4 04 ! A o 4 kg , , , ED- TOR & PROPRIETOR. elect ,storg. 'Mother.! mother! Jim Olarke is con- , -, t in' hum with Sall !' T. 1,0 I; a t ma tut 'ls he !' exclaimed the old lady in reply, %declare I didn't think the sap head NO. " knew enough !' • INTEGRITY. Reader, we didn't 'go in.' Integrity is the . ..foundation of all that is How Nike Came Near Losing Sally, noble. and praiseworthy in mankind. Lit ,We were between sixteen and seven- but Didn't. erally It means /woody. but it is honesty tern years of age, when the event about 'Say, have you heard the news 1' of feeling, intention. language, and action, to be related, transpired, and as a d 'What news 9 ' much more then that contracted tion of our person at that time is abso- 'Why, Mike Hans and Sally Brown get .enc • • e which SO often posseses 'll the world intely essential to the point of our story, married last evening.' for tierightness and is so, only in one pie we give it ns concisely as the subject 'The natten ! yon don't say so ?' ticular sense. will snow. in reference, then, to that pc- 'Yes, as sure as you live ; but between j 'Who steals my purse stems trash—ti, noise rind, to say that we were 'green,' i e t h e you arid me, Mike came mighty near not thing, nothiag, usual acceptation of the term, would give getting ba I"WrIS 'll3 his, and hash°. slave to thou. r.' sand.:; reader but a poor idea of the figure 'Row wits that?' But ha that filches from me my fond name, we displayed. Rather imagine a tall, 'Why I came very near getting her my- Robs me of that which not enriches him Iran, cadaverous, swarthy looking chop, self.' And makes me pour indeed. with legs like apair of tongs,counte. 'You ?' , nance about as expressive ns n plate of . 'Yes , I'll tell you about it. You see Other qualities may add to the se/se "nr of a man's character, or enhance his social Dutch cheese, a mouth that came very Mike and me went over to the Bethel toe,, position but if this attribute is wanting , near making an island of all the head tine, house one evening to prayer meeting tn eir l , us , all tre dies ant, He tint feeci• above it, ,e face covered with a furze that for no other purpose than of going home nate the vast world. end thousand:: iney looked very much like the down on a with Sally. I saw him as soon as I'd got bow before the shrine of his intellect, elo• newly hatched goslin, with a gait that led in, and he saw Ine, so we both knew what . rinence, velour or art. but if tie proves tin t the beholder to believe that we designed we might depend on. worthy of /rust he anus/ be degraded in Ito travel down both rides of the street at 'When meeting was out we both made , . , . the eyes or , the reenteous. !Win, the same time. end you hove a correct da- a dive for the door to go in for the chance,; to believe that nmenantne or lefty giterreotvpc of ;Teems in the seventeenth but us good luck would have it, he got „ iece ~e e „..„, , year of his age tangled in among the people, and I cot Ono dvlr, tg l " ln Y ni g ht in the nmth of him out " slick us a whistle. II I motel stud yet cm eiterfeits there are, i„,base Demuth r, we chanced to lie at 'spelling ,t pile of gold it wouldn't have pleased me „ ono ,. Hi. who rests on a selvair me a thousand miles from Bald. ono whit better, for you see I was already dial principle of virtue, win act tvutsvilie,-..here our eyes fell upon n in love with the gal. We talked and with a ft , arks , tlio.nity which the self 'fairy form' that immediately set our sus- laughed along ns merry as crickets; and orato r , ritteeeiiiito into ceptible heart in a dleze. She was six. bat for the fact that there hail been a show- patio iht , tiutidi~y and ran teen, or thereabouts, with bright eyes, red et- of rain the evening before. which lied tii . ttetteito, which foot ., over cettaitri. for cheeks, and cherry lips, wild° the nburn left puddles here and there indhe road,' ctnisciuus rootittido itito , to „ itt. to ringlets clustered inn wealth of ran- everything- would have been as it should , all . sion axonal hpr laiettudful head, and her he. mien are obliged to honor him. They person, to our ravished imagination, ens "For my part I didn't cttee for the pad h-oh, movie more perfect in form and outline than the dles—in fact I'm not sure but I'd rather ahoy ,. oit , itt moor faultless statue ever chiseled by the have had them there, for each one of th, to of their awn sculptor's art. As we gazed, our feel- mad„ it imcessnry for me to tyke Sally in tottoi , ted throioniite , the ,. Ines, which had never before aspired girl my arms, and leap over, which, by the trit , t stiiiit a ;tau isi were, were fully aroused, nod we deter- way, was anything but disagreenble. It ran,. the :tystein he net, uprit 1.3 ,trrt mined to go home with her that night, or would certainly have done you good to see Ilia friends increase without his courtin,. perish in the attempt. As soon, therefore ,me peel on the ateony every time I came to favor, and has praa . r , s , w „ iti , h as school was dismissed, end our 'fled y ! one of these puddles I done it for the e, •or vhe slow, it 3 . 1111.1. love" suitably honnetted and chinked, press purpose of hurting the feelings of we nppronched to miler our services, as Mike, r ho was following along eft., t , onntmnplaten, and then it was that we in :lie crowd ns sober ns a judge. Of learned an important lesson, viz : the di f- course Sally end I led the way all the ferm•nre between resolving and doing. As t ime. It was very dark, so dark we could wr neared her, we were seized with par . scarcely see the ground, yet we could see dial blindness—red, blue, green stud gel all the puddles of water very plainly by lour lights fleshed neon our vision, end reflection—as they looked white. appenred and disappeared like witches in Seen after we entered the !awn, run rrset his a phqntasmagorm, our knees smote to- nine, up by Tom Smith's I eaw en untisu- Aence of a gether litre Belchazzar's when he dis- ally large' puddle. Telling Sally to hold sage reply: covered the hand writing on the wall, her temper, I took her around the waist The doe- I while our heart thumped with apparently and made an awful leap. Do you think I Amine; the es much force as if it were driving ten lit safe on the other side? No sir; I lit him malts penny nails into our ribs. We in the with one leg on either side of an old white seeps on till meantime managed to mumble over some cow that lay in the road, and which I had .nother man thing which is known perhaps to the re tnistook for a puddle of water. The old The Doctor cording angel, bat certainly not to US, at cow being doubtless as much surprised ns seine sort the same time poking out our elbow as myself, sprang up, bind feet first, and in ood; he gets r.early at right angles with our body as the next instant Sally and I found ourselves gets worse our physical conformation would permit. landed our heads. But that was not the that man's I The night air blew keenly, which sex- worst of it—one of the old brute's horns the doctor's ved in some sort to revive us; and as our caught in the strap of my waistcoat, and One year I senses returned, what were our sense- away she went dragging me don the lawn leep, dig up times on findme the cherished object our roaring like a lion. I suppose she had tut nubbins. first love clinging to our arm with all the dragged nem fifty paces before hold broke ay, the rain tenacity n drowning man is said to catch loose : but as the road was smooth, I sus. have a crap. a , a straw !—Talk of elysinn, nr sliding tamed but little injury The only serious I upon fifty dewn rainbows, or feeding on German injury that I had received was an internal have been in flutes ! What are such 'pheelinks' in one, and that was caused by that Sally gave in the east comparison to those mighty ones that when we lit on our heads' ft went through Its star stands • swelled our bosom, nigh on to the burs- me like a knife, for I had no idea but that her I saw it; tine off of our waistcoat buttons I Our the girl moss killed. ffin keep the happiness was sublime, sublimity, sub. As soon as I could clear the dirt from ter turn out. timely sublimated; and every person who my eyes, I hurried back to learn the worst He makes has ever felt .th • divine throbhings of a In a very little while I learned it, but in it well for a newly fledged love principle, fully Uildet• a different way from what I had expected. lx and stand wands the world of bliss couched in the There came Sally down along the other an and stars fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh words at side of the lawn swinging on Mike's arm, the while. • the comm ncement of this sentence. and laughing fat to kill herself. Don't you ;es one man Well, we punned on pleasantly towards think I was mad? I hadn't n word to our Sally's home, talking of love and Cove say, but just dropped back and 'cut across and dart and part, until so courageous had the fields and left them - , we become, that we actually proposed to : 'A few nights ago I called upon Sally ilgo in and sit awhile,' to which our Dul- with n determination to pop the question cinea graciously assented. Absn, for us ! and bring matters to a close. let mt over I hew soon were we to he reminded the, the whole rigmarole, and she listened to I .the course of true love never did ruin ice till I was through, and then with one smooth.' k of the most provoking laughs you ever Sully held n brother of some tea sum. heard, she looked up arid raid I was a lit niers, who accompanied us along the way tie too late—she was engaged. Mike had and WEIS in wonderful high spirits nt the got the .heels of nw, and nothing under i , en of his sister having a beau, and he the sun but the old cow was the cause of would walk around us frequently, giggling i t . in the height of his glee, and eyeing us as closely as if ourself and Sally were the world renowned Siamese twins, and be vas taking his first look. Billy, by th way, was a stubbed, dahlia headed boy. whose habiliments would have made the fortunes of any two dealers in mob rags. At length we reached the oars, and while we were letting them down, Billy shot pas- us and tore for the house, as if pursued by n thousand bulls of Bastian. Ile flung open the door with a bang, and exclaimed at the top of his voice— published at GOING HOME WITH A GIRL THE FIRST TIME. • • • $1,50 time of 1,75 o year, 2,00 if not paid to subae•ip. ix mouths. d until nth diseonti•an- t the option BY "'BENS, " OF TDB BALDWINSVILLE GA• zETTE •rrl by us. lust, told sander. fiserivtions. Wriffrn or ice or pith- is neither II 11 IleW year commeite tintied wad ising to tid.o inoci in, mid !in evidence Ily adhered 10. du. 3 $ 50 7:i I 00 ;01 .2 00 12 1110. 1 1 $tk 110 10 10 uu 10 114 00 Iri • 27 011 111 411 00 Ito is, ;$4.11i1. .inin; cent to bring the pub moy—that 1.1 ti it it thie,t citi- fncilities I; PRINT- other office own.- en!ly. u iii Lc 3Utll. d sends the motion ." is here fur ireSti on the glory of God is handiwork. h, and night and fox hop- Said the one minute Said the !ninnies one cnn eat it in torucious gen ast me a week, d a hull a sec. I his patience, which threw ig his absence to frust ins rne • ton was cats n he got hack? " LIBERTY AND UNION, NOW AND FOREVER, ONE AND INSEPARABLE. " FETTNTTNGDON, PA:, WEDNESDAY, MAY 26. 185 S. ear AN Irish 'gentleman' had occa sion to visit the South souse time since. When he returned, h. remarked to a (Heim that the Southern people were very ext raw. stmt. Upon beingnskod why so, remark ed that where he staid they had a ca.,elle. slick worth eleven hundred dollars. 'Why, how in the world could it cost dint much?' inquired a friend. 'Och, be gorry! it was nuthin' moron n big nage,. fellow holdin' a . torch for us to eat by.' e l jaW ---, I*/ i - 11 / 04'• . ,40Y (11'''::1 ''':l" / -', 4i . ,.. 1 1) 1,. ic 1,4 gl It l': Ht: f i., , , ik ~... 1 JT, , 7 11 .).:,,' -••••• $ . IVO. 7, The public, have often been searching for true merit, but it is ina for a Crtni, for when the true recipients of its favors are found, they transplant the fal, deceivers. Corrupt ,the wadi/ nt farge may in a measure be, still it cannot with hold approbation or reword from those whose conduct has been inn rked by ,unva ried integrity. They show no vanity, nrr are they at all times guided by their affec lions--which sometimes fix the semblance of virtue upon nets of loose unstable na ture, and hence, following the narrow path 'which leads to life eternal' they ftre always the seine—trusty friends, lid sties I ate relations, conscientious traders, and picas Christians. rnspiriou haunts not stinh minds, for in ...ealing with twig's bcirs, candour governs both their actions, and feelings They do no wron!+,•, nor look for suolt in others. 4 Bless'd are they Hdet, dr, hunger, and thirst, after rigl,t eonsness, fur the; • shall be filled.' St. illatthetv, b rh., fith , v, Superstitions. In many parts of Eng,laud. wh.w fairies still maintain their prelim'. milkmaids sprinkle water—the true d scendant of holy water—about the dairy. to prevent the little people from clippie their whiskers in the milk pairs dims the night.—Tho souse persons are al— persuaded that witches often pre: •r broomstick tine handsome horses, soil ;:e -cordingly take them from the stable, ,i,•l ride them over earth and water ell Omagh they are always very , bring them lock held, the tonna, prevent this, the postns fltUdiOUSl} up every aperture in walls and door, by which a witch might he supposed to ,•114t. uu tdarance. Still the toentl.ess of this sisterhood tire so ing . enious and powerful that they get into the stables uev,,tle and ride the horses so furnotsly ilott they shimi , 11, t1 - ton wool , ' be ~1 , • •, 0 '', 1 l. ',id, of Me' ct,ititt.titt to run emit him, cheat the poor printer and then—' .' to recommend his o.ottlerful medicine to Bang tint's the il ier.inl out tines the all who are 010,1 with ceughs, colds, father and husband grumbling like a bear ; ,,,ti i , n , i n t„ . ,.. i , creatures, b ou , s .bi ni . so , i n . with .1 sore head. I wish children 1 . - ti.tittimition of the florex, refusal of the how 10 1147questions.' kt,lncys to respond to the jells of the mu- ..,-,.... ,ittt, noun'trutle. vacant feeling. in the • ' rinir". In the great inter.,t ~.•:, •'. ;.„-.•• h,•:•.I. such as lack of brains, etc. To 1 prt,,,l, 111 this country wit, 1 . 1 'it Hi .•. ~ t',.. - ~, rilill ill, desirous of chanty. I new yershin of th t Scriptures, we i. ~.t. ~ no w ,- . or chatettriff hushinds and no doubt thou many of our readers toil '''' ' .. , t. %. ives. all too are anxious to visit tot, vt•ry cordially welcome. no account, given .•r :tide of Joraitu, this medicine is confi• i Corn. sitlit?other page of this paper by a COTIA. ,!•iiliv EcCoallilead.d. To those . persons I Much Indian Corn is every season de ;P'""l'in lit ""1"^"."' of a . Heir work ( " i , t r i io tithe a lively interest in natural history ''''Y '2ll 6). not paying attention to the the Wilde whose pubbcanon has just bt'en When cunt is planted in the latter part of commenced in Ch..,rntitity. ~,,,,, wa,,,,r. into would ;Moire them to throw thern.elves Late of the rho ground when plant e d,— „ill soon see I April os is frequently done, it is bette'r Into the arms of the retired clergyman and I no foss a scitulor than Cheplier {inn en • , th,t it should be in its ordinary dry state. they may be assured they proposes not only a new translation of both letliant - and rhinoceros the Old and New Testaments, but an ex- ' I ' .......„...... I moist end wet, or just before a rain : And tic), if planted when the griund is egetic commentnry nod elaborate ili,ini- UN” Each reinter of this pa per is re- ! rely, S sitions upon various scriptural subjects.' tin ,ted to procure a new subscriber nod `„akin , * the seed until it becomes soft and I .1 portion of the first volume only hm a as send the name nd money to this office. then burying it in wet soil, is curtain to answer. been publ;shod, but it can scarcely fail to a Recollect only one dollar . and fifty cent, 1 :•cati,e a large prtqmrtion of it to rot. Well, I'll tell. you. Emigronts in a be examined with careful attention by year, nd may be sent in postage stamps I sort . of cross between a ground-hog and a lettrued Men in all Christina COMMuni- i Address, We IIuaWSTER, Ilant:agri, ,, . i P., gralt , hopper, and is very boil on gross .' I ties, ure found in the morning tretnkehr; rt over left covered with swvat.— lIVYVr to meur to the worth locking out the wholesouw air , uucy pr du,. this etrect. Ear Ch. o Jerry Downs, ou% in Califor— sin was reading the news to 01,1111' alldoz en of his neighbors. He read to them thy• item of intelligence that the gra s s -A “s t'rrt• short en the plaines, cud it was feared' that the emigrants would fan• badiy. 'Emigrant.! what's tlteo•i?' u,ked one of the liste.rs 'Don•t you ialow? Don't you 7 Don't you Ile afikector each, and received a negative Mind Your Own Business. This saying. has so much /„.„ squ „i e • It is death in Copland to - marry n maid and bluntness about it, that it amines al- without the consent of hor parents or most impertinent, to sensitive ears. But friends. When a young man has formed an attachment for a female, :the fashion is not ithstanding that, it contains the germ of the very truest of all systems of phi l o.. t o appoint their friends to meet to behold sophy. Somebody once said; very taus- t he two young parties run a race together. ' ticaliy nod very wisely. How few troub- The maid is allowed in starting the ad les we would have, if we fretted as little vantage of one third part of the race, so that it is impossible, except willing of her about min, people's affair:ft as we do about tnir own!" And so it is—half the bother- self, that she should be overtaken. If the maid outrun her suitor, the [natter is en. ;buts and vexations of this vexed and both. ea world, arise (torn our interference, one ded; he must never have her, it being w•th the other. The divine Golden hale penal for the man to renew the notion of is capable of being translated very nearly marriage. But if the virgin has an On into tin sanie sentence as °Mind your tion for him, though at first she runs fast t own business, and let other folks alone.'' to try the truth of his love, she will,— tt , certainly desire others to keep aloof without Atlanta's golden ball to retard her front our nflitirs, for it is a singular phenom- speed—pretend sortie carnality, and make coon that nobody ever takes "good advice.' a voluntary halt before she comes to Generally-, those who nab for it, are the the cud of the race. Thus none are la,t ones to follow it. Then if we do no compelled to marry against their own wills; and that is the cause that in this we would be done by. Anuld certainly Ineep 111. CI,, out of other pee- poor counery the married people are rich • t _ , , o es we would er i n their non contentment than in other that ili 'ioniddti uittc ~," — T hat was lands, where so many foreed matches cynic, tyke, when asked what make feigned love, and cause real no happi he thou : Jilt of giving advice, said, ”I al ness.—Cust"'s Ot Nali°"3* ,ays lind out what it man wanly to do, ' Rules for Self Government. Ind thrii tlilvise him by all means to do it!' : The , pru d e , o ld gerit i emai .w . . „ a i d. ~ mi upon it, that old fellow's advice turns out to be no other than the verita ,,, alwdys respected. It requires a vq.'l Id, Lomlon Punch himself, who, in hie inatchle,s merriment and jocose style lay mutualrut mel intimate friendship, .0 allow of eth down his 'prudent' directions as fol. exchange of good•notured ad. ~ ..,;d even then, the relation is apt lows : nt he pretty severely tested by them. It Always sit next to the carver, if you con :, common sa",•imr... in the west, that there 1 eta dinner. i, rime a mai in I , ;,,tosky who acquir- Ask no woman h er age. an iminci,e !mune by minding bin : 113 e civil with all uncles and aunts. bush.— ~'i irk and we feel sure that the Never joke with a policeman. maxi,n originat,d in something more than Take no notes or gold with you to HIP, imagination. At all events, no harm fancy bazaar—nothing hut silver. ~.old rice from such a courw—, and it is ' Your oldest hat of course, for an even than probable, that very excellent ing party. ,alto [eight be the fruit, if everybody Don't play at chest with a widow. tr mild follow the example of this Kentucky , Never contradict a man who stutters. myth, nod "mind their own business, let- Make friends with the steward on board Wig Other folks ' Ulone . . " there's no knowing how 3 , 10 n A. PUZZLING 'POEM." you may be placed in his power. Properly punctuated, the following non- Keep your own secrets. Tell no lin sf•ii,e becomes SallSlbl rhyme, and ja , man beings. dye your whiskers. e Write riot one more letter than you can ioub.i.s, as true as it is atria[., though • it now stands we admit that it is very heir' The man who keeps up a large corions if true : cor,spondence is a. martyr tied, not to i I I saw a pigeon making bread; I saw a girl composed of thread; I saw a towel one mile square; I sawn meadow in the sir; I saw a rocket walk a mile; I saw a pony make a file; 1 saw a blacksmith in a box; I saw au orange kill an ox; I Sal,' a butcher triode of steel; I saw a penknife dance a reel; F•aw a sailor twelve feet high; I. saw a ladder in a pie; I s::w an apple fly away; I saw a sparrow making bay; I saw a farmer like a dog; I saw o puppy mixing grog; I saw three men ivho saw these too. :\ nd 'will confirm what I t-11 you. Sharp Shooting. ;laving a cough, she finally fell into the 'Father, what does a p r i nter live on ?' hands of the "retired clergyman, who, 'Live on [—like other folio; why do 1 , sands of life' had nearly run out." She you ask ?' parchasi'd a bottle or hi. C nalu, [oshttc e you said you hadn't paid nay- from which i•he gained strength, judgeimr, ,ir your paper, and the printer still from the viole ore of her cough. Ott taking the second botle, her strenth so increased that he was able to cwagit all day and night, without interruption. The third bottle landed her in Heaven. Thus, in a brief •part of time the fond Huns of inure than a it to you.' •Fife spank that boy.' .1 shan't do ii.' ?' • 13ecause there is no r. , ason ' 'lto so? IFh. .t (1., you ot. 0!. ? juia this, the boy is 6iiiart, t l : d f,,r Guher, and i'nu can't deny ; • ..n.l a hall (peer talk and I wish-- . • • 1 k : !.. . • 't care wt•hat you n•i.•h. y '• • , ,• ',t. L kilo s •nqh In see that a tutu , • „ ; 1 1 , 1 4 ' 1 • 1 Marriage in Lapland. the stake, but to the post. Wind up your conduct, like your watch once a day, ox mining minutely whether you are 'fast' at 'slow Old Sande of Life. Dr. Hall, of the Journal of heal?h, who I has investigated the matter, and analyzed the drugs, finds that the mixture for tvhich Old Sauds of life' charges two dollars. when made from the very purest and mo.t extensive materials used, costs exactly sixteen cents. bottle and all. And he furth ermore charges, as do natty others, that it is a deliterisns article at Lest. The foi lotctng from the Gleaner is a severe rap, Messrs. Editors--Permit me, through your columns, to hear testimony to a val. outdo medicine. My great aunt has been striving to reach heaven for twenty years. l' A ,•-! .:-.., i i; I'" :.•' IV, t . 1 • I p ) ~.f , -' clk VOL. XXIII. NO. 22 ,farmers' 05,11imn. Ile that by the plough would thrive, Himself, must either hold or drive." Weaning Calves. This year I have fed five calves with half the labor and better success than I fed three last year. My plan is to let the calf be with the cow until the third day ; then take it away, and commence feeding. Then I take good hay and put it in a ket tle and steep it well until the liquid is of a dark green color. The liquid is sweet, and a very naturrl nourishment. Add about one•haif of this liquid or hay tea to half of milk. Pour th I hay tea into the milk while warm, co as to heat the milk to the right temperature.' The old process Is inure apt to burn, and it will sour sco:,:r, ,Alter two or three weeks, I fed them sour milk with the bay tea mixture occasional ly. 1 feed them about eight quarts apiece, three times a day. for about two weeks ; then I think twice a day will answer r find that calves fed in this way thrive bet ter and are fatter, and more hardy than when fed on new mtik alone. or allowed to run with the cow, and it is also more protit;ible to the farmer. I made from four to live dollars a week front the five cows by selling milk. The nutritive qualities token from the milk are supplied by the hay tea. Use of Limo as a Fertilizer. It becomes now a matter of curiosity to ascettain if we can, how the use of lime as a fertilizer came first into use among us. By agitating the subject now, among our varieu, country papers, and "oldest inha 'bitantr," we may probably elicit sufficient facts to establish the earliest history of its use, and by whom first suggested. Our attention has been called Lo this sub ject from the reading In the American Journal ,17 Science, a review of Ruffin's Essay on Calcareous Manures. In that article, it is stated that the German iutmi• grants from Palatinate first brought it in our coumry. A gentleman of our Sc. (luminance, sent to that journal an expres -1.0 of his doubts of such early use of it ~,German settlers; and since then, noth, tog further, so far as we have known har transpired. As reasons for disareditng,rlZuffin's ac• count of its origin, we have to say, to wit; In Lancaster county, filly yearn ago, lime was very little used by the German de scendants. The same can be said of the farmers in Be rks county. The same of the farmers in the upper part of Montgomery county. Chester county seems to have chiefly set the example of its earliest use there ; and that too, not among the Ger. Gmlann descendants peculiarly. It has bee'n a tradition of Ghester county that the earliest lime used there for building purpo ses was brought out from England. And now, th"re is a house in IV illistown, owned by the Garret family, built abont the year 1700, which the deseendruto say wit. built from Milne so imported. These are ingoirks which some of your nomerowi readers .vnuld like to investi glt, and it po,sible,setthl. AutucoLa. Sheep Tick Destroyer Malty nl my neighbors, in order to free their sheep and lambs of that disgusting and troublesome insect, the lqicki" rippl) spirit, of turpentine, which is a most wea hcnintx application, and although - eff..ctual in re nt oong the evil, it i:ljurtts:the animal alma, as much am would the evil itself, it nor rvinored. My plan is to give rev hunk, aft, she,uing the sheep, a thorough weAting in New England rum---u which, while it ilmost instantaneously de- :toys the '•tick," leaves the animals brisk and IRely, without any subsequent depres sion or loss of eneogy and health. This is by no means nn expensive application, two gallons of good liquor; worth forty cents per gallon, being enough for fifty lambs, if properly applied. No tick can exist in a lock of wool which has been thoroughly wet Nith this rum, or any oth er distilled liquor. Alcohol, in a concen trated state, is surto death to the insect.-- Telegrupb. Sheer-Rhenrina should be done in warn weather after the 20th ol the Month.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers