mmmWmmmtBmmmMmW&mmmmmmwmWmWmmmmmWmmfmmm&&mm , THE JEFFERSONI AN"' Bcuotcu to politics, ttcraturc, agriculture, Science, iHoruliti), ani (general intelligence; VOL. 30. STROUUSBURG, MONROE COUxNTY, PA. JUNE 27, 1872. NO. 9. published by Theodore Schoch. trr(S -To il1lir a ye:rin advance and if not b"'""nR Fn ll,c 7c-,r l" uoiinrsanu nily ,,nl be charpeJ. pti'f Jiooi)tiunel until all arrearages are paid, Hf!t '. the option ol the Eilitor. jC7AJveriiements of one square ofteight line) or an or inrrc ui-t-i nni- i jf. nnv.ii niiuil ioildl intrtimi 30 cenu. Longer ones tn proportion. JOB PRINTING, or ALL KINDS, Iieeutrd in the hiahest style of the Art, and on the ino.t reasonable terms. Valuable Property FOR SALE. The subscrilers offer for sale, their residence in Stroudsburg. The Ifit has a front of 145 ft. jgyyton .nam Street, with a depth of -Sii fort. The building consist of a convenient dwell ing house, store house, barn and other out building There is an abundance of choice apples, jinn, plums, grapes and small fruits, with excellent water. Mr 16, '72. A. M. & R. STOKES. I ACiiiWix.x.i nor. si:. i orposm: the iepot, East Stroudsburg, Pa. B. J. VAN COTP, Proprietor. The run contains the choiest Liquors and tlieTACl.K i supplied with the best the market iffurik Charges moderate. may 3 lS72-tf. DR. J.LANTZ, Surgeon ami Mechanical Dentist, Still Im his nflii-e on Main Stret-t, in the second :ry f Ir. S. Walton's brirW lniiUlmg, neaily opw iif'thts trondburg lfotie, and tie fl.ttlers himself lut by riglurru ye.us constant prstctire and the nuit irnvi dnd r.iiriiil altentu-n to all mailers pertaining l hi prnfeion, that he is fully ahle to perform ail Mrt"ns in the dental lute 111 the most careful, t.tcte lil Ani skillf'il manner. Snt-rul a'teiition given to avtnq the N.itura! Terth ; t. tie lnsrrtton of Artificial Teeth on Rubber, CIJ. Siivr or Cintiiiu jus Gums, and ptrrlect fits In ill rAr inntrrd. Mot persons know the great folly and il.injer of en trunii ttielr vork to tlie jnexperienceil. r to those liTiitg at a instance. April 13, 11? I. ly DIt. V. O. IIOFIM1AX, M. IK Would respectfully announce to the public that he has removed his office from Oakland to Canadensis, Monroe County, Pa. Trusting that many years of consecutive practice of Medicine and Surgery will be a affieicnt guarantee for the public confidence. Februa rv L, 1 870. tf. Gto. "W. Jackson. Amzi LeBar. Drs. JACKSON & LcBAK pnvsicnxs, si'bgeoss i AtiiimiEits, Strovttshurg ami foist StromLltnrg, Pa. DR. GEO. W. JACKSON, Stroudsburg, It the old office of Dr. A. Reeves Jackson KwMenre in WyckolTs Building. DR. A. LeBAR, East Stroudsburg, 5t next door to Smith's Store. .Residence n Mm K. IMIer'n. feb. 8 72-tf DR. N. L. PECK, Surgeon Dentist, Announces lint unvinjr just returned from Deoitl Coilegp, he is fully prepared to make irnficul teeth in the most beautiful and lile- liie manner, and to fill decayed teeth crdm to tlir mod it proved mcthoil. Teeth exfractr-d without p.iin, when nc- de- Tfd, hy the use of Nitrous Oxide Gas, hich it entirely h-innles. Repairing of 1 1 kinds neatly done. All work warranted. Chtrjes reasonable. Ofice in J. ii. Keller' new Brick build er Miiri S'reet, .Stroudsburg, Fa. uf 31-tf Ti.MLS II. WALTO., Allorncj- at 1axy9 f 'fnre in the btiildin fonnerlv occupied nrson, and opjosite the Stroule l'ank. Main street, trouilsbur, J'a. jn IT.-tf KELLER SVILLE HOTEL. ,The undersijrned having jnirchas'd the tvc known and pojular Hotel l'ror V. would rcsji'ctfullv iiilorni the traveling Mbhr that he has rcfurni.hcd ami fittinl up inuri in u,e hest htvle. A liaii'lsonie ir. ith choice Linuors and S Ilite '"eodants and nioU-rate charges C''ars, CIIAKLK.S 31 ANAL, 10 1ST1. tf.J J'roprietor. Fonnd out why jicople ?o to McCarty's to f't thetr furniture, be-ause he buys it at the ,re ''""inn of v Co. and Wlls it at avance if only tiretif-tirt and tico- w 7T r, ,,t. ( )r in t her word.- Hocking r tiat llf. mVli of Jce !t Co. (throusrh jn runn.rs . H-m't have) for $4,50 he soils .. J ,yt ,,', (0 fj,,,. some oool Fat- , li:k k co. roudshurg. Aug. IS, 1870. tf. r PLASTER ! rr, f,roun,j Nova Scotia PLASTER, t!H,,k,V Mins HEMLOCK BOARDS, IkV.:,NG' KinntfLES, LATH, l'A ,JM.n.J I'OSTS. cheap. nJUliand FEED constantly on hand. r 1 1 exchange Lumber and Plaster for "Jin or tny tlif h'gl.eet market price. C,A(;KSMITI SHOP jt opened by Vm'-' '", exPL'r'Pncd workman. 1 uUic trade solicited. , .. N- WVCKOFF. -Mi!!, IN,., April 20, 1671. JHV. EDWARD A. WILSON'S (of Wil-fcl-o,1?'?1', N. Y.) Recipe for CON. and ASTHMA carefully com- funded at hollinshead's dhug stoke. Medicines Fresh and Pure. Cr-L 1Q7.J W. HOLLINSHEAD. FARMING IN CALIFORNIA. FORTY THOUSAND ACRE FIELD GANG TLOAVS AND HEADERS RENTERS AND LAND OWNERS THE BEETSUGAR CUL TURE. Between Stockton and 3Ierced lie about six hundred square miles of wheat. The railroad train runs through what appears iu ue an interminaDle wheat, field, with smaii nouses and barns at great ntstances apart, and no fences, except those by which the company has guarded its trains against the cattle, which are turned into the fields after harvest to clean the crain and consume the stubble. Wheat, wheat, wheat, and nothing but wheat is what you see on your journey, as far as the eye can reacn over the plain in every direc tion. Fields of two, three and four thou sand acres make but small farms ; here is a man who "has in" 20,000 acres ; here oue with 40,000 acres, and another with some still more preposterous amount all iu wheat. Of course, the crop is in and and up, and from six inches to a foot bight ; it is not so fine a fight as it will be two months hence, when the whole plain will be an ocean of waving tassels. Vet, as you look out and see mile after mile, without a division fence, 50 or 60 miles apparently in one field, it makes its impressiou. The Valley of the San Joa quin differs from an Illinois prairie in that it has two magnificent mountain ranges for its boundaries, the Si vada on the east, and the Coast Range on the west. Ihe mouth of the Valley is to the north, as that of the treat Val ley of Virginia ; the San Joaquin river joins the Sacramento and flows into the sea, and this has been, until this year, the chief avenue for freight transport from the country through which it runs. Now the railroad is in operation as far as Mer ced ; it will reach Visali in 3Iay, and JJakerfield in July, and Los Angeles or San Bernardino perhaps in October; and the great rich valley, which has so long lain asleep, given up to horses and cattle, is wakiDg up. A MARVELOUS CROr AT HAND. It is a singular piece of good fortune to the farmers and land owners that they get a remarkably fine scasou and and the railroad in the same year. They have known how to avail themselves of their good luck, fur they have put in enormous crops. One of the best informed men in Stockton assured me that the San Joa quin Valley will send to tide water this year 1S0,0U0 tuns of wheat. 31 r. Tried lander, the ureal grain buyer of this State, is reported to me to have estimated the probable export of the whole State this year at uu.UiM funs. 1 his means that 700 ships of 1U00 tuns each will be need ed to carry California s crop to its far away markets; aud it means that 18,000 cars, each carrying 10 tons of grain, will be needed to move the surplus wheat of the San Joaquin Valley to Sau Francis co ; or CG0 trains of 50 cars each ; or single train more than 100 miles long. There will be ships needed to market the grain crop; and there will be men need ed to harvest it ; aud as the harvest here lasts three months, and as harvesters will this year get at least $2 a day and food, many a thrifty man will no doubt earn a small farm by his labors in the wheat fields. It will surprise you perhaps, as is did rue, to hear that much of this great wheat field, of which I have spoken, docs not bear, even iu such a good year as this is, more than from 10 to 12 bushels per acre. A large part of the plain between Stockton and 31 creed is light and sandy. Some of it looks like a mere collection of of white sand ; and the wind when it blows strongly, as it often does, blows a man's farm about a great deal. There is a goodly quantity of heavier soil a sandy loam, the best of which yields in a good year from 20 to 30, and even 40 bushels per acre ; and at the western side of the San Joaquin there it yet heavier land, adobe, which will bear, when it is not too wet, Mill heavier crops. A great deal of this land is owned in large tracts of from 20,000 to 40,000, and from that 100,000 acres. The holders of these tracts do not usually farm them, but lease or rent them; and this is a vast business in itself, as you may understand. But I mut first re mind you that if it were not for the pecu liar climate of this State, wheat raising on such a scale would be impossible. They sow the wheat here from the 1st of December to the 1st of March, and they have the other three months to harvest it in, with a certainty that no rain will dis turb them during their long harvest. HOW THE CALIFORNIA FIELDS ARE PLOW ED. The fields are piowed with what are called gang-plows, which are simply four, six or eight plowshares fastened to a stout frame of wooJ. On the lighter soils eight horses draw a seven gang plow, and oue such team is counted ou to put in G10 acres of wheat in the sowing season ; or from 8 to 10 acres per day. Capt. Gray, near Merced, has put io this season 4000 acres with five such teams his own land and his own teams. A seed sower is fas tened iu front of the plow. It scatters the seeds the plows cover it and the work is done. The plow has no handles, aud the plow-man U, in fact, only a driver ; he guides the team ; the plows do their own work. It is easy work, and a smart boy, if bis legs are equal to the walk, is as good a plowman as anybody for the team turns the corners, the and plow is not handled at all. It is a striking sight to see, as I saw, 10. eight horse teams followiog each other, over a vast plain, cutting 'lands" a mile long, and when all had passed me leaving a track, 40 feet wide, of plowed ground. On the heavier soil, the process is somewnai ainerent. An eight-horse ieam moves a iour gang plow, and gets over aoout six acres per day. The seed is then sown by a machine which scat- icio ii, itei, anu sows io to luu acres in a day, and the ground is then harrow ed and cross harrowed. When the far " 1 -TT II . . mer, in mis alley, has done his winter sowing, he turns his teams and men into other ground, which he is to summer fal low. ihis he cau do from the first of March to the middle of 3Iay ; and by it he secures a remunerative crop for the following year, even if the season is dry. tl:. j? ' . . .. . ' auis discovery is oi inestimable import ance to the farmers on the drier part of these great plains. Experience has de monstrated conclusively that if they plow their land in the spring, let it lie until the winter rains couoe on, then sow their wheat and harrow it in, they are sure of a crop ; and the summer will have killed every weed, beside. A VOLUNTEER CROP. After the summer fallowing is done, the teams have a rest. The horses and mules are turned out to grass for some weeks, and about the 4th of July the har- vest, oegins. ii is men the rainless sea son ; and the farmer gets his teams, his headers, his grain wagons, his thresher and his sacks and men into the field, and ou the light soil cuts, threshes, and puts into sacks the grain at the rate often of 150 acres per day. Three "headers," which cutoff only the heads of the wheat stalks. leaving the straw standing, and nine wagons to take the heads from the headers to the thresher, require to work them 23 men and 83 horses. With this force they get in 150 acres per day. The grain put into sacks is left on the fields until time and teams can be got to haul it to the railroad ; or often until it is sold It does not sweat nor mould, and there is no fear of rain. As soon as the crop is harvested, the teams are bitched to a brush six horses to a twenty-foot brush, which goes over the field at the rate of 40 acres a day. The brush scatters the irran which has been dropped in the fields ; and sometimes a little more seed is added When it has been brushed it is plowed two or three inches deep to cover the seed : and from this comes, without fur ther care, what is called a "volunteer" crop, which is olten better than first, and as certaiuly counted on. Now the horses and men have another interval of rest until the rains begin and plowing re commences. Thus, as one farmer pointed out to nie, they have work for their teams almost ihe whole year, and have no horses eating their heads off in idleness. In the heavier Roils, the volunteer crop is put io with the harrow instead of the brush ; and this is followed by a "chisel cultiva tor," having from seven to thirteen teeth, four inches deep. If these leave the ground rough, it is again narrowed. DIFFERENCE IN SOIL. "It would astonish you to see how small a crop pays the farmer on this sandy soil," said an intelligent man with whom I rode over his fields. He told me that from 700 acres, last year, he got but a bushel and a half per acre, beside the feed of his teams while they were harvesting. They often feed the horses with wheat from the header-wagons, which is a wasteful act, I should say. But, after all, from the small crop he made 8500. At five bushels per acre, ii wheat brought 52.50 a bushel, the farmer on the sandy plains makes 53 50 per acre, clear of every expense. This result, which seemed to me incredible, I saw demonstrated by figures of the cost of the crop, which were satisfactory to a whole room full of farmers. But if you will remember that it is no uncommon thing for a farmer to put in three or four thousand acres, you will see what money they make, even with a small crop, if the price happens to be good, as it often is in a bad year. Two and a half cents is, of course, a high price, and a cent and a quarter is a more usual price in good years. But at that rate a crop of 10 bush els per acre pays so well ou the sandy plains that farmers down here count con fidently on making large fortunes this year. 1 was lortuuate enough to nn a myself, one afternoon, among a, dozen far mers, some having sandy soil, and some the heavier loam ; and after discussing the comparative cost of cultivation, which is nearly double on the heavy land, and the product, which is as 10 bushels to from 20 to 25, I listened to an earnest argument concerning the relative merits of sand and clay. I must say that the sand had the best of it, very much to my surprise, for it is not only sand, but it has, I am told, an impenetrable hard pan, from a foot to throe feet below the sur face. In spite of this, which would seem to make it worthless, it was admitted that the sand did not show as much sign of exhaustion as the clay, aud that, takiug six or eght years together, it was as pro Stable as clay. A very intelligent mau, who ownes and worked 2000 acres of clay and loam, said, at the close of the discus sion, "l he sand has many merits , u can be worked very cheaply, and it can bears drouth Kurprissingly well ; but, after all, it is good only for wheat ; it must always be farmed on a large scale, nu circum stances may make it unprofitable some day ; whereas, on the clay we Can raise anything we like, and are not deficndent on Wheat aloue. He added, "the clay and loam farms will have to be cut up, and will be before many years. It will pay better on that land to take 1G0 acres and work it in various crops, thoroughly, theu to exhaust 2000 or 3000 acres by skimming over the surface." LANDS FOR SMALL FA MILES. I told you that much of the land is rented. It is usual for the land owner to furnish seed, feed for the teams, all the tools and machinery needed for putting in and harvesting the crops, and the land and necessary buildings, and he gets half the crop put in bags on the field. The renter, as the tenant is called, furnishes only the teams and men, and the supplies for the men. The arrangement is not inequitable ; and it gives, as you will see, an importaut advantage to a man without capital. An eight-horse team is worth about $G00 ; with five such teams, and five men who receive in the winter 30 per month and rations 4000 acres can be put into wheat. When the work is done, the teams cau be hired out, or they can be turned into pastures without cost. I was not surpris ed to hear that many men have become rich as renters. Two or three good crops enable a renter to buy a large tract of his own. I do not know what is the net pro fit of the land owners under this system, but was told that one, who has 40,000 acres, refused to rent land for SI a year per acre. At this rate, many of the large land-owners, who rent their land for wheat crops, must make nearly 100 per cent per annum on their original investments; for you must understand that these plains lay for years in the market as Congress land, and could get no buyers ; and it was only during the war that men began to think them valuable. Theu thousands of acres were bought for greenbacks, when gold the currency of this State was at from 150 to 200 ; that is to say, these lands cost from GO to 75 cents per acre. I do not doubt that the whole of the great counties ofl-resno, lulare and Keru would have been gobbled up by the land monopolists at the same rate, had not the Government given a land grant io these counties to the Southern Pacific Railroad and withdraw the whole of the public lands from sale at the same time. From this it results that the "even sections are now open only to pre-emption or home stead settlement, in tracts of from 80 to 160 acres, and thus more thau 2,000,000 acres of the most fertile soil in the worl were saved ior small iarmers, who arc ii i now coming in in advance of the railroad and taking up these Congress and Kail road lands, must of which are of better quality and capable of more various pro ductiou thau the Merced plains. FRONTIER ECONOMY. The buildings put up for renters are, as you may guess, as slight and poor as can be There is a shanty for cooking and sleeping the larm laborer here furnishes his own bedding and docs his own washing : aud his equipment is usually two thirts aud a pair of blaukcts. There is a well, and barn roomy enough to hold the hay and barley and the teams. The renter either has a house of his own elsewhere, or, he is poor, his family live in the ehauty ; there is no vegetable garden, there are no trees, there is absolutely nothing to make ife endurable or pleasaut; and the only care of owner and tenant is to get as much m out ot the land each year as they can, at the least expeusc. It is not a pleasant system of agricultural, nor oue which can be permaueut. But it develops in the farmers who prartice it a great deal of enterprise, aud very shrewd business habits. They make money by economy in cultivation ; and they are very quick in seizing new labor saving devices. II I may junge from those I met. I should say these wheat farmers arc an unusually intelligent set of men, with great courage. "Last year I fed my teams but once a day, the whole season, and worked them hard, too," said one to me. "How could you be so inhuman ?" I exclaimed. "By Jove," he answered, "I was not inhuman; I was poor; I had very little to eat my self." A nurserymau wished to have a piece of 20 acres plowed ten inches deep, but was told it could not be done with the gang-plows. "Why uot try a single plow 7", I ventured to suggest. "No, Sir," a farmer replied ; "I don't sale a single plow ; you can't get any man to put a hand to his plow here." One far mer told me, in reply to some questions, that he had lost 515,000 in the last two years. He expected to make at least $10,000 clear of all expenses this year. He had paid for seed aud leed, shipped from Sau Francisco, to put in his crop this winter, 7,500. BEET FARMING. Another farmer shrewdly remarked to me that when the wheat crop is large en ough to suyply the State, uod a little over, then wheat was pretty sure io be very low in price lower than when the ... ii i i crop was very great ; 'uecausc, saiu lie, a heavy crop draws ships hero to carry it off; with a light crop, the small sur plus weighs ou the maiket, because no ships come to take it away." I reproach ed some of them for not planting trees. and the answer was, "We don't go a cent on anything but wheat iu this county ; we all want to get rich in two years. But the men I spoke with saw the evil of this farmiug, and are prepared to welcome better things. J he sod in Merced coun ty is well fitted for mcny crops. Fruit grows .well wherever it has been tried, and the sugar beet culture has begun on a large pcalenear Sacramento, where 1200 acres are now sown iu beets and a very complete factory is ready for operation. It has cost 5200,000, aud the company are satisfied that they will get tlm year ten barrels of sugar to the acre. They employ 350 men in the fields, mostly Chinese, and between 70 and 80 in the works; and they have exteusive sheds for storing the beets; have planted wil lows along the fence lines and irregular ditches for wind-breaks, and have pre pared sheds for fattening 500 head of cat tle with the bagasse or refuse, which last year they found to be very much relish ed by animals. They mix ten pounds of cut hay with as much bagasse as the beast will eat. The beets are sown in Feb ruary, and the sugar making will begin in July. The beet sugar works near San Francisco have been, it is said enormous ly profitable for the past two seasons. On the 3Ierced county plains but little at tempt has yet been made at irrigation, but some plans have been formed, and experience has shown that if the land is flooded and thoroughly soaked before it is plowed in December it will bear a pro fitable crop, no matter how dry the sea son. Tribune. Remedy for Freckles, Sunburn Mosquito Bites. and Freckles indicate as excess of iron in the blood, we are told, the sun actiog on the particles in the skin as it docs on iu dclible ink, bringing out the color. A very simple way of removing them is said to be as follows : Take finely powdered nitre (saltpetre) and apply it to the freckles by the fin ger moistened with water and dipped in the powder. AVhen perfectly done and judiciously repeated, it will remove them effectually and without trouble. An old English prescription for the skin, is to take half a pint of skim milk so poor as to be blue slice into it as much cucumber as it will cover, and let it stand an hour; then bathe the face and hands, washing them off with fair water when the cucumber cxtract'is dry. The latter is said to stimulate the growth of hair where it is lacking, if well and fre quently rubbed in. It would be worth while to apply it to high foreheads and bald crowns. Hough Rkins, arising from exposure to the winds in riding, rowing, or yachting, trouble many ladies, who will be glad to know that an application of cold cream or glycerine at night, washed off with fine carbolic soap in the morning, will render them preseotable at the breakfast table, without looking like women who follow hounds, blowsy and burned. The simplest way to obviate the bad effects of too free sun and wind, which are act on occasion to revcugc themselves for the neglect shown them by the fair sex too often, is to rub the face, throat and arms well with cold cream or pure almond be fore goiog out. With this precaution, one may come home from a berry party or a sail without a trace of, that ginger bread effect too apt to follow "these pleas ures. Cold cream made from almond oil, with no laid or tallow about it, will ans wer every end proposed "By the use of but ter milk, which youifg ladies cau hardly prefer as a cosmetic on accouut of ils odor. , A verv delicate and effective prepara tion for rough skins, eruptive "lisenscs. cuts, or ulcer, is found in a mixture of glycerine, half an ounce of rosemary, and twenty drops of carbolic acid. In those dreaded irritations of the fkin occurring io summer, such as hives or prickly heat. this wash gives soothing relief. The car bolic acid at once neutralizes the poison. of blood which causes the sore, purifies and disinfects the wound or blotchand heats it rapidly. A solution of this acid in glycerine made much stronger, say' fifty drops to an ounce of glycerine, forms protection from mosquitoes if applied at night. Though many reonle consider the remedy equal to the disease, constant use very soon reconciles one to the crco sotic odor of the carbolic acid, especially it the pure crystalized form is used which is far less overpowering in its fragrance than that commonly put up. Those who iislike it too much to use it at uight will find the stiur of the bites almost miraculously cured and the blotches re moved by touching I hem with the mix ture in the morning. Hubics and chil dren should be touched with it to re ieve the pain they feel from insect bites. and do not know how to express excent by woirying. Two or three drops of ottar of roses in the preparation disguises the smell so as to render it tolerable to human beings though uotso to-mosquitoes. Harper & lazaar. T In Concmangh borough, Cambria coun ty, about two weeks ago, a child was born which bids lair to prove a greater curiosity than the celebrated Siamese twins. The infant wc speak of was born with a duplicate part of itself attached to its body above the naval, but while this duplicate part is almost perfect in every other particular, it is headless. The lower limbs ure well formed, as also its body aud arms, but there is only one linger on oach hand. The body is turn ed inward and only requires a head to make a well formed child. This iufant is etoTit, hearty, fine looking female, and if it should live will prove a wonderful curiosity. A Chicago lady 72 years old is the mother of a baby aed ten days. SunstrokeCause, Prevention and Cure The usual exciting cause of sunstraltd is exposure to the direct rays of the sub1, generally in connection with great ex haustion of the'hodily powers. It some times occurs without the direct agency of the sun. Thp principal predisposing cause is the use of alcoholic stimulants. Enfeebled, poorly fed, over-worked, and! irritable persons are also somewhat liable to it. As special precautions during the hot weather, the entire body, including5 the head, should be bathed daily in cool or cold water, great care should be taken not to wear anything around the neck so? as to impede the circulation in the least, and the covering of the head should be light and porous, so thajL the air cau cir culate freely through it. Those who obey the laws ot health need have no fear of sunstroke. The treatment of sunstroke should vary somewhatj according to the condition of the patient. In all cases he should be removed to a cool and shady place, and the clothing stripped from hS body. If the head is hot, cold water or ice should be kept constantly applied to the head aud neck, and hot water to" fns' hands and feet. If the skin is cool and moist, the entire surface of the body should be vigorously aud continuously rubbed until reaction takes place. If the skiu is hot and dry, then the whole body should be rubbed with cloths wet in the coldest water that can be obtained, of with pieces of ice, until recovery takes place, as it almost invariably will under this treatment. Bleeding in Euch cases, as practiced by many, is almost certaifi death. Keep Straight Ahead. Pay no attention to slanderers or gossip mongers. Keep straight oh your course, and let their backbiting die the death of neglect. What is the use lying awake nights, brooding- over the remark of soma false friend, that ran through -your braid like forked lightning? What's the use of getting into a worry and fret over gos sip that has been set afloat to your dts advantage by some meddlesome buysbody, who has more time than character ? Ihese things cannot permanently injuro you, unless, indeed, you Kike notice of them, and in combating them give them charade and standing. If what is said aboct 701 s true, get yourself right at once ; if it is false, let it go for what it will fetch. If a bee stings you, would you go to the hive and destroy it? Would not a thousand come upon you? It is wisdom to say little respect ing the injuries you have received. We are generally losers in the end if we stop to refute all the backbitings and gossipings we may hear by the way. They are an noying, it is true, but not dangerous, so long as we do not stop to expostulate and scold. Our characters are formed arxi sustained by ourselves, and by our own actions and purposes, &Bd not by others. Let us always bear1 in mind tj)af"crr. lutnuiators may usually be trusted to time, and the slow but steady justice of publid opiuioa. "A Double-Headed Snake. srrange reptile hes been added to the already known sinrMihr T.inldcrlpnl existence of Australia. A double headed snake has been discovered. Porfessor Ilalf'ord thus describes it : "Each head was perfect in its own anatomy muscles, bones, poison glands, and faugs. Each neck was perfect for about ten vertebra?, .when they blended with one body and an oi me snake, lhere lets, two wind pipes, and which the right was the were two gul two breasts, of largest, as was the right head. The distribution of the blood vessels I have not yet Traced. There were two intelligences belonging to one progsessive apparatus, and the result was very interesting to witness. The right head wished to go one way jmd the left the other; as the neck vertebno of each departed from the other at a very acute angle, the result was a simple onward movement of the common body. When a common danger threatened, then the left head twisted itself round the right one sokas to be in the same line, and then progression was tolerably quiefc." Since the above fuTatto was caught another of the same tribe answering the same desorip-, tiou has been captured. THE CURRANT WORM, Y e are informed by Dr. E. Worcester of Waltham, that the currant worm, so destructive to a favorite fruit? may be ful- ly and almost immediately destroyed by the use of carbolate of lime. The Doo tor tried the powder iu many instances during the past summer, and iound that while it wsl full as effective as hellebro it was less disagreeable, less costly, a.nd perfectly safe. The method of using it is to sprinkle it over the vines as soon as the worm makes its appearance, bringing it well in contact with the loaves.and soon the insect is destroyed. It will need but two or three applications and the work is done. Iu this way for a few cents large quantities of currant bushes may be saved and tho fruit allowed to mature, and no danger whatever incurred. Neith er the foliage nor tho fruit is in any way injured by the carbolate of limo. jt will be well for our readers to remember this when the fruit season returns. Huston Journal of Chanishy.