r 1 1 j i ji II M 1 I 13 IP :! M 1 W1 IJ Beuotci) to politics, itcvahtrc, agdcnltuvc, Science, iHovolitij, aiti cncral Sntclligcitcc. Jj JPj VOL. 29. PiiMishcd by Theodore Scliocli. TERMS Two doll its n ypiirin advance and if not jH bpf:f e the cn;l of the year, lvo dollars and fifty cents will l cli-.irpe l. No p i-xt ili:tumiiuvi until all arrearages are paid, exi'"ilf a; the ;ii'n ! the K.litor. ivcriisoijieiils of one s.juare of (eight lines) or r's. oa or tfifC insertions 51 50. Each additional netl iii 50 ceni.s. Longer ones in proportion. JOJ5 E:2IXYfG, OF ALL KINDS, Executed in the lushest style of the Art, and on the most reasonable terms. DR. J. LANTZ, Surgeon ami Mechanical Dentist, Still has his office on Main Street, in the second story of Dr. S. Walton's brick buinling, neatly oppo site the StrotnlsliurR House, arid lie flatters himself that I')' eishti'fit years constant practice and the inoft earnest ainl careful altcnll' n to all matters pertaining to his profession, thai he is fully able to perform all operations in the denial line m the most cartful, tasle I'll and skill!':'! manner. Special attention given to savin-; the Natural Teeth ; also, to the insertion of Artificial Teeth on Rubber, Ciold, Silver or Continuous Gums, and pertect fits in all eases insured. .Most persons know the great folly and danger ot en trusiin their work to the' inexperienced, or to those living at a distance. April 13, lsTl. ly DR. N. L. PECK, Surgeon. Dentist, Announces that bavin? just returned from Dental Collets, be is fully prepared to make nrtificial teeth in the most beautiful and life like manner, and to fili decayed teeth ac cording to the most in proved mcthoJ. Tec ili extracted without pain, when b pired, bv the use of Nitrous Oxide Gas, which is entirely harmless. Repairing of ail kinds neatly done. All work warranted. Charges reasonable. Office in J. (I. Keller's new Brick build in?, .Main S'reet, Ktroudsburg, Pa. February 23, 1371. Cm. D ill. GEO. W. JACKSON Physician, Surgeon & iceouciier, Oilice, Detrick'd building, residence Kres gey's Hotel. EAST STROUDSBURG, Pa. June 3, 170. tf. Would ivsj).-tf:illy announce- to tlie public that he has removed his oihcefn;n Oakland to Canadensis, Monroe County, Pa. Trusting that main' years of consecutive practice f Medicine and triirgery will be a fuflicient guarantee for the pubiie confidence. February 125, lSTit. tf. J .132 SIS 51. WASFOX, . Attoriacj ist I..aw, Office in second story of new building, near ly opposite the Washington Hotel, Main at. Ftroudsburg, Pa. January 1', 1ST'1. tf. " s. HOLMES, Jit. Attorney at I-mv, STROUDSBURG, PA. . OrTice, on Main Street, 5 d.ors above the StrouiU-burjj Ilousr, and opposite Ructer't clothing store. C7"3asine.-s of all kinds attended to with promptness and flde'iiiy. May 6, I?G9. if. D O.VT you know lliiit .9. II. McCarty is the only Undertaker in Siroudtburg who understands his business! If not. attend a Funeral managed by any other Undertaker in town, and you will see t he proof of tho fact. Sept. 1 G, '67 DEV. EDWARD A. WILSON'S (of Wil- ham-burgh, X. Y.) Recipe for CON SUMPTION and ASTHMA carefully com pounded at HOLLINSHEAD'S DRUG STORE. 07" Medicine s Fresh and Pure. Nov. 21. 1607. W. IIOLLINSiJEAD. JELLEUSVILLE HOTEL. The n'tiHTslgncv Laving purchase:! the We well known and popular Ilotc! Proper t.v. would respectfully inform the travelling public that he has refurnished and fitted up ihe Hotel in the best style. A handsome liar, with choice Liquors and Sugars, polite attendants and moderate charges. b. j. van cott. Nip. 1S70. tf. Proprietor. K 11 A. OCKAFELLOW, DEALER IN Rcady-SIadc nothing, Gcnls Fur nishing Goods, -Hats & Caps, Bods k Shoes, &c. EAST STliOUDSBURG, PA. (Near the Depot.) The public are invited to call and exam ine goods. Prices moderate. Way G, 1SG9. tf. . i3l!a. STERT Fresh ground Nova Kcotia PLASTER, at Stokes'' Mills. HEMLOCK BOARDS, FENCING, SHINGLES, LATH, PA- UM, and POSTS, cheap. FLOUR and FEED constantly on hand. Will exchange Lumber and Plaster for Grain or pay the highest market price. BLACKSMITH SHOP just opened by C Stone, an experienced-workman. Public trade solicited. N. S. WVCKOFF. Stokes' Mills, Pa., April 20, 1871. THE STROUDSBURG Passenger R.W. Co. T' nni1 ftr.4r Bonds. Interest payable in January and April. Tor sale at the 3Ionroe Coimtj Han I. v . , . , TIIOS. A. IJELL, March 10, 1671. Trrnknr. MONROE COUNTY BANK! STItOUOSISUKC, PA. ON THE FIRST OF ATRIL, 1871, THIS BISriv will commence paying Interest on DAILY DEPOSITS, at the rate of Four Ier Cent SUBJECT TO CHECK AT SIGHT. Accounts rendered, and interest credited monthly. SEVEN PER CENT INTEREST PATH on permanent deposits, as heretofore. Checks on all parts of the Country COLLECTED Free of Cost for Depositors. DRAFTS FOR SALE ON 5:ril.Ti:I isi Erclanri. All deposits in this Bank are secured by Bond, with securiety to Thos. M. Mcllha ney. Trustee, in trust for Depositors, which bond is recorded in the proper office. THOS. A. BELL, Cashier. March 10, 1371 ly. p S. WILLIAMS, Watchmaker & Jeweler, MAIN-ST, STOUDSBURG, PA. Located in corner buildinjr, third door be low the JerTersoninn office. Room handsome 'y fitted up, ond heavily stocked with the fi nest assortment of Clocks, Watches, Jewelry, Jewelers No tions, &c, ever offered in this section of countiy. A full assortment of Spectacles, of the best quality, aud suited to all ages, always on sale. Silver-ware, and Silver Plated ware, al ways on hand at manufacturers prices. 07Repairin neatly executed, and char ges extremely moderate. Calls from the public respectfully soliciied. November 5th, 18GS ly. MONROE COUNTY 32a I a St., Stroudsburs, Pa. The subscriber would rosjectfullv inform the public that he is .tiil at his old stand where he will furnish at .short notice GRAVE STONES, m MONUMENTS, &c. &c, of the bc.-;t material and workmanship and at as reasonable rates as they can-be purchased at any other establishment in the country. J. K. KRDMAN. Jlach 0, '7L-4m. THERE WERE SOLD IN THEyEAR 70 8,841 OF Blatchley's Cucumber TRADE MARK WOOD PUMPS, Measuring 213,505 feet in lenghth, or f uflicient in the aggregate for A WELL 0VEII 40 MILES DEEP, Sirnple in Construction Easy in Opera tion Giving- no Taste to the Water Durable Reliable and Cheap, These Pumps ie their own brst recomtnciulaiinn. For sale by Dealers in Harttware nr.d Agricultural Implements, numbers. Pump Makers, &.c, through out Hie countiy. Circulars, 4c, furnished upon ap plication by mail or otherwise. Single Pumps forwarded to parties in towns nliere I have no agents upon receipt ol the regular retail price. In buying, be careful that your Pump bears my trade mark as above, as I guarantee no other. CIIAS. G. Ii LATCH LEV, Manufr, Office and Wareroom, G24 & 626 Filbert Street, Philadelphia. March 2, 1871 6m. NEW FIRM. The undersigned having formed a co-pa rt nerdiip, under the firm name of Burt & Ilsr zog, for the purpose of carrying on ihe Brew inn; business, at East Stroudsburjr, Pa., would respectfully inform the public that they will be able, all times, to famish to or der, a pure article of ALE at short notice. Their stock of material be ing the best the City affords, none but the pure and best malt liquors will be permit ted to leave their establishment. They re spectfully solicit the patronage of the pub lic. JOHN BURT, J A COD F. IIERZOG. East Stroudbburg, Pu. Dec. 1, 1870. Marbe Works, STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., JULY i-'ix in a row on the doorsteps there Nice little st hoolma'am, prim and fair, Funniest nose?, dimpled chins, ' Li.sten awhile 1 the school begins. Classes in 'rithmetic, come this way ! Why were you absent, Mary Day ? Now, Miss Susan, what's twice four ? Maybe it's 'leven, maybe more. "Johnny, don't blow in your brothers' car; Stop it! or must I interfere? Say your tables now begin ; 'Trustees' might come dropping in 1 "What would they ever say to us, Finding the school in such a fuss? Baby Jenny, how is that? DOG, dear don't spell cat. "Terrible boy ! your face is red Why will you stand upon your head? Class in spelling, that will do: Here's "sterfiticates for you." Faces as pure as the morning sun, Voices that ring with harmless fun ; Sweet is the lesson you impart ! Sweet! and I learn it all by bait? Six in a row on the doorstep there ; Nice little schoolma'am, prim and fair, Free of the world, and all its pain; Would I could join your school again ? fc The Devil and Tom Walker. BY WASHINGTON IRVINQ. As Tom waxed old he trrew thought ful. Having secured the ?ood things of u o ri this world, he began to feel anxious about the next. He thought with regret oa the bargain he had wade with his black friend, and put his wits to work to cheat him out of his conditions. lie became, therefore, all of a sudden, a violent church-goer. He prajed loudly, strenu ously, as if heaven were to be carried by force of lungs. Indeed, one might always tell, wheu he had sioned most during the week by the clamor of his Sunday devo tion. The quiet Christians who had been modestly and quietly traveling Sionward were struck with self-reproach at seeing themselves so suddenly outstripped in their career by this newly-made convert. Tom was as rigid in religion as in money matters ; he was a stern supervisor and censurer of his neighbors, and seemed to thick that every sin entered up to their account became a credit on his page. lie even talked of the expediency of reviving the prosecution of the Quakers and anti Daptists. Id a word, Tow's zeal became as his riches. Still, in spite of his strenuous atten tion to forms, Tom had a lurking dread that the devil after all would have his due. That he might not be taken un awares, therefore, it is said he always car ried a small Bible in his pockets. lie had also a great folio Bible in his counting-desk, and would frequently be found reading when people called oa business ; on such occasions he would lay his green spectacles on the book to mark the place, wnue ne turnca round to drive some usurious bargain. Some say that Tom grew a little crack- brained in his older days, and that fancy ing his end approaching, he had his horse new shod, saddled, and buried with his feet uppermost, because that, at the last day, the world would be turned upside down, in which case he would find his horse ready for mounting, and he was de termined at the worst to give his friend a run for it. This, however, is probably a mere old wife's fable. If he really did take that precaution, it was totally super fluous at least, so says the authentic old legend, which closes his story in the fol lowing manner : "One hot afternoon, in the dog days, just as a terrible black thunder gust came up, Tom sat in his counting-house in his white linen cap aud India silk morning gown. -He was on the point of foreclos ing a mortgage, by which be would com plete the ruin of aa unhappy speculator, for whom he had professed the greatest friendship. The poor land jobber begged him to grant a few months' indulgeuce. Tom had grown teety and irritated, and refused another day. "My family will be ruined and brought upon the parish,' said the land jobber. "Charity begins at home," cried Tom ; 'I must take care of myself these hard times.' ' "You have made so much money out of me,' said the speculator. "Tom lost his patience and his piety. "The devil take me," said he, if 1 have made a farthing.' "Just then there were three loud knocks at the street doer. "He stepped out to see who was there'. A clack man with a black horse, which Deighed and stamped with impatience. "Tom, you are come for,' 6aid the black fellow, grufily. 'Tom shrunk back, but too late. lie had left his little Bible at the bottom of his coat pocket, an J his big Bible on the desk, buried under the mortgage he was about to foreclose never was a poor sin ner taken more unawares. The black man whisked him like a child astride the horse, and away he galloped in the midst of a thunder storm. "The clerks stuck their pens behind their ears and stared after him from the windows. Away weut Tom Walker dash ing down the streets, his cap bobbing up and his morninz-jrrown fluttering in the wind, and his steed striking fire out of the pavement at every bound. When the clcik turned to lock tho black man had disappeared. "Tom Walker never returned to fore close the mortgage. A countryman who lived near the swamp reported that at the height of the thunder gust he had heard a great clattering of hoofs and howling along the road, and that when he ran to tho window he just caught sight of a fig ure such as I have described, on a horse that galloped like mad across the black hemlock swamp toward the old Indiau fort, and that shortly after a thunder-bolt fell in that dircctiou, which seemed to set the whole forest in a blaze. "The good people of Bostoa shook their hands aud shrugged their shoulders. They had been so accustomed to witches and goblins, and tricks of the devil iu all kinds of shapes, from tho first settlement of the colony, that they were not so much horror struck as might have been expect ed. "Trustees were appointed to take charge of Tom's effects. There was nothing, however, to administer upon. Ou search ing his coffers, all his bonds aud mort gages wrerc found reduced to cinders. In place of gold aud silver, his irou chests were filled with chips and shaving, two skeletons lay in his stable instead of his half-starved horses, and the very next day his great house took fire and burnt to the ground." Such was the end of Tom Walker and his ill-gotten wealth. Let all money brokers lay the story well to heart The truth is not to be doubted. The very hole under the oak trees, from whence he dug Kidd's money, is to be seen to this day, and the old neighboring swamp and the old Indian fort is often hunted in stormy nights bv a figure on horseback, in a moruing gown and white cap, which is doubtless the troubled spirit of the usurer. In fact, the story has re solved itself into a proverb, and is the original of the popular saying prevalent throughout New Eugland of "the Devil and Tom Walker." A Teacher Murdered in Sicrht of Hen Scholars Attempted Suicide, Laoranoe, Ind., June 23. Mi?s An na Dwight, a school mistress, was murder ed yesterday, at Stone Lake school house, about ten miles from here, in Van Buren township, by a young man named Chaun cey Barnes, of Elkhart county. Barnes left his father's house yesterday morning, walked to White Pigeon, four miles, dis tant, hired a horse aud buggy there, and taking with him a woman whose name and character are not yet known, went to the school house where Miss Dwight was teaching. Miss Dwight was at the time enjoying the noon recreation with the school children, on the margin of the lake near by when Barnes and the woman drove up. The woman called Miss Dwight to the bugsry side, when Barnes alighted and asked her to walk with him, as he wished to speak to her privately. She consented, and they went a short distance and sat down on a log and conversed a few minutes, when Barnes was seen to rise, draw a revolver from his pocket and fire two shots at her. She fell at the first fire. lie then presented the pistol at his own head and fired several tiroes. Two children ran frightened to a neighbor near by, who ran immediately to the epot, found Miss Dwight dead, aud the youug man reloading hi3 pistol. He and the unknown woman were promptly placed in custody, and Surgeon Elliott, of White Pigeou, sent for- 1 he doctor reports four wound3 in Barnes' bead, two of which en tered the brain, and that this would even tually prove fatal. An examination of the parties was had before Justice Gallo way, the young man committed to jail, and the woman held to bail in the sum of 81,000 Charles Dwight, the father of the murdered girl, going her bail. The young man was brought to jail last night, and is this morning resting tolerably com fortable. The physicians here are not so certain as to the seriousness of his wounds Great excitement prevails iu tho vicinity of the homicide. The neighbors are pre pared to finish the work the young man attempted on himself, but Mr. Dwight protested against it, and a better judgment prevailed. There is some comment on the fact of the father of the murdered girl bailing the woman. The ouly sup posed cau?e of the crime is the rejection of Barnes ar a suitor a short time aiio, and the acceptance by Miss Dwight of the attentions cf another person. The pis tol used was a small six shooter. Barnes has been clcrkiug in a grocery store, at White Pigeou, Michigan, lately and had borne a good character. His father is a farmer in Elkhart county, Indiana. From the Cincinnati Commercial. June How a Temporaries Society was Wound Up. A sad story conies from George con cerning the fate of a temperance insur ance society, which was started by ten persons, each ante ing up 5, and con tributiug So a month, those who didn't backslide in twelve months to divide tho accumulated amount. All but one re lapsed into their errors, and on tho ap poiuted day the survivor called at the treasurer's office to obtain the 050 due. The treasurer being out, ho took a seat and a drink of whisky. At that moment the clock struck twelve, and tho solemn information was conveyed to his cars that the treasurer had lost all the mouey at a skin game of poker with the" presiding elder, and had pine the way of all default ing treasurer.. The sad event has cast, etc. 20, 1871. A Crying Shame. Oa the 20th of June the child of Mr. Heury Bctweiler, of Bhillipsburg died, and on the 21st Mr. Dctweilcr weut to see about its burial in the Cemetery of that place. Mr. Lcrch the Superintend ent of the Cemetery, was waited upon, and did not think the grave could be got ten ready in time for the funeral. The child was however buried iu the Cemetery on the 22d, and shortly after Mr. Lerch called upon Mr. Ietwciler and demanded pay for the plot in which the child had been buried. Mr. Betweiler is a man of ordinary laboring circum stances, and not having the money with him at the time of demand went to the shop of his employer, Mr. Winters, a wheelright, to get some money due him. Mr. Winters happened to be away at the time, and of course Mr. B could not ob tain his wages. Mr. Lerch thereupon began a tirade of abuse on Mr. Detweiler with threats to disinter the child if the amount was not paid. Mr. Winters when he returned home, sent his son to tell Mr. Lerch to come to the shop and he would pay him tor the plot, aud also for his ser- vices in burying the child of Mr. I), twei- lcr. Mr. Lerch, who is a milk dealer, af terwards drove up to 31r. Winters' shop, wheu the money was tendered him ou condition that he would give a receipt. Mr. Lerch refused either to take the mon- gripingey 0r to give a receipt, and after abusing Mr. Winters very shamefully, drove off and went to Mrs. Detweiler aud told her if he did not get that money he would have the child disinterred aud set outside the fence. 'Ibis he had done oa the 2d of July. Mrs. Lamb, wife of the man who lives at the Cemetery, says that she land several others saw Mr. Lerch with some amozement disinter the child and set it outside the fence, and for a time the stench was so bad that she was com pelled to keep the door of her house shut. Mr. Lerch had a note sent to Mr. Detwei ler by the overseer of the poor informing him of the disinterment, and asking him what was to be doDC. This seems a most strange case. Free Press, Fast on. Constitutional Convention. At the coming October eloction the citizens of Pennsylvania will vote upon the question of calling a Convention to amend the State Constitution, under the following act passed by the last Legisla ture : An Act to authorize a popular vote up on the question of culling a Convention to amend the Constitution of Pennsyl vania. Section 1. Be it enacted, -., That the question of calling a convention to amend the constitution of this common wealth be submitted to a vote of the peo ple at the general election, to be held on the second Tuesday of October next, the said question to .he voted upon in manner following, to wit: In counties and cities in which slip ticket voting is authorized by law, votes for and against a conven tion may be expressed and civen upon the ticket, head or endorsed with the word "State," and not otherwise ; and the words used shall be "Constitutional Con vention," or "against a convention," and in counties or districts in which slip tick et voting shall not be authorized by law, each elector voting upon said question shall cast a separate ballot, endorsed on the outside "Constitutional Convention," and containing on the inside the words "for a convention," or "against a conven tion ;" and all votes cast as aforesaid shall be received, counted and returned by the proper election officers and return judges as votes for governor arc received, count ed and returned under existing laws. Sec. 2. That the elcctiou aforesaid shall be held and be subject to all the the provisions of law which apply to gen eral elections ; the sheriffs of tho several counties shall give notice of this act in their election proclamation the present year, and the governor shall cause all the returns of tho said elections, as received by the secretary of the commonwealth, to be laid beforo the legislature at its next annual election. A Good Rat Trap. 1 Farmers and housekeepers who arc troubled with rats may try the folio-ring plan given by tho Journal 0 the Farm: "Take a barrel which will hold water, cut the head a little rnaller than the top of the barrel, pass a string through the cen tre of the head, and hang tt up so that it may hang perfectly free insido the barrel, three or four iuches below the chine. Now, put in five or six inches of water, and drop some grease on the top of the barrel head, which you mu-it balance by tacking on some thin pieces of lea 1 ; place your trap where the rats cau get on it easily, and it is ready. They come up to the grease, and in stepping one one sida of tho head the other naturally tips up, and in goes the rat. The head soon gains its equilibrium, and is ready for aether. Sometime?, when there is considerable grease or food around where they can get it, they won't take the bait. In this case, put a little auise seed in your bait." A very smart hoy on his return from college, attempted to prove that two were equal to three. Pointing to a roasted chicken on the table, he paid : "Is not that one t" and then pointing to another: "Is not that two ? and do not ono and two make three ?" Whereupon his father 1 1 nt'p . 1 1 -r 1 1 saiu : " ue, vou ukc one ami 1 ll take tho other, and our smart boy caa have the third or his dinner" ISO. 13. Feeding Poultry. Onions are slid to be an admirable fooJ for fowls, or rather adjunct to the ordi nary food. If given regularly, it is said they will prevent the attacks of the mor ordinary diseases of poultry. Meat is said by authorities to be an esseutial food for poultry, especially in the winter, when they cannot get the worms, they pick up in summer. Others, again, maintain that the habits of giving meat to poultry is productive of grave evils the cause of many of the worst forms of disease which affects them. By those authorities it is called an unnatural food, inasmuch as thsr digestive organs of the birds are not fit ted to assimilate it. There must, we think, be some mistake in all this ; for wa know of a surety that fowls do eat, hen they can get it, and entirely of their owt accord, an enormious quantity of animal food. Here it 13 not cooked ; the grama found in nature's garden is raw. If meat i3 au unnatural food for poultry, they cer tainly have a most unnatural appetite for it. Throw in one lump of meat among a lot of fowls ; if not literally a bone of cod tention, it is something vastly like it, so cager are all to get a grab at it. We be lieve the habit of giving much food in a short space of time to poultry is a badt one. If you notice their habits, you wiff see that the process of picking up their food under the ordinary, or what wo call the natural condition, is a very slow one. Grain by grain docs the meal get taken, and with the aggregate no small amount of baud, small pebbles, and the like, all of which passing into the crop, assist diges tion greatly. But ia the "hen mode of feeding poultry, a great heap is thrown down, and the birds allowed to "peg away" at such a rate that their crop 13 -filled far too rapidly, and the process of assimila tion is slow, painful and incomplete. No wonder that so many cases of choked crav are met with under this treatment. Dr. Livingston, the African Explorer, and His Whereabouts. Dr. Kirk, writing from Zanzibar on the COth of April to Miss Livingstone, daugh ter cf Dr. Livingstone, eays: "By the last news of the Arabs ho (Dr. Livingstone) had gone to a place called Manema, which is on the other side of Tanganyika Lake: but this place you will not find on any map. At Ujiji he made friends with some Arabs who 1 hear have been very kind to him, and in their com pany visited Manema, which is about two hundred miles west of the lake, and if they must have crossed in punts or ca noes, or what we call dhows. He and his Arab friends got to Manemn, and they (the Arabs) made a good business ia ivory. I suppose the doctor did what he went for, and will tell us some day what he saw; but on his way bnck he got well, he seems to have been bard up, as I should have said when out of cash, and detained for remittances. Luckily the means were at hand, and the man I sent to Ujiji to help him has sent on all he needs, and there will still be a good store on his return to Ujiji. The expense and loss ia gettiug thiugs so far into a savage land arc great, and at a cholera time it was well we got anything up at all, so thafc he will never receive the whole of what I sent and Mr. paid for. A second supply has been forwarded, but I shan't be sorry if the doctor passes it on the way. I should say the parcel of clothing and boots was sent off long ao. Grooming; Horses. The horse being the most important machine in. the farmer's establishment, care should be taken to preserve him iu a3 psrJcct a state cf her.lrh and condition as possible. The ordinary enre of a horsr consists in feeding and watering him, and wheu from neglect he suffers, dosing him with balls and drenches. Physicking a horse may be avoided altogether by treat ing him properly. Give him a roomy, airy stable a loose box, or stall, is pre ferable to tring up with the halter. Clean out his stable daily ; nothing i more hurtful to the feet of a horse than to permit him to stand in a pile of fer menting manure.- With a clean bed, and left loose in his stall, he will, of his own instinct, avoid laying m filth, sn much labor in cleaning will be saved. Every niht, when the day's work is done, wash his his lect and legs free from mud and dirt, and in winter clean off all ice or snow. Cleanliness is an absolute preven tive of grease and other di?eac which commonly affect the feet and legs of hors es. Have handy in the stable a piece of rough sacking, and rub his legs and knee joints for a lew minutes before leaving; him for the night. A day's plowing or harrowing over soft, yielding soil is ex cessively hard wotk for the legs of both horso and man, and this plan of rubbing with a coarse cloth is good for either. Feed regularly, and groom morning and night, and you may "throw physio to tho dogs." Hearth and Jfome. An Indianapolis woman, at the grate of her husbaud not long ago, according t all the papers, said there was one consola tion she knew uow where be was nigh a. The best guardian of a woman's happi ness is her husband's lovo; and for her houor her own affection. The first ingredient in conversation ia truth, the next pood souse, tho third, good humor, aud the fourth wit. Tho friend that LiL-s from its p.tir faults is of h--s sjrvica t- us iluu t.'v ciieuiy thut upbmida uj with ihviu.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers