor witty,
Borrow nig tame;
13t,1U tome ifishe be pithy,
'DMTOIr Will COM%
Poi {hen, all gearding vain,
Sure trouble this.
She bringtuimmasured pan,. ;
Sore trouble this
aeril r • Neter. 9, my BOWS c aps peace ,
be thine
Unlirgtcat Mango's grace be mina
If afigryllie •fesigm:
. 6 11, clilidria'aluie 19 thee,
7- *. • Mourning comes too.
-_Bat If rio hielfu'hould
I'2- Mourning comes too
earning wealth and power
Pain 1111 s the cup.
mei/ ire a& Aid Poor,
i Sorrow cater;.
Though "math shottlabar door:
f arrow' enters.
Plahr-db,y strength and mire--
- Fain hi ipstore
GreSt hoard" the shelves shouliThmtr,
faints
Bat if esekuly you pray; ' •
hb sorrow Mal:
To Min who bears alwify.- , •
Mitsoaleitt, VialsiA;."÷
4Tours gnu
kr3 • o4:
• •- Yourjoy Isgrest:
Mora. Never, omy art Lt.?' -
That a people lure 0;4 liate , in them
Ole essential lildrit of goodness and of
WEDNESDAY, ti ‘ F t BETTAR* 1 28,1874
progress, would seem to . the Observerelear,
and the fact that therare not goOd can:
I only be explained by a' reference to the
severance which always exists 'between.
life and the mind's ideal, and to the result
of a popsiklar creed in which. symbolism
ran maPond become Utterly base and
concrete, has - destroyed not indeed the
mind,but the .tone of-daily'llfe. Of the
filthiness of Southern Brahithanism we
think better—for it is not worse . than
that of the highest ancient Greek society,
and there are stages - in eivilizatiou to
which Socrates and Phallic WorShip eon:
trivo to exist side by side—bat -of its
marvelous effect in destroying virtue by
making it consist in external rites, it is
impossible to speak too 'strongly. The
Hindoo belongs, by the law of'his nature,
to the Quietest rather than the Calvanist.
No dogma will purity, or eYen greatly in
fluence his life • nothing but the inner
coßscionsness Of nearness 'to the Divine
-which be sometimes. derit:es from medi:
tation, and which shines out through all
these hymur We said we differed with the writer on one point, and it is this :
we doubt if the people who are influenced
by these verses deem God so unapproacha
bls as Ile thinks they do. He 'knows
them personally far better than we can
pretend to do, but in these hymns the
depth of sadness, the undertone of wailing
does not seem to us to proceed from hope
lessness, but rather from a genie best ex
pressed—at however immeasurable . a dis
tance—in the prayer, "If it be Thy will,
let this cop-pass from me."
AGRICULTURAL ADDRESS.
The following Address before the" liar
ford Agricultural Society,"Sept. 28, 1871,
by Rev. George Forsyth we publish in ac
cordance to a request of many citizens,
which obtained the consent of Mr. For
syth :
"Ever since the time when Adam was
placed in the Garden of Eden to dress it
and keep it, ever since the time that Cain
adopted theprofession of fanning, and
Abel assumed' the position of-stock-raiser,
these employments have constituted an
honored and honorable calling for a large
portion of the human race.
A hiltorY .of Agricultural progress, if
written, would be a history of ono of the
most important departments of human in
dustry ; a department lying at the very
foundation of national, and individual
wealth. In the very earliest times, doubt
less, the earth provided spontaneously for
the few and simple wants of the compare-1
tively limited population ;- but little of the
care and toil being required which win;
imposed upon mankind, after the earth'
was cursed , for man's sake. When that
event occurred, then a necessity was im
posed upon. men to labor fur support ; and
necessity beirig , ..great. sharpener. of the
fritebb - vet faculties, the art of ac.ncultnre
became the leading occupation of the
people. The simplest tools only were used,
and some of the farming operations of
those early days would, doubtless, excite
wondering attention a; the present time.
In the valley of the Nile, there were
periodical overflowings during some three
mouths of the year, which deposited upon
the adjacent tidds, a rich ,fertifizing top
dressing of mud, Upon this muddy sur
face the fernier east the seed, turn
in a herd of, swine, a sort of self-acting •
harrow, and then contentedly await the
coming harvest. In the more mourstaine
ons districts, the employment of the mass
es was somewhat different Then•riches
consisted in immense flocks, and herds of
Cattle and Sheep, for, the maintenance of
which,a constant, i tin eran cy.from one place
to another was necessary.
Improvements in the art of agriculture'
in any given district, must necessarily de
pend to soue'degreetifx? . n theclimaterand..
the natural (eaten* of 3that..district,...it
will also'deriend largiy upon- the extent ,
to which that region is populated. When
the population .is scarce, and their wan.
sass y suppfied„ then incentives .are lack
ing to an energetic and intelligent system
of agriculture. In proportion to the in-1
'crease of inhabitants. and. enlarged de
mend for the products of, the soil, must be
% the improvements in. this, useful aYd in.
dispensable pursuit. -
• -
In Egypt, China and Chaldea do-we 1 1
find the first certain indications of ad-'1
range in the art of agriculture; in'
these countries, probably, animal power
was first introduced as a relief -to unman
muscle and. bone. , In Greece; one-thous
.uutl years. before Christ, so far as relianctH
may be placed upon the somewhat doubt=;
fiat history of that period, substantial pro
gress seems to have been made,. nOtwith=
standingmany natural..obstaelea .-with
which the. linsbandman had to contend.
Among the early Romans there existed'
a high appreciation of thengriculturid art.'
To .each citizen seas allotted-by the-State.
a certain tract of landjamallet first, bat
grad ually i increased as the et:unite expand=
ed and territory was:acquired: , Many of
Roine's greatest men, both in the departs'
Mehl of arms and of letter.% were taken
from the ra ksof yeoman TOO , Males their
cmintryAn3ons. -; As the nation pi.Ogress=
ed, the spienci of agriculture did not lay
in the rear.: Plows of different styles:oTel
invented, and -many of tli essential jitnj
.Pletneitts or-tliti,..presetit ay; redo and
prinietise iu low it may' . s be; gradually
camelitto use. There existed considerable
information as to the : - nature of the:join'
and their ridaptedness to diffrent
- Manures Were carefully husband ed; .and
.opflied with judirenien :Cloter waistline.
binge. acilsnl in order lilmyed_in, and
not4l pi:rill - 00.T : were: grain , 'gabbles'
- horned over, in order that the soil might
be miriched with the-asheikandabo flaunt
Anil sal nahkcetops Vet& ritbditeed.' . Still,'
very little wasknuaviiof t jbapiitligatigp'of
.roes hanil foram; i idsCeofseverelliatik•
al- dradgery. Who ;can; conceive :of 411 e..
Libor : necessary to' prepare- grain' ray food
es Supply altst: nation. When the- tater: .
wheg : ]gas efehtti . tras nn=
.bnilien ATI theiservicx'of sit ti, and the
gind 4wept O'er e ail valleys With
ou,E a. single mill I: -Jill 'these*
hare tome ttireliere.htinlatiffinsP
!sing after the purled :whicletic p I
j aiSing
litidef.solastfatid iiiiperfetit review, - j
The Romans effected a landing in Ong. laud 'about fifty-five years before Christ i
and introduced into a wild and barharOns
region . tome knowledge of agricultural
=WM
art ;= year s
of theiroceiniation,- Sub.shintial progress
wasluatle.• - :Biit;even the'exiaratiOn of
that time agriculture' in • that world.re.
,nowned island ' was extretnelKrude -and
imperfect. Some grain was raiio,but•the
quantity' eras small, and the'systeth of ag:
riculture was so filleeriairiand . criule, that
nufrequently famine 'oppressed-'the
people, and each winter a large portion of
the' cattle perighed„from exposure and
hunger. ~Hoed.cropsweral t inknown, and
garden vegitables not m use to:any extent.
Eventis Tate as the sixteen th - cen t uary,i f the
Queen of England wished a solid to grace'
her board,or protoke herappetite;she Must
needssend to. Holland for the deliaicy,
"and in those days,"there being no strain
boats or telegraphs, and as the trip would
consume perhaps a week,possibly a month,
it evidently would mover answer to'keep
dinner waitingitaarTival. Until aboutthat
;Olin 44, POiktneaarrOtaiqthbages i
squashes and turnips were gll unknown,
all Inrin- considered indispensable in the
humblest cottage garden,. 'The loWer
classes subsisted chiefly upon corded bread
made • from barley, while the. aristocracy.
consumed vast quantities of the grossest.
aniinal food. The condition of•the Peas
antry was one of ignorance and degreda
tion; they were oppressed, by tbe land
holOrs, and were even responsible tar his'
debts' to the amount of any little property
they might haveacciitunlated.
In such a sluggishcondition slumbered
the!a,, ,, ricultitral interests of England, and
indeed of , the greater portion ; of Europe
until after' the Siiteetilli century, 'Then
various occurrences Which .took place,
scorned to give an impetus to, humus' in
"telleot. SFhe invention, of, printing,. the
Reformation with allits wondrous secrets,
an the discovery of a Nuw World TO
wards' the setting sun, had set men:to
thinking, and awakened a general.spirit
of enterprise; and from that time-the
tendency of the middle and lower classes
of society hal been :upward; and there has I
been a corresponding advance in the all
important department, of
,agriculture. 7—
The first work ou farming, publitilied. in
England, was issued in 1534, after which,
in the course of time, appeared a number
of others; all useful in - affording new and
prattical ideas on the matter. At the
present day, most of the improvements
which' modern . science .has anggestedlire
adapted in England, and that hitloistaild,
upon which a timid American was.afraid
to walk in the right time, lest he might
accidently fall off; in ordinary seasons,
produces most of the food necessary for
nearly twenty millions'of people, about a
million .and quarter orliorges, about four
millions of cattle and over twenty million
of sheep.
The early settlers in.the,present United
States; on their
,arrival found themselves
in a wilderness, with peculiarities of cik
wale Ulia. son so semen they were tithe;
cnstomeiL Innumerable obstetrics were'
in the way of speedy,success in subduing
thd vi r gin soil, and_transforming it ,into
blooming fields and smiling gardens.—
Consequently for many years, agriculture :
was in an exceedingly depressed and back
ward condition. There seethed to exist:
in this department an atmosphere of .old
fogyism that would not brook innovation;
that seemed to declare, all things shall be,
as they have beer., to the end of tune.—
Any farmer who should hare dared to
tempt anything like an experimentwciuld
have found himselfa mark for the wit and
sarcasm ()fa whole neighborhood. There
was u'routine of labor handed down front!
father to son, and freim grandfather, to
grandson.- The young farmermtist"plant
first as many acres of corn as hifancesterti
did, he mast plow with the. saikie number
of. oxen and he must harvest nt the sante
dayof the mouth:There., was no origin;
ality;'only'-a mustY atmosphere: of -tradi
tion and.cemmon usage which - enveloped
the. intellectual nature. like a wet' blanket.
The farmer was, a machine, just' a _trifle' •
elevated above the
_patient ox which lab
ored in the farrow. • , .
. , „.
of the 'earliest writers „Upon agri
cultural anbjects, in Anterica,w,as a clergy-.
.man of Connecticut—had it not „been,
Cot this fact, perhaps I might nat-hare
presiarned to appear before. yok.to-day,- 7 -
Tire first Agricultitral Sotiety, of wkich`,l
And mention was thatif,Seuth:Carolina,
established in.1,784„.ind for .apything I
know to the " contrary in' still.-
- Then followed the eshibliilirneht Of: Simi:
lar associations in 11 Philadelphiii. 'New .
YOrk and Massachusetts, all earnest and;
active in' their-sphere, and :th*mPliehing
ranch towards neededreforthation. Not-:.
withstanding the - laboninand
of these:societies 'in the light of the pres
ent day,' it seems' incredible that
nate wprejtulice should have' ektaine4
the minds of the people, iigait;st eVe . rk' 1
• thing:Alia , were even • tke 'seniblence 'or i
rioVelty..: The introdttction:cflabeir;:tatiag, '
michinerk Artie as eteriill'OppOsed and:ns
.fiertely rididuled by the Antericanlatinei,l
mill:the English laboter'_irlio fancied he, I
detectedintheseinnovations 'the Shade*
.of
children- ',.-""=•
A'''tiondertal' ,eliange hailCken . yfaCe:
:within; comparatiiely !irk?, siiick- irne..
Tho4pYthe f the' Ifind-talie,..the flak' and
other raipletnenbi , manual toil, fitld
theniselvesi-''Stidd'enlY
sgtieriuntiuteiT—
Fa operations - formerly' and'
tedlottlß'ere perforined: with the id .of
ecientiticitirentibitivith air even ' dceleri=.
• ty:aitoivislikig cOntentplate the keit'
of tfie p:citjand far - Mira "iire awaking to
thC•colltieubo;thqr faritters; they,
are: pot, necesLzarilt Aebarrect front the-eill
-tivation' of their- intelltiet,
,tkuvsot Aheirs.dielthi.-'''' Not - at iiniiettal
C011111 1 b0 . ! de40;
atvisull - :amoti,t , ont fartnikkpopulation,:.
localities 411 ere bf tho old=
tune-reverence fat anglehtitistitutimii
Placeifirhere 7 theofatmei; stilr
ickypio among btmiiiis and
.itopeswitleh
long ugh, - sliorild IdaViiivenjoom fir, the
stliiiothlWorkitig : 'ltiower;':;:piaCee
men,tremeii end children - still' wearily
gather - tip the - harbr, h:iindsfull,: and
places likprifittalhe'fOtilm#hearit
thc: imlCuinlk , Mciaotonetts'rstmod - arthe'
flail.fro OF ; morn =to itherefthe
tfauceof a newspaper Or atibliihtelkif
kitudeiS litinangefir tib&ftie
tietiteenPtil 4 •7- • 4
Still we must bo thankful for what lms
been neeemPliebed, aruilook hopefully to
the future. There is no risk in the esser
r,rn.T.!
' r+ , ute ! ,. .1 7 :7.
:,•
thit ,th A
e mproyements mado in
implpfpnts tin 4 adopted.into
tnOst;gelieral use iiithoi lh'e past half cell•
tury. have enabled; tlit'Aineridaii fanner
to accomplish at least donblo the amount
ofi labor, !int the - same. number Of teams
and men as foiMerly. What stastsaying
i, thus . accomplished. Whit tin immense
addition.' to What
promiaa for' the future of the agricultural
Intgests in this in agnificen t con n n'sr Oct!,
its population shall ba, multiplied , by lea,
all .bountifully,sapplied ,by-the products
Of the It Would faruxceedthi limits
'and design of , this' addreas, to enter into
statistics of the chief agricultural produC- .
Consthe.differentrections of our land.
-Such 'details are dry, comparitively..unin-,
terestifig, and different of : remembmnce,
and bCsalet are cagily acaessible . l4, - tliose
curious for information. ' ° -
"These exhibitions of pio !
ducta.are becoming fiXed feature_ tits the lnterest in our country. It is well. that it
Ilhpuld be so. , "Isere" Here interest - is excited;
emulation is aroused ;'•%IVA'S .'are inter ,.
Changed and men's minds receive an im-.1
pulse from, fiction with other Minds Which
they could not otherwise obtain. and with
out which they must, infallibly ,rnst.—
Thefe . online! gatherings are useful ,in
bringing together the inhabit:nil/iota dis
trict, and furthering their acquaintance.
Rem they bring the choicest - products of
farm and garden, and questions are eager
ly. asked and carefully answered ass to
-what kinder treatment produced such and
stick molts. 'fere the working-Of differ-
eat kinds of machinery is discassed;mid
• Cho merits of different breeds of-litock tire
Compared. , All these things are calctilat
'ed' to,' promote - the intelligence •and the
success or a - farming community. The
bnsiness of farming is.no exception among
all departments of industry: the inure in
telligently we go to .Work, the - greater re
suite will appear at theend of the year.—
The farming population of• a mantil
The nation's ; wealth. They may _talk of
the triumplis'or commerce, and the pude
- embellishments of city lire, but the • bul
wark of a 'nation's existence and freedom
lies in herlauded proprietors who on-n dud
till her soil. In the city, corruption and
fraud stalk abonttlio stmt, and with un-/
blushlog hatinti-*the
offices. In the country; temptation isnsit
So powerful, and tia yet, a comparative
menet:ire of piirity may be found. lily
life is 10 "a great de 'nee, artificial exis
tence, Where:elinple' liaturi and her re
quirements are sadly ignored, and' where
pitfalls for the unsuspecting foot, are scat
ered thicker than the leaves of Autumn.
In the country, associations• mud, habits
and customs are more simple and natural.
In this world,' we are all engaged. in the
Punta of happiness, and the more,closely
we follow the nistruetions of natitral laws!
in our Mode or life, the greater amonnt of
Inippincsa-yreitrall - becure. .• -
It is au unpromising feature in the fu
ture of our country, and gives rise to dis
quieting forelodings,•that so large a pro
portion of the young men in onr;rnral
districh3becomiiig discontented with what
they imagine a narrow' sphere, and a de
grading occupation, and. excited , by. falsely
colored' pictures of"town and city life, are
leaving the .beautifiil fields. and. smiling
triesidows of their ,hoy-hood, and flocking
to the crowded - centres la hope of impley
meat and fortune. Even supposing, young
men, -that your ambition, is artful;and
yen 'hate been promoted: Irons the'
grovelling avocations. of farm- labor, to'
wieldingthe yard-stick and , measuring
tri,pe. in some - gloomy . city store, have„ you
totee manhood?
'As fur from` Ikea heaven is from the earth.
There is nothing . in: such employm,enta to
develop yon plinucally or mentally,, 11Con
will be -stirrovinded with temptations nfid
perils on every side: -Yon have made
a most disadvantageous exchange.; There.l
ere ipoureities,thonsandsof women suffer
,ing the horrors or grtul oat starvation, Jill° 1
aro ribundahtly gratified to till thotisands
of positions Towards which our young men
of iron. muscles, and atalwart „frames - ire
;seeagerlifiocking.-Dolour part,yonng
man, towards pscueing these- perishing.
unfortunates. by, remaining where you are.
loitimist get iii9sy limn home ? and ex.
hibit Yonng Amenmn's native Indepen
dence, mike "roe the West,•go ,ipto.!the
weals, and s by, haul bloiya avd, untiring
industry bliild,np a licithe and
These centres acorn merceare over•crowd
ed to-day; an advertisement -for help hi
any departieent,brings a swarm of hongry,
applicants. ‘• Yon Will be snubbed;and n
sulted and your young manhood , crushed,
•outieven it acrimprobable a thing should.'
occur as 'your finding an openingitc which
to display your talents. - • ,
A young man has a praisetvorthl ambi t
tion to secure an education. Ile goes to
',School for a veer_ or two,- alid_lnstead of
carrying. Lea pkg.nevrly_acildiredikttowll '
_edge, and to it, to practical account,
upon 'tbe fiefenint n tes t lie,piiist ; needs
dabble ill law, or he in physie,Tortic
-I,iluire.:smattering of'
qnentll l tliq :pantry, is , sriarming with
brierteselawygr,s, iuefficient,doctore,- end
fifth-rate 11re:tellers.There is altogether,
wiling; iniPreseliin 2 ;existing" "too often
•
iamorig onmral pcqntlation.-An irepregs'
, ionthat is'doing more then anything else
' to drive our young men from home, and
into any other biLamess than that of farm,.
L'fbg t .,Alvimpression,that educated
gene° la unnecessary and" ant, of placetio•
on the All false.• There smpe
in the icienee of agnicultUrefcrprpround:
itudy, and' deep investigation. the
information: you (An the best
:solwas Of ourlond,,Will not Teriller
any theYpore. mint to'hold the ploF,,or to,
guidelhe trie,wer. ,time "100 can
dototo 6 1 'fiest Ahoy will bo too,little
for yen to mister all; the intricacies. Other
thernis Seriituallarne attach.,
fitg ißEeptaro,,r inereisiht ~ tinrest
and discontent Mtleng tho„ young ;.people
of Cur agrimilfpfal districts.- The reSist
leis fend - cagy of Ihelige ia progrep,. -and
tnan fkreTtkilidy eudeaccring to with - stand
`that. tendency, th.Yriigge of
Meartinli people Wiring ourfan
"m,eTct,ybOly_ejgbui,g for , the; goctd,.old
Ivqa • ofr Oleic uncestorsv=atrcanntit
are Wit . "-book-tarnip"ttifif broefitthein
selves or their children. Tin boy who
has by some fortunate chance obtained a
gime into the ne' and enchanting
world of lettera.is checked and gemmed
411.1)trni; 11:1
4,1
NMI
EMS=
'vour)ffw,xxix,mmmat*
1.9 Pu. 007 akdss,V , nr.ii.PP..fiziP_ got'
- Tensity iti iazinew, . OrPina 5,,,0p,10,'
1 yonth; , if :La ii i perinittitt,•,4tiring it.feW;
,weeks • in: the ;meter to'sittenifitt trritedai.
•
intervals p
tholspublic.:srhakvsftfeitlllag-:
-men tary.,cln 7.Pbs mr I*ing,,,syritirtg,‘;-1,.•
'arithmetic km defed out, tim . 9l49L§Lig : ...,
i competent teiielscirst''Puriiiglists wisAttl-,
' -der of the:year; ., he hi Mien" fretty Ont.
morn, fill deliymve; and hit '' grositift P to,
I young.rnanbood; with a :Itigne:tknowkge.
of better and. nohlerAhings, Ank•ite : Juts ;
O mits' *mighily gels iblfcd Tretrt,v -Partici- .
1 patiimik them:'
,:fs', it:ll*_tt th. si k f i i 4A
I should he &scouted Mid imams s.
.. • ~.... ~ • -
;,. The - tendency: ationg fekt '• many or 'kWh.
farmers, is. to fall'in to a: ineebiirtied -rent,
i ne 44 drnqget7S 63 .m Yetif!teyesr; in -which:
thought has very' little,to,qcsip34.oAvivse;
the whole family iffdragilefl , , along Impel,
same channel. , " Theft!' is coinparatively,.
little :shout We isonseliold; to kende:lan,"
attra e tive•or pleasant to theyoting.••; l lien
also are ofuimeszenerons and, libetallo-:
Wards outside‘ lien evelen t. object", am close,
to a fahl in: regard to ,rinytliingiwisfeh
wonldipromotethe innocent' liiippiti - dfor
solid improvementlof :their dWn"••faWiilfeii -
Sutv9' the premises,.: and:'yon will &X
iinPainte - dlionso,prostrato fesmes is dihrpi
dated ont-httildingS, ~°Ornfertless-npagt-•
• theists,- " seldom • tf•newiPtsper,piiii',a, now
book; no amid la thb honst.;• Va .: Sorrels
in the yard,-,-only it gencral;:ahmtsplittilibi
must and.rast, which is ',terribly' f . dialistirt- -
- enineto'iMing , and:aspiring, nunds. 7 ,lt.
-may •be - stud; Abet • to •_prnyisib.::lll they,
consfortis Mid ltiiiariee4' nione:Cii:iler4l.
and Bo it is; lint on etperinienkYciii n itiuld
he, eaten ish ed .nbat.s Iv:anit! z Veit; les:
produced, with ti,very Uttlesponey s acginad
deal brep 9 rieve4 q itlce.and aA4 ettrpCitt4idt.o
/Million. - Itesisßs, all We theiiPl :Vent's is
.tapitel invettedi: - :-Efery'dallatfamerit in,'
.be.aniifyingAhe isomestskl/ifiitid . tliditsl4 ,
jug the frart&vt .99nrebila0t, ' - ' t4 ,
in, premoting you ebi14,171:'111.44
developinent;and4linii.,ll37,AV • : .s. - . .
a more roll - kW prep fur roar, 6 a`to;37lsl
in the long ru n,
_ yield a fit hj` g tO sate :41' :
interest, that Ralirbild-sibefsts,Ar VIT.,
went lsinds.ilt Willsteriado.'gssounst is.
,enhanced,,vultiemf , the farroon yeneinsti
'domestics ,ltoppinera4, and 'lll !th6 iittat
. welfare : of ,„3 slur eh ildrels,And- tim :shiny
.Mgr'eEior:YPO - Aild.: -:••: . f:,-,)tr ~ ; 1: : f- 1 ;l
- - Ire'n4o iticit - Itstol,4rice.iisttelic.Kr.„
:filtriSeri; SuoM'eultsire in ,thetr il farruAck •
MoroistaiktVinbre 'inirsie;' -r tubre Rowe
•pnore of, everyth in g •that ieleatitifall' - ‘11:
thing of twenty, is it joy:lfiirere,l , 44
where on earth.usev.,so winch, of aeasitY
cluster, With' sii'lltN,co'Sy , ns, man Ags,
llsrellibe'ertli , 'crib 4tniki_o4 I‘g
',,.
, er,, •
4 74
Aclintre said heflire;•the-fOrindoitik ,Ist
a untion'skpmsperity 94sif, AK'iiiskid=for,
Sts,',„the,:agrrultnrei.,,lrmlatiiii.lo !lb*.
more tletciiindArlop',is,stupriimli gut : per
tier ivillttie ' Om:- siip.eit-aPOPrek,arli
dwienpkWeirit'a Or 'ttis - • - foindation.- 6 .
our greatuesiociery itlaiViti44ll4l7 . 4CHi
4 part to net, a work to do'::: !:"Lit ne•takii
mire, that lunid,allge,radvattee ~ Jr: omit
land' in ot her depart men Ls, „ the•-a *cult
ural interests'do nitTlag: behind; + WI
the narrow mindedness or - shorti• sighted,
nesaml thosectifishose•bare•it fs'vonfidi4
Letferteil , l'lY,i,itet :eleti:Cini, et.4 - Atiti
dirtt.# o , 6 tPKlX.• itie*Tek7, K ,..i 1.••;=.; - ::. v-!: .:.,t:
7,L1!,
!OA!! AYTITRk.O/14 3z-rt:
roucrri
Jeff Davis turnslotit ta,be.o Yankee 4.
birth: -Esiireifee to'aiihin g l e azeo* . :
resiondekit l bsia`b'eeir:found in;lasivezisiv:
epee instead. of tiling
,"1:t
tacky, as has Airilys:been , suppklrcapt,i
us he has always asserted, Iteriratt'nh
horn in Massachnietts; Andlherefore; In
stead., ef,r-being it,-puredanmled non' or
.
only it'Alifssatirebzi
'tette'. Yea kt:c.: Unman 's pictiennry etf.
Congress ralherandel,
fitiatelpaeli4itig lieen'bern ititbt/DMI,
.txtnnlY.Aeutnaltyi in:1808. 1 Pinwinitflir".
• claim to be wellAnfortnedsaylitit "ieftq s
waa' bor,nin Old ,toclsbridge,
ISOS,'etid relieved toSerktuckv 041)!Pla
fattier *hen a imidt'cbild:
said to bare been a wheel-A-Agri* it,
'and the honse .where elf oilelside
of the :owl, aq, :1 3 1) 9 p white:ln Trialt.,' , 7
edim the; iler arc well Ffliaggi.Ovrefk.:
by tiling irittteiisei. kis, therefore, potitt i .,
ible 'tylit • the - - .Rebel ?n:fy
Ple.t!entn niter air
7 , tint:
Martwiteitess
.' Tile:news which Wilt pii4lislied lit"itte
yaws ghliqrt time hinee , of theilibtitittei
I of J.i4liisk. :by:lbe imnrmatraxithistibrO 1 :
'ter mistress.. ttopto hubjehtsof.g.enett
tricot::
. It. trafr the tnoreialketl , of fromtbi r . , .;
.feet thhtilte',llthiiitiell' flintily have, liFert u i t
well known ittAlttliforitja.' , Th 1444:165eth
.;
Martetiebt was Ilireditor of • tlib - Blifilost:"
0 1oill.401141imeti :lielritrrabittiewhiJbadoo
theresixtet .of.,„the .coputomoityk.` lictwitatli
shot' by 14, - plan ,tititoet). JpitilAttlitir', , t lE . a i
editor of' th"Stoefetoit:,TuttrriirOh,e d ) ~,1
f.
'en lir growit,4• tint.' of "tbitet.'-nttirifmite -
trouble.t..4t that; tithelhe, Minefield' EIWi .
iv relittell ittlltyllobt,..lltbiettooraijldag"'
liftio'sflitltl, whorled At . :Qtqn, uvnteityrupp;;.is
1 citizen. of Calito:rn,tao4 - ilie lam& }p-- e
,91hdiop,, , ;i le; arighter,lleleti' lisigne,
1 ,
leanie!.!tet'' 'ittifirroifeledei 'airfield ibr:" °
'some ,yeitte.ont Stitt& Btreett 1 Ileleti: eitoti-;:°
ttfirtio ktittyrty 118 ft:girl tritlictt - iiefattitilfr'
tiop, titid'Oeitilrett„4. characte r for blee,,Viip)
ittallietz=gerit - Prapeido 417tefin; ; , ,
4 °" -- 7"" , in - li tr .
t , letportin flatten:l - itiftrltf..4: ,
; iku, irftpqrtaitt.railuliyActeittianifitittic
„received ol'firipatiop by 'the New York t
.(court ofAmfflev,tkaratheitawitortri4-;: . /
4 ho . l.'enitaytramorTniqthfa''.,'POrao4lll4t . 3'
reeoitrififin, lof Vsit..OrilliggOge. ! ViV , ,
.Imbillf- or tlipp:feks , e,.it:trAiuttnetraittaq.:,..2t
As tbetil Tyalo:etintlttieil prink* rnv-thell ~: -
tiekoft ultattlibiell. the Tilaintifft§e,tidititliyi
1
, ili tbe tone:oflbe.fois i the:- ilfe i t'otietleil:.t . ,
Wouhlniithelin k ble to exceed 11100,ithe et:till , *
not feeorertMorelban'tlittliuk — ,Vtitli '
tlialltglnil*Pltriidigetittinetljtitlffitqkpll
for 00 0 0 7 a4lheCouttittfifpli biki*, ,,,l
.sttfirrietr ,tlit,,itttigpent;-;! # ifiefilitiAt•ert
irtitintatitt. Lila*, thittithee ttsO.rli.ezA
road: beltittelfthitlig the Sits ofil ,:fpr_
bagoag'w :.-- aloes not reit.,tliftiiViitelt ..rd arc*.
1 .Tbla tea incision of a Woo mooted aid fratt:! - ' ':
11464 contested question.'. +. - t . --" ! :, •-• •
. —Virginia npir. ;Wary - land. are. spirt
making broilsover the tberapeake Bay,
i;yeter beds. "Y'
f i 1 1 1
* 1 : -
Vet" 1
ISME