0 Ctte burg Gaytit. EDILDIAG, W IXD 86 VIM AV rArsa CM PtUsbargb. Allegheny awl AMA- =II= 'MIDWAY, NOV. 9, 181:18 Moss minumuoti, at Balt lake, against the Mormon despotism T boring has Just "cut off" a number of high dignitaries in the church, who dispute Ms regularatitho r4ity. Throe Instances will multiply and elith decided results, ere long. MARTI.LND bas also a Legislature to elect today, that is to say, twelve Sena• Wtsatad',a new House of Delegates. A 81*ct Controller and costa) , officers are to be chosen. The Republicans have nominated 11111 tickets In most of the counties., 'Ten Tablet (organ of Archbishop ido- Obteasy), with reference to rather Hy& tdnthe says: "We have no hostile f - ling toward him personally; we are In no of the word his enemy, and we only pray that he may not bean enemy to him- Hia present position is titogleal and 110241neble, end he cannot maintain It. Hs must retrace his footsteps, or go fur ther." The rabid Is zight. Halting between two,optnious is like standing upon slip pay ground--eure to end in s Whkti way? Is the question. WWI the oppolltirm talk of contesting the election of Governor Gaspe, the little game would have a more promising bat itd theta, If they would cease their mutual scbusibisa of treachery and venality, and their general criticism upon the palpable unpopularity of their bia candidata. Either a good nominee aim unfairly beaten, or a bad one has met his Just:late in a legitimate animas Gentinnenl pray take one view or the other, and stick to It Tax O. W. & Z. Railwayoulanding bast Lotiasville to Morrow, a short dia. beaCeeut of Cincinnati, has been ordered W be,aold on the 28th hut. It will be peiehased by the Pennsylvania dui Pan Handle companies, who are likely to pro ceed in completing the abort connection from Dresden to Louirrlile . at once. Throughout Southern Ohio, a deep bas been awakened in the develop. mat of the policy of those companies, looking toward a Southern railway Wald from the C. W Z. at Lancaster, to the Ohio and thence down through Eastern Kentucky. The early transfer of the latter road into Pennsylvania toads, Lan essential feature in the pro gramme. It is a signal mark of the pa eral public confidence in the wisdom, ability and vast resources of our great ralltray corporation, that Its entrance in this way into tke railway field of Southern Oldo seems le lava revivified the entire region, which is all agog with brilliant and golden expectations based thereon. A proposition from the owners of the railway from Hudson, 0., to Millersburg, to transfer the same to the new "Pitts burgh. Mt—Vernon Columbus Railway Company" upon certain conditions, "the 11101 t important of which is that the sum of $165,000 shall be raised to prepare the josd•bed from Millersbarg to Mt. Ver non," has bom accepted by the new Company, and the required sum sub scribed. It mesas now certain that the read will be built. INIUAIt.IPAL 11/14 ' Eimry tax-psyer who resides within the boundaries of • city or borough under stands full well that by lar the larger part of all his contributions for governmental purposes are exacted for municipal ex poises. In cities, and about in propor tine to their .magnitude, are the local levies ordinarily heavier than in boy °nem This lemeasurahly natural, and so Inevitable. At best, cities are costly luxuries, and they who enjoy the oppor , tnatles for the acquisition of fame and lafthence, pleasure and wealth, which they afford, must incur the liability of promoting &der, cleanliness and prosper ity therein. Charges for these ends can not be reduced totes standard prevailing In agricultural or even la mineral dis tant& In some respects a comparatively lavish expenditure for public obtecta Is Jo advantage to a city, provided the out la wisely directed. Whatever tends to render residence In a particular place-21nm pleasant -or profitable, may be regarded within reasonable limits, at worth all it costal This is a fact which the mar of people In some towns, and many in all, are slow to perceive and ac- ceretn its properbearings. With these people the prevaihng idea is that all, Of nearly all, public expenditure Is waste or pillage, and hence they regard as the best administrators those who stop improve ment and cut down taxes. "There Is that withholdeth more than is mete, bu i t leadeth to poverty." Illustrations of Ihisiteuth are found abundantly in these twin rides. They have been regarded se good places In which to make money, but bed gems in which to stay and enjoy com petencies after they have been acquired. Streets, sewerage, street lights, police , water, schools, fire engines, markets, record houses, council rooms, parka, and the like, are absolutely indispensable to cities, and saint, be had without large toms of money. The best are generally the cheapen In the long run. All these can only be had at the common expense. They who own the property, do the bus. limas, and ruakethe gaina,'ln the particu lar *laser, mist fore the bills. There is no effectual escape but in clearing out. Partial escape may be bad by low valua tions or false returns, but these dishonest expedients only shift the burdens from some shoulders to others. But after all this Is said and admitted it remains true, as every payer of manic ipal taxes comprehends, that local taxes are grievous to be borne. They are not only heavy, but steadily increase, with no prospect of abatement. Each year brim • new project and fresh burdens, just as In the economy of a household. The rate of taxation is increased,' great hand ate negotiated, which dually repel sers'onners and drive away old ones. Nor is this aft, nor the worst. In many citkispublic improvements .11111 aotcai only jobs of the most flagrant descrip tion, In the hands of those who manage them, ostensibly in the public Interest. Indiums are adduced la which Improve somas have actually mist row times as meth at private individuals would have paid for thesame material and work. Bo • far Ina thls profligacy reached that ft has become common to regard all public en , tapeless u jobs, designed quite as much to enrich officials as to promote the public good. liar are clues wanting In which persona who are comparatively scrump lonferillielr Finite transactions have essetleally held "the public to be &owe whieb the sharpest had a right to pluck." General Imputations of dishonesty have !cone so tar that many upright and sensitive mem refute to he txtrousiled erith public sears. Grant that mtia of this detraction has no better foundation than emmiclon, and it still mast be confessed than the eievelence of thole suspicknis is int witiarn, reason. inumg men who have given this matter its yet the lief earnest coil ddenakm, it isteld to be desirable to fir a &GuileJ to :Wlitchtlaxattres O W/ al purposes may in lacindlitik sloe rfilit 9f 90310008 .".IF'll4/1 It has, indeed, been suggested that this ?imitation should,he subject In each case to the judgment of the voters, expressed at a general or special election ; but there are serious objections to this condition, among them this, that by far the larger part of the voters In cities are not tax payers to any considerable extent. All experience shows that there is a constant willingness in most Men to vote taxes for other people to pay. While it is true that property, and the ability /to acquire property, are justly liable to taxation, It is s dictates 3( common sense end common honesty that public levies s mail not be lekto pasalota and capri that spring up• suddenly and quickly subside, bat should be regulated by p -determined rule. The tendency In thi direction ban been Increased by the twill with which ' the Legislature has been indliced to sanc tion special levies for mUnicipal par poem do defining a limit to which local teas. tion should go, we would not be gov erned by parsimony, but by a just exam ination of all the essential facts, allowing each 14 due weight; endeavoring at the name time to provide such safeguards for special municipal disbursements as would hvert the power of rings and ensure fidelity and economy. The reader will not fail to perceive that the evils to which allusions have here been made, are largely the product of special legislation, which We argued, the other day, it was most desirable to cut up, root and branch, by a constitutional amend ment. PUBLIC UISTRUCT/021. How much education ought the State to extend to children and youth growing up within ita borders ? Thisls aques lion that, sooner or later, will be looked squarely in the face by the great mass of taxpayers as well as by those who make politics, ay • science, a careful study. Weannotdomore, just now, than throw out a few hints that may go touard the solution of the problem. In each nation the system of public instruction established therein should comport with the nature of the Govern. meat; and this to witnessed almost inva riably. In Great Britain the government Is oligarchic; the few rule in the name of a Queen, for their own benefit, at the ex. pense of The many. The educational system conforms very nearly to the char acter of the government. Oxford, Cam bridge, and other seats of elegant and exact learning, are munificently endow ed, while common schools, in the proper sense of the name, are few. The design of the educational system is to furnistuforth the nobility and gentry. In Rome, the government is theocratic; In the name of God, by priests, at the cost of the whole. The chief ruler is a priest, and most -of the subordinate rulers are priests. No place outside the church is worth muck. The educational system conforms to this Idea. The colleces In which priests are trained are -sell endow. ed and sustained, and admirably answer the end for which they were designed. Ruda Is a military government. Power runs In the name of the Czar, at the cost of all. The educatimudaystem is adapted to produce soldiers, a few to command, and the many to obey. In none of these cases, or In other ens lagous ones, sill it do to say that Gov ernment is unmindful of its male duty. The Government Is simply true to the cardinal principle on which It is founded. For It to proceed on a different basis would be to run the most serious risk of Isabel:talon. Prussia and some other monarchies are trying what may be call. ed the democratic education of the peo ple, but with such accompaniments as seem conducive to the established politi cal order.. Flow this arrangement. will succeed, It is easy to forecast. In the long run, and at no great distance ahead, popular education will produce its legiti mate fruits. Freedom of thought in cer tain directions will lead to freedom In. all other directions. Tnemonarclual or theo cratical government that concedes actual popular education may endeavor u mach IA It will, to and in it a support, but the final result will not correspond to the e x. pectation. The democratic education of the people means democracy, and can mean nothing else, Just as the oligarchic means aristocracy and nothing besides. The government of the United Suites is based upon the popular will. The democratic education of the people com ports with it, and no other system of ed ucation does. This system requires the instruction of. each, for his or her own benefit, at the expense of all. And here the questioe recurs, with which we set out, bow much education, under the democratic system, ought government to provide for ? Some esy, education from the lowest or most primary to the highest or most recondite departments. These have not stopped to discriminate wisely. Others piece the limit between the two extremes indicated, but above rather than below the middle, hot clearly without ekeetness or maturity of conception. Under a democracy so much education should be furnished to all at the general cost as the mass of children and youth I have time to take on—and no more. The I education.of the few, in the higher branch es, at the expense of the whole, Is not I democratic but aristocratic. We do not see how these distinctions can be obit. erated. At what period of life, on the average, must the rudimental Instruction of boys and girls cease? Every person of obser , Talon understands that, as a rule, boys and girls, at or about fourteen, have to go to work either to earn a living, or to qualify themselves, by obtaining s know ledge 'of some craft or calling, to gain subsistence. This, then, would appear to be the period at which the public edn• cational system should stop. What can well be put into a course reaching that tar, and no farther, should be put in, and nothing else. Of course, it is every way desirable that a considerable number in proportion to the whole shall have sithe. riot advantages for mental training; but it seems to us that this should be at mi. Irate out. 'The public eariieseonably be required to furnish only what the muses need anti have opportunity to improve. Reading, writing and arithmetic are the three great educational tools. Who ever le thoroughly master of these has a good prearnimuy outfit. By these the vestibule of the temple of knowledge Is gained, andirom thence the possessor may go itthithersoever he will. All the rest is at his own option. One serious defect of the existing edn cations' practice Is that the three primal sciences are not taught with the exactness they should be. Few graduates, either from the common or higher schools, are so completely master of them as to find them a pleasant possession. Not a few graduates of colleges are sadly defi cient in the most essential branches of an English education. Indeed, he among them who an prepare a manuscript on any subject, fit to go Into a printer's hands, is an exception, as we know from long and wide experience. This comes from laying In haste and lope:tidally the foundations of knowledge. Too much eagerness is evinced, both by pupils and teachers, to get Into the higher branches, while as yet little is known accurately or the lower. Indeed, many teachers are none too well grounded in the rudimental sciences; and hence are not unwilling to , humor the desire of the pupils to move on rapidly. bet ea repeat; the =vent tendency is to somelid4 much beyond that which fa Included In the democratic education of the MP?. /lePeer,th e edue 6llo Ell ail' tem has become very expensive to the tax payers, and there are as yet no signs that the increase has reached ita maximum Another defect of the present system consists in that the instruction afffirded is not obligatory. All children, between certain ages, ought to be required by law to attend school, not only for their own good, but for the general welfare. A. democracy cannot rest securely on Ignor ance. All who take part in the govern. mesa ought to be so educated as to ap. prebend, with a reasonable degree of ac• curacy, their duties and obligations. Besides, an educated man, simply as a producing machine, is of higher value t i himself, his family, and the nation, than an pninstructed one. Boys who do not go to school almost invariably join the dangerimis classes, and so create a need for a strongly repressive govern ment, which is always prejudicial to the idea of democracy. We commend these considerations es pecially to those who are officially con cerned, in any way, In public instruc tion. WS OVANIONALLY Bee paragraphs In the papers which it would do no harm to reflect upon; for example, thong who complain If they have beef when they had looked for hro,led coops, might pon der advantageously upon the last words of an old match pedlar who dunt in J nu. York city C! NT.% RV ATION the other day. With hie dying breath he connoted him self by saying, "Ah! but I shall have plenty in Heaven." Are there not pen. pie in our own cit.lea tat proud to beg, too honest to steal, who are dying, star, lug, with no other comfort but that old man's hope! Tea abolition of the franking privi lege and of the letter-box ;delivery will be asked for In the Annual Report of the Postmaster General. The tint request to • timely one, and if a popular vote were to be had upon the subject. would doubtless be granted tiv a large majority, but the second bee Its incon venience, and newspaper men and other night workers can not afford to postpone the receipt of their mails until the next morning. -As a general thing, we be- Rave the subirtitntion of carriers for boxes would be popular after the novelty of the change wore oil, but in particular cases It would be excessively I deonvenl ent, and the needful exceptions should be made in. the Postmaster general's new report. To THE PCIILIC LI HEART In Melbourne, Amsterdam, all persona are aduAtted, provided they have clean hands, and in order to facilitate matter. an ante room is provided with water, soap and towels. We commend this regulation to the con• sideration of the Mercantile Library Ae sedation here. The pecuniary outlay, necessary for a constant and ample sup. ply of the necessary articles for ablution, would not be insignlndint In our dingy city, but It would probably he amply instilled by the improved appearance of the books and periodicals, to say nothing of the amount of dirt which would be ab sorbed by the water Instead of by the paint and wood work of the new Library building. If such a regulation is a good one at all, there 1• no place where It would be better to adopt it than in Pitts burgh. Few et•IENCEM have advanced whit such bold and rapid et.idea as the: of engineering. When the Thames tunnel was built it was considered one of the wonders of the world. Ho, when the suspension bridge at Fairmount Park was stretched scrota the Schuylkill, it was regarded as a wonderful triumph of art. It is only a few years since these undertakings were completed, yet they are already insignificant when compared with the more modern triumphs of the engineer. The water tunnel st Chimp), the .111911121&111 bridges over the f Ihio and Allegheny. the bridghig of the Mind.. sippi t at St. Louis, and the stupendous promation so soon to be carried out, for a wire bridge at New York, are all won derful results of this program, which lead us to reflect upon the marvellous triumphs of this te.elle . 4l yet Lo 001:13e. FATHER Pant, wu an ardent advo cate of the principles of protection in Fzigband. lie once Raid, with much truth, that if the Free Traders were nonaletent and suNsosaftil they w.mld abolish quarantine., the patent lawn and copy-rights. We have already called attention to the glaring inconaintency of an author who advocates free trade for ovary other article but an international protection law for books; yet this sight can be witnessed oonstantiv now since the New York importers and their Eng that customers have decided upon making a vigorous campaign against the material interestrnof the country. Consistency is a Jewel which they do not possess. These men who want to protect books and nothing else are certain to protest against other "special legislation." To follow out Pront's idea, if they advocate the killing of the industries of the country, they might as well alto insist on the free introduction of cholera and other plague., which would perhaps slay the people faster and with greater agonies than could he done by gradual starvation. As In= formerly prevailed In Louie_ lima that If gambling were legalized and made public, It would not be patronized, because of its very publicity—Jost an shop is especlaly safe from thieve. whoa It has no shutters and is kept open to the oubliette= all night. This theroy was put Into pract,imn. The Louisiana Logi. =are authorised the license of (limo number. of which imme diately appeared In New Orleans and the result was anxiously watched for by the staid portion of the community. Young men and old ones too seemed to be very careless Indeed of what the public thought of them, and kept these placer thronged from dewy eve till morn, while hundred. of persons who would not have discovered the carefully concealed dens, —such as abound In this city—were at tracted Into them when they blazed out with brilliant lights. The pretty MU. Idea of people being ashamed to gamble In public has been thus torpedoed and now the respectable portion of the community to petitioning for a repeal of the law which Mennes so much license. A RENOWN= SWEDISH CIIIMIST, pro feasor at the University of Upeala, an nounces that he has discovered a method of putting to sleep, or, as Ett mond About would asy, deleloating Using animals, and, after keeping them in this elate for any length of time, bringing them back to actual life again. He hes experimented on a snake for the past ten years, and gives it two years of death at a time. When devitalized the serpent becomes hard and brittle as glass, but seems to enjoy his repeated returns to life. The chemist has petitioned his government for permiesion to experiment upon a condemned criminal. and novisweits eh answer. " be man with a broken ear" may become an actual and commonplace occurrence yet. One of the meet singu bar assertion , of this discoverer is, that those Egyptian mummies from which the vital parts were not removed, were never actually dead, but were merely awaiting a, revival, the necessary secret for which has been lint. So that the Epyramids may Dave been erected as safe wes to preserve the Pharaoh, from ing broken to pieces While taking a short reed from the cares of life. 7 111--•••••- - - • Au anecdote Is told or a former Em peror of China, to the effect that walking by the side of s wheat field, he saw a stalk of wheat much larger and riper than the rest of the field, and that he plucked It and saved the grains to be sowed, and from it derived a variety of wheat much earlier and moreprolific than the wheat in common use, and thus con ferred a great bent& upon his people. When wheat Is sown in drilla, we can easily peas through the field and cut Into a Nukes the heads that are the plumpest and first ripe, and best out the grains for seed. In a day's time a careful man might Mum collect wend pecks of seed wheat, that would be as much better than. theayerageof thetield 'as the ears of core that we select for seed are better than the IteeM3 corn of the corn crop. _ PITTSBURGH DAILY GAZETTE : TUESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 2, 1869 I FARR, GARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD. I.)IIEaTIC RECITES. A (:ory4 , —A gargle, matte by dissols ing a tablespoonful of common salt is half a tumbler of water, has been found by trial to be an excellent remedy for dry, hacking coughs, and the other thmst difficulties that prevail at this season of the year. As it is harmless, 11 would be well to give it a trial. To !fake Ink.—To make ink, take ex tract of logwood one half ounce, bi-chro mate of potash ten grains, copperas five grains, gum Arabic the size of two peas. Dissolve In a quart of rain water; when cool, put in clean bottles, and leave un• corked for a week or so, ns exposure to the air is Indispensable. rtoiechote.—Two quarts of green tome- toes, two quarts of white onions, one dozen green peppers, one dozes green cu• cumbers, one large head of cabbage, chop fine. Season with mustard and celery to suit the taste. Cover with the best cider vinegar. Boil two hours slowly, continually stirring. AL soon seyou take it from the stove, add two tablespoonfuls of salad oil. Cover tight and keep in a cool place. To (lean lour flair,—To clean your hair and head, beat up the yolk of an egg; rub it all through the hair; wash and rinse in warm, soft water; dry with a towel as much as possible. Avoid going out be im.° the hair is thoroughly dry, as you will be likely to take cold. Ammonia is also very good to cleanse the hair, and hair brushes. A teaspoonful of liquid ammo rata In a pint of warm water Is a proper proportion. Add a little soap, wish the hair, and rinse well in clear, warm water. When dry, brush ten minutes, and dry with some clean. soft oil. To Drive away floor- u and Anis— Take powdered borax and scatter when. ever the cockroaches most frequent, and they will disappear directly. A safe and Efficacious remedy for a moat annoying vermin. Ants can be driven out of cup boards if lumps of camphor are scattered alsinttnem. Ants object to strong scents, and In tropical climates are prevented from entering the rooms by powerful scented oils and gums. A large sponge can be sprinkled with sumo an laid upon shelves where ants are numerous, the next morning plunge the sponge quickly into boiling water, and most of the intru ders will be destroyed_ Then scatter cam. phor and you will have no trouble. Medicinal Properties of Ent.—The white of an egg has proved of late the most efficaolousremedy for harms. Seven or eight successful applications of this substance soothes pain and effectually ex cludes the burned parts from the air. This simple remedy seems preferable to collodion or even cotton. Extraordinary stories al4 told of the healing properties of a new oil which Is easily made from the yolk of hens' eggs. The eggs are first boiled nard, and the yolks are then remov ed, crushed and placed over s fire, where they are caredAly stirred until the whole substance is just on the point of catching fire, when the oil separates and may he poured elf. One yolk will yield nearly two teaspoonfuls of oil. It is in general use among the colonists of South liussla as a means of 'curing eats, bruises and scratches. Coen and llogs.—From carefully con ducted experiments by different persons, it has been ascertained that one bushel of norm will make a little over 10l pounds of pork—gross. Taking the results as a basis, the following deductions are made, which all our farmers would do well to lay op for a convenient reference. That • When corn costs 121 cents per bushel pork costs I t cents per pound. When corn CURLS 17 cents per bushel, perk costs 2 cents per pound. to hen corn coots 23 cents per bushel, cork wee 3 cents per pound. When corn costs 23 cents per bushel. pork costs 4 cents per pound. When corn costa 50 cents . per bushel, pork costs 5 cents per pound. The following statements show what the farmer realises on his corn when In the form of pork. When pork sells for It rents per pound, it brings 25 cents per bushel In corn. When pork sells for 4 cents per pound, it brings 22 cents per bushel la corn. When pork sells for 5 cents per pound, it brings 4 - 5 cents per bushel in corn. —Xe. Hose to Bare elirdled Pratt Three.-1 correspondent of the Nashua TeityroyA says Mr. Lemuel Town, of that place, practices successfully a method of his own Invention for saving girdled trees. His method, which was first applied to a fruit tree In his own garden In Milford, Is to graft live or six scions as large round . as a goose quill and long enough to reach over the girdled place, Into the tree. The live bark Is Bret notched above and below the girdle, the sprouts sprung into place and the ends fastened with wax. These scions grow rapidly and in time spread over the whole girdled surface. Two thrifty apple trees standing upon the premises of Mr. Samuel B. Weston, on Temple street, In Nashua, were complete ly girdled by mice eighteen years ago, one of them having the bark taken off over a foot in width on one side, pod were saved in the above manner by Mr. Town, and they are still In good bearing condition. Making tritA Dry Bonds.--I believe that much of the milk gets tainted with noxious or bad odors before it reaches the pall. Some persons, and hired help es pecially, have a habit of wetting their fingers with the milk once In a while, and then wetting the cow's teats, as they any, to make them milk easier. Now, this wetting process causes much foul stuff to d p from their hands or the teats Into the pill while milking. This is all wrong; cows ma bo milked as easy with dry hands as wet once_ I have been In the habit of milking cows; and although I have met with some hard milkers that require their teats to he softened In order to draw the milk, I have generally found it both easier and pleasant to milk with dry hands. If the teats are dirty, the odder should be washed with tepid water and allowed to dry before milking; and if the teats are very hard and tough, the cow had better be turned Into beef, or kept to raise cal yea The Hop Crop.—The Green Bay Art rotate Kaye "We gather from our ex. changes that the hop crop In this State will be better than last year. In SOME places it is damaged by lice, but the de struction is confined to limited localities. Is some places the picking has com. menced, hut generally the men will not be ready for picking until the latter part of this week. Baraboo and elsewhere growers are uncertain whether the prices will justify the expense of picking and baling, and unless some assurance is given of remunerative prices, the crop of many yards will be allowed to perish on the vines. At Kllbourn City 15 cents per pound has been offered for prime new hops." MANI farmers have an erroneous no tion In regard to the destruction of weeds on grass lands. The impression prevails that the only way of getting rid of weeds Is to break up and thoroughly cultivate the ground In hoed crone. This is not always the convenient, or even desirable, way for In many cases it cannot ho done without breaking up the herd or dairy, while some uneven surtaces cannot be plowed. There Is another way of killing weeds, such as the daisy and that clam of plants, by the liberal use of manure and grass seed. We Dave eradiated white daisy in several instances by simply ap plying farm yard dung and plaster, and strewing the ground with clover. Es tablish your clover upon the soil and feed It until it fa tunnelled, and it just lays bold of the daisy and other weeds and chokes the Rife out of them Tug cabbage worm, of which so much complaint is made In various parts of New England, Is said by Mr. S. H. Scud der, of the Natural Hlitory Rooms, Bos ton, to be Paris rope—an English Im portation, which is spreading very rapidly. He has received It from Northern New Jersey, and complaints of Its ravages are made in Maine, Vermont, New 'Hemp shire and Massachusetts. Mr. Scudder says, In the Nem England Flintier, that it produces two broods a year, one in May and the other In July. The butter. dies are of feeble flight and can be easily taken In a scoop net. Wiser. board fences become old and the boards begin to come otf, nail upright facing strips upon them against each post, and the boards will be held to their places and the fence last several years longer. Always set a post lance over a ditch, or near a good drainage, and the post will always remain dry and will last many years longer than those standing in wet sub moll. Iv a horse is at all inclined to kick to harness, Helen to no excuse matte for Ms having done so. lie may go quietly for a week. month or year; but unit= he is • mere Inesperienad colt, kick again ha will, so sure as be Is • horse. If. afar: knowing what harness means, a hone kicks, he Is not to be radically cured of the propensity; believe no breaker who promises to take It out of him, GEORGE W. BARDWILL, Booth Deer. field, )lass., has gathered, this fall, nine barrels of, Northern Spy apples from it tree which had bore no fruit for seventeen years. Instead of cutting it down last spring, as he had intended, he plowed around and under it, and spread a barrel of ashes on the r.,il Toe kitchen is more important than the parlor. It should be kept perfectJy clean, well lighted, properly ventilated, and supplied with necessary conveni ences, Dry wood and a brisk tire, and an abundant supply of soft water, will greatly facilitate the labot of housewife or servants. Tux question - bas been asked whether apples should be shipped long distances in tight or ventilated barrels. Shippers of experience replied that the trust, after it is put in barrel dry, should be allowed to sweat before heading; and, after head ing, boles should be hiored in the heads and sides for ventilation. INDIANA says its crop of corn, scorns, Sm., this year, is too much for its hogs. They seem discouraged when they eon template the vast amount they have got to eat. Tue Rural New Yorker recommends mixing wheat that has a musty smell with slaked lime. It says the lime will sweet en it, and not Injure the grain. Tux Nova Scotia papers state that the crops in that country have been more than the average, and have been secured In the best possible condition. Fsnvens near the seashore in Maine have found that flith make as goal feed for sheep as hay, and that one flab makes a full meal fora sheep. Ravors. all straw and grass from around the trunks of fruit trees before mow fella Tea price of lands In some portions of Alabama has advanced 100 per cent. In two years. CORN sells at IL higher price than wheat In some parts of Indiana. IMIII=I ==i! I=l can be °owned from the caption at We heed of MA •rtLelo; fur of *1! dlomses Ithlch 101P110 baman health sad I holt.o helm. life: not. are more esre•slent them thoee which Oleo, the Uhf. tad pulmonary Usaurs. War Wel' we re..rd mw asease• in the UV" of a merely .81W:a coat.. which le bat the for, reamer of • zoo, .110460 I=ll I= pregnant with sell cd forebotikag of disaate_r. la no ninon of molultes nnould Inn pliyalclan o the Mewls sad tunny of the I.oe. be Mon variously forewarned than le thaw. of the leafs. I=l meal Is mast desirable, sad It Is then test denial I=l Dl= = tive, a tow. • soart•tiC and li4ol•Mat. = = =I 1!!!!MICI!::1:3 svmpathle• that dlatarb ue bartoontoo. wort. Mgt of the animal ennoway. the harrasslnf twee, the weal ivaplewUoit, lb. Math. Wyatt d with blood, will soon arty • Wang to tbs Perms.] and proper worktop• of health and vigor. ♦o aptrexated expert/tore of peer Ilan) , roan tta. an•Pled Dr. Keyser, to We rompuu.dtot of Mt LUSO CURL, to alto slow twos to Lb. Co gamest, beveled and at the mole is. eLesed7 renal Is those co. prevsle•t, eatsesteal sod pwnrcn.TWT unless eared by moo approprtau rome4y. UR. K 41 LUNG CONK le . and et- I= I= rare when •eeretbing else fella. and In simple ease .111 re, nfleeltmee toe few dale. The M.1...1013 or MAPIALAI, s.• •.• median 1=1:1 =1 1:1:113112=1 %Mil I crelo,t r. r at W. Ore. Illedlelpe Stogy, 1611 Llborty end (Tyco • to 6 wad V 1221:11 Ml= I= = mid alteratl• • are granitic's. 1 . , • iierlod of sear!, lu•nif Purls, luterval HOS rTiJi.v STUMM U BIT t. trio, liald to Les , iiii)druiu unrivalled Maul prepAr.t..wo ha" g. will It. WI lanif fin all fallen Into las male or vent lreiniulvloa for •••cit of •tronaa•. aro= Me lint, tale now ar neld•nuovraod Vageueile Toni/. ti•• been M'o an .1101.11 f &rid d n•nri• nv 11=1 &Wel, apwa the • t retiweinthl yew. of 14 elect- Irmo& e.. orei•Otthe sad rrrrr warms to bath no auto - nat. Tbe medical profethloo thietioa and approm• . and It It how at the head of a ,ths of m 00... to which It Winona. the admitted. •o•thwated Potaenalt 'roma - or To• AO, The 1.1.115011 e. or taw Vatted Maths Revel u e 11. partment olil verify the watrineat that It star.. alon• and •napprohehed I. the da masulta of he tales as compared with 1b.... 11 .of other prupetstitry mord, odayetteed oa thia ad. of tha •111•11 e. Tot . or this tact easy be r .m -prUed it a 1.. word. 11T011- £Oll BITTEitel hat oacs the . the salest seal the ceoet poteet of sit vegetable Were. and the heat aottdote W ern, •eliet• of mat.rloaa diseao. Ileac* It la especially edepud to the !arousal aelleoa of chlUlea deel eget age h.tle. MM. raw. FRUIT CAN TOPS. SELF LABELING COLLINS t WHICH r. • • Pii - CSDIIIiGf PA. . . w• an saw w• te amply St•t ••a NU... /I P. t. Ina ail damp as th• plain lop, h• the names a the 'arrant Pratte atmpal • the oover, raliatlag ham the Maier. Mad .la4es or potato" erampea ahem the toto or ttu east. It la Marl', DlAlnetly and Permanently Is/LlNELtalirlls by merely pisolus the Demo of the frail the Caa eostalua oppoalle the polatu sun., la the customary meaner Na preserver at fruit ar rood home/memo em eat Mb.. WI" W o, :bt• seeing t. hit page y to a•=o WNOTICF. lanai netting of the Stockholders of the ZONES Minn crorerminr WIII be ty Id at tbe GOD. of •. D. SMITH ro.. Noe 94 Water morel, cie 1101.1 Ye Noermher Ilith at II o ore, at width 'time sad plate ao /hello. for re Director. N• DI b. held, and mai other tomlnem t aaaaa chid aa may come before tW OriCell.. W-Y. lIKDISH, ochriqii IZ'Fila.ll% ° :' 14rAN( ELECTION for THIRTEEN DIRECTORS To tern for the 00000 fte ewer, will he held el TH ornet, I 2=l Oa ?MOAT, 9tl day of November Nut Belay. the bean of II ♦. N. sad 9 r. a w43ito_ WM. P. lIEFIBILItT. PnevviM7. IarDIVIDEND 111011 CF--The Directory .r the Wharneburi and Law• rencevilie Bytaimi Company hare thia day da elated • dividend of PI VII rza CLIP?. • for the laat eta month., payable at the olhoe of the Tresanrer to ebarpaburg forthwith. JNO. PIZZO. Tumour. mum...gnu. Oct. 7, IBM °elfin: _ NEW ADVXR GREAT REDUCTION IN Firloan PREPILITORT TO HIM BAIT FOB OH Christmas Stork t We offer 1111 oar rood. at hood at aresitr taste diced pre..., to room for new stock. at Malt naything Is oar will do ire I to we a pyrighta/.1 84.44 tars r FOR. VS ° 10 311. Ft db Oo'6l,