Wellsboro agitator. (Wellsboro, Tioga Co., Pa.) 1872-1962, January 28, 1873, Image 1

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WOL. AX.---NO 4
e if Agtitatior.
, • . VVVAT TTST2iDAT
#l. ! , la INT ir2s 71
,
. p
t ' Sit'
etp.atxx
ti DA4 1 .E.9 O.E' AD VVIITZSING
2 I 8 in. i 4 St , tMe`3l: COI.
W(.e 00r — i36 Odi 0,)
1 to)? ‘ 4 1 11 . . b t ...it)! 6 401 1 09111, 00 10 00
114'.4.4.1 r, WI V); e 44101 km, 1R fl 7)
itottti. -.? 01 '7 LA) ; cu, 0.3
xi4itys . 4. oi l Bs, 00.18 ( 0112 1.,t0 lfo'. 2 , 3 00
"a5Lat.1.3...: ..:- :P. 3 Cr.) tr.) 00116 fto,'2s 35 07
.. L i t s. a tb s , L. . ) 1. 3 1 ) 0. 1. 4 ,4)128 00136 01 CO Ca
L 01118 tiof2s vil23 Wll 3.3 00ICD 8‘,11;10
iii i• ngth
N...iv,rtis resents are calculated by the Inc&
!Ad 3.511.c.5c spz,:.e to rated as a tall inch.
Curries , edsertisotriente mast be„pald for before ir.-
s rdia nos surpteta yearly counsels, when half-yearly
•ayineutslittadnnee Triii he reqdrcd.
OcattErriessiu - rue Editorial coltunna, on the
' , sound lileente per line each insertion. "Seth
,•,•s for less than $l.
Lses,4 I.7sz. es in Local coltuun, 1 10 o line it
eras per
urc'ettuo tire twee ; and CO cents fez a notico of Ere
!Lie 1., sir
II Nott , OESLIOI T 3 of Allauumakt and Drarnstnserteil
t r.r )Jt't qb:tllA.^lll,,ti.:k:4 bk.! charged 10 cents
r nue.
e5O pia ant above regular rates .
IPrerWil Craws 51lues Cir p 6, 00 pier year.
/
suvin es Carcl;s.
•
E. gat.TaiganZa..l."?, . JOEMON.
Batchelder & John • on,
4.Autimeorord of litommea.:46, I,;c- -. l.,stortee, Table
Top, 4
0
ver,9194...De1l tra eee. Rliog. Witln st.,
appotlto Periiiall,lV4l:l4lf 4 abo, PR.—July 9,18"..
. A te r
OQUZiSEILLOI.I I.4W.—Colioct
4,24.4, WU:TUT atloided to.-131oesburg. Tiog. enun
Fenn a.. 4.Vr. 1, 11M-11)21
- Seyinoar,
Lailigt LAVilriTlegt‘butilneus esa
to las Gait 161111-racilve i ) roaapt tteutlon.
Jan. 1, 1872.
ciao. V. Merrick,.
iTT6r3.Nry ;AT LAmr.—Mice in Doren & 0003'6
acpcSar, Lail from Agitator 01.11,v, door,
isteustaro. Pe.--gui. 1. 1X)72.
Ml!obeli & Cameron,
ATIOUNVIES T LAW, Claims 414 Utatarsoaco Agents
Otos In Converse .k Williams brink block, ores
CouTtrie & Ostpoet`e store, Wellaboto, "Ps. len. 1,
1872.
Watt= A. atone,
416rLAW, over O. B. series' i Diy Good
wigglaiN".73l l tMiL:Titock on Main street.
•
OBE SYLVES, LIQUOIik3 Aiit / ittiiiills at Wlloleul
Itas /Watt. tie.Sticeto lEtouao Block. Watlabore. Fa
a, 0,1812:
Josiah Emery,
rictuae,
wre WIDiam,VOM Pa. Inalxt , as
seimigpity UM.
J.. C. Strang,
VITORICEY AT LAW & DISTRICT ATTORNEY.
OX14) vath Esq., Tiellstriro tn.,
0:1‘. Dartt,
eTelith =Vie with the 2rEvr ctltoctsm.. 3,
t • give better satieetctiou then shy this* a'
01110 e, in Wright le Bailers' Bloch. N'teli
• et.is, 1879.
J. JEW
Anofiltra l AT LAW.—Will attend promptly to bus.
tukll6 eteSrUSted to tie cad's 1n the counties or 'Lop
end Fo:e, 02ce on t6.^2No...aue.—wetsbore , ..
• '
Jxto. W. Adams, _ _
,xxxor.:sri As• LAV.Nzt ,
Cc:ale:data prvirlyty - ettar..l24 1.:"_2 nc
Gizerpseri- , - - •
ATreittgr baslneaa entrusted to hilt
ektr.) , ? l, l to.-0 . 4.ye door sonti:
of Mak= .st* Yazie strx. - e. Tioge.coauty, Pa.
Jail. 1, PM.
Armstrong & 141111,
ATM:Mtn X LAW, Willimr.spc:t,
WU. H. AIekarZESOWF.
&Mins, LThrx.
Win. B. Smith,
PECiSIOII ATTOSSET, Bolinty end Insurance Agent.
Ovimatuaiouttfaua sant to' 't. aad-re.9.3 Wilke
tit thtratl4 , o".....lrma
111..74t,
..; /300,1 Wheeler
PicalliOilialico tbalsoiloctlou of aLI vigama it
TWAv.tWttiftesi With Hera; Shea-wood &
coot gid* of Me Will° spare, liirellgboro, Pz
tlot. 15, UM. •
Barnes & Roy,
JOB kitINTERS. kinds J ob Printing done on
%bort twedee, sat In tbA) bt43t manner. °face in Bow
ea S Cone 6 s Rd floor:4Eln. 1873.
W. D. Terbeu & to„,
WHOLESALE DRUGGIST, and denteii in Waal Paper
Harmon Lampe, Window .Glass, Perfumery, 'Nitta
Oils, &G.--Corsdng, N. Y. Jan. 1, 1912.
Sabinsvilie House.
Bannfrittlx. Tiogs Frorcetons.
This house has been thin:mg* 113novaad and iF
now In good condition to aooOmidato thv ta-zvelLat:
publia in a popular manner.—hal. 1, 1873.
D. Bacon, H. D..
PELYSICIIAIi AND SURGEON—May be found at hip
tea* Ist door East of Miss Todd's—Main etreek
Wlll attend promptly to sal calla.—Wellsboro,
Jan. 1,1E172.
HAW (Y.TM TIT, Grt.i Lis 1 .:1-IC,3 l o!l th 34
ellgboto, Pa., Jar. I,
Seeley, Coats Bz.
BANECERi, 'lama:Lay
9111.ewsit i at...^r.q.ult Lotus; 9.t4 drafts on Now
Yvtk CP4: — Cis.ll:s,:ticknala.r..uptl7 mode.
licknarkii .3.2ra-sr, OiC•io.a. ENE
:HD. 3., 1872. DtV/1) Coe7s, Knoxville
Petroleum House,
/ 6 ITIELD , Pa. ; , 0.0-cautolodatiou
cautolodatiou for loth titaa
icoakile, and itcucl at:Almon giv - tr, to grauttg
34 . r5.. Mary E. Lamb. -1
'AIL LL:•ilititLti ; :eu - ~.1 t , ... talar•n t•. , r frtendi -k r.re, th{-
,rb:i. , .. :.;• 411,=*ss' Iry 14.4-4 4i, ••.I.i '042 • ~:•;•,, la tt.s. %Itilin
ety N 0.:.• reg. iillersl - 41:. , Y 4 1,41 , .11,c111r.. , l',.s. 1)(17. atvi :11,:.1,
'De ..,,.,1 V t 3 rp110.A.H.r..44•4.• kt0r.t.L.,x•....1c)z tt: `AI r.• , ;.;
,t . , •
_,L x v0t! , 414.: , r,1.ft , `ar....5 -- , 1;•t: ,::. '... EAMILLt... Lei
a•rtrg,, g,t Z .•
iivd:l4 itll L'ili-ralx-gdevtrt , r E. at$1:11
t ., !:i igllplft ttgdflonl,", , e - azive77. to ie. -N01.12,72-.s.
M. ICale.,_t Co
• are manutaotuxtng:,..,prera.l brands of choke Cigars
whichwe will sell at pr ' es th eas
st claeot but ple
oar eastomere. We nas no:13 but the beet Connect
;out, Havana end rare It back .. , ed We mthe cur urn
Cigars, azdfcr thet :tea a urn warrant thpm. ',co
Date a general assorti::,nl cf '..ocKi Chewing . &rid
Smoking Tobacooe, Sub Ye, Pipe from clay to the
Ilailat Ilsorechaum, Toter-co Ppuehea, &o , Nrticle
gale and reta i l.-,Dec. 2t, 12721 - '').— ' - "- - -
vaJohn R. Anderson,,
ESAU & RETAIL DEALER IN HARDWARE,
L .- on, Steel, Nails, Rowe Trimmings, Ye
atiLloiV Tools, ,Arictltural Implements, Cerrlage
Occds, Axles. Springs. Rims_ .F:c., Pocket. and rabte
Cot Jail, Elated Viers, Gunsand Ammunition, VM.,livi
Pampa—moat and iron...this best in use. 'MannDv:-
tow end dealer in Tin, Cygrar. en et Sheet - than
Wart- Rooting in Tin awl Iron_ All week: warrant
-1111.46n. 1, 1878.
Wellsbore
COR. 'JrAlli ST. tc THE AV 9 JE,
Wellsboro,' Pa.
SRL. BUNNEL,
Thts Is a popular Hotel lately kept 1,7 B. B. Rolf /.I>y
,___Th*Pter r zieter will spare no to =ship. it a ''.l:4t
W m Zbtml4, All the stages anive and , depart from tai• A gapjlibostler pa attends:toe: ita:Livery t..t
4e l,
.„ • 1,1.61,, :. , . .
•._ . ,
Notice.
L OS E. WOODARD hating lett my bed and board
= i t hut muss or provocation, Z hereby forb:d
barbari s m' trusting her 'on my account,
4711 .a. -- /S7 ngl deb ot , hoC.contrao= after this
'flea b• : IWOODARD.
CtriffitgiiNrilthaittr.
RAILW4,t 'TIME TABtAii.
Wellsboro Zt Lawrenceville it. I R.
- Title TLlbleilto. 4.
Takes Effect. Um:day "Tune S 1,1872.
QOM) ItCOTH, 00m0 SOUTH.
42 2 4 fitatans. ' I 8 9
p.m. p.m. A.M. a.m. p.m. e..act.
160 63610 00 Jr, Conking, Dep. 800 • 735 800
12 28 430 866 . 900 840 0)8
1218 428 844 Dep. Dmming 011 848 098
A. m.
12 oa 412 a4O Lathrop 916 860 833
11 43 4058 28 TS ogs Village 929 904 643
1.1 23 SB2 812 Eratomoid 943 918 713
1113 843 801 Mini Omsk, 969 927 7
11 07 3 40, 800 ._. goiliday 957 990 729
10 57 8 92' 1 62' 311581obitry 10 OS 998 729
10 49 8,27 74^r - NtleeValley 10 08 943 747
10 95 919 739 Stokeedale 10 10 961 7C9
1026 810 732 De. WeDeboro, Aar. 1026 10 00 8-10
2 48 Oharleaton, 10 52 . -
203 Sti_mmit, ' 11 12
130 Ant:dill, 114.6
A. H. HORTON.1:3110,01
Blossburg & Corning it Tioga R. R.
TIM(' Table No. 32.
Take.) Effect Monday Jima 34, 1872.
DEPART Mont corCS - D6.1. AttitV.T. AT 11L.0;9IWIW.
/147. .860 a. W. No. I tO 4b rs, Z.(4.
T 35 p. m. 3 ~.102.0p.
•. 16 .320 p. Su. "15 626 p.
DEPART FORM kiLOSARMIG. AlatIVT. AT OININTX , 7.
... a s 5 p. m.I No. p.
41
No. 8
pri,ct, Poet of Plue Street, Willtartutpart, rn
LAWCAMD.
MALI dap. Williamaport, . 9.u0 a. u•
Accommodation oc3p. . p.
Af ail arrive at Williainsport O 10 p. tv,
Accotutoodatton arrive at Wi11iaza5p4rt........9.:10 a LI..
An additional train leaves Depot at herdic House,
trinaport, at 9.05 a. m.--for Milton, Philadelphia, ti.
York, 804.011 and intermediate poitit.4 Beturnita.;.
.lased oonnectlon is taai.to tWilliamsport with trains
far the west.
No change of umr:, bey,. Vdtl nAblphla, New Fit
sud Willionerical. GEO. WEBB. Sup':,
Erie Railway.
r r/ZSE TABLES AIX).FIED Amt. r. 3a, /UN
Now and Unproved Drawing Room and Oleepinq
Conches, combining all modern Improvements,
can through on all trains between New York, Rochee
cor, Buffalo, Niagara Falls, Suspension Bridge, Cleve.
land and Cilionmeti_
Westward.
STATIONS. No. 1. N". 6. No. 7.7 710. 3.•
N. York, Lye 900 am 1 OBUI 630 pua 700 p m
inui:elm, " 444 p us* 935pm800ara ,3 40 a Lo
Elmira, " - 886 " 12 80 " {5 20 " 535 "
.10/Ting. " 707 " 1 20a na 568 " 6/7
Pt'd Post, " . 1 20 " ..
Socheat'7, Arr 10 37 " 10 92 " 10 32 "
Eiorsi'vlle, " 830 Sup 250 " i 7 25 Btt. 720 Bft
Saba°, " 12 05a ttl 810 am 11 45 am 1245 pm
N'tag. Falls " 1255 am 1 71 30p115 " uu 1
1 4 1
35 pm
Dizaisk, " 160 " 1 600 " 1 15'"
. •erg • .. 4: .: ~. ~.~; .
6 a. sn., ezoopt Sundays, from Owego for, Etornells
vLUe and Way.
616 a. m., exoepj Sundays, from Susquehanna for
flivliallsville and Way.
SO a. ED dakly E-oza Sttaqttehattna for Horne'lsTllle
tact Way.
• 1 10 p. Ea., except Sundnfa, flu:wan/Ira for Avon
to 134a10 mid .Way.
220 p. except 'Ettincla . ya, from Binghamton IV
aonaellaYille ana Way.
sTATIoxs.
Dunkirk. LTEI
lag. }13128,"
Buffalo,
Eiorn'isca,
tiookseter, "
Jerning, "
Elmira,
tslng'mtn,
gew York, "
Anna
6 06 a. ra.,
°Vag . ° and Wri
6W g. m., des:iy tram tiorttallsv:ll I'r:a :; , otiquebe.rme.
a.r.e. Way.
7 - 20 a. sq., .1 1, z , etit'SomdaYa, from tiono,6ll.6Tille for
e.irgluuntort cud WO. • -
a. La., ex.ce2t Sandf.ys, from Owgifo for S3usque
-aazia-exid Wan.
00 R; at. Oxclipt Stuadtyi, 'from Palatal Pot: ft;r
12.041174 csul Way.
1 p. m. except Stmdays, from Ef'›raellaville for
3usquattanne. azul Way.
tYomitys excapted, bettroan Buagnelianna sad Port
Jerv.ig.
' Through TlCl'dCie, to ell points Wes; at the very Low
yt Bates, f , ",, , r sale he the Comnny'eaZfve at !•Le Cora
-
Depot.
This la the only authorized Agency of the Erie Bail
say Campo:L.7 far the We at N . Yestertt Tickets in Cora-
Baggage will he eheolted only on Tickets pm:Anse:l
.1 the Company's Mace.
Northern - Central Railway.
Praha arrive andiapartat Troy, since Jane Bth, /871,
as follows :
-
2, , przEviikap. eetrxiv,44.aD.
..Nl:iggr. Express, 407 p z 7 I Balta. Expreas, 816 p llr
*****:
.190 16 p ra I Mg," Express,
9 6
1 62 f: ra ln
A. 11. YISSE„ Gera
J . P.M. 1. 1872
Cyrtuv, Sfdia,
VIEEOLEZ&LE DFAT PP IN
Foreign and Domestic Liquors
wzmi, ko., eo.
Agent for Fine Old Whiskies,
Jan. 1, 1879. 00BlittiO, ICI', Y.
Houghton, Orr & Co.,
STONY FORS, PA.
Manolzottu , , , re of
Buggies, Sulkies,.
,
PLATFORM SPRZICI. TRUCE AS ])
LUIR IER WAGONS 9
CUTTERS.
SLEIGHS AND 808 SLEDS.
notice ar ang r f a m.VZst d° :).a " gr tlt o t=n on gia l m h- r rt .
Died. ROCORTON, ORR F CO
RIUMS fi Cdr.FR, Agents Weitsbotro
Stony York, July 1, 1872.
* - s 7 x,rirxißtcoolz;.
Latest Improved, hates THE BEST,
HAS NO SPIRAU SPRINGS
• t,
./ S P'EVER2' i Mono*.
HasSelf' Setting'NeetUe and Inariov6,:t
• SHUTTLE.
TIRE VITCTOR
Vi r /LL be put out on trial for puttee witba,g,
21°10. on easy, montbly"payments.
Beforepwchesing r eall and examine the It,
et L. or. T:uman•s store to Wellsboro, Pa.,..
E. SENNINGS, Agent.
5159h114 Twlat. Cation und Needles cf Lll •e: h.! 5
coustautly baud.
N.
P--
N. 9f U kinds repaired on reasonable
• Noy. 9,19726 at.
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.703 p. ta. • • 4 1000 a. in
720 a. m. 270. 8 1148 a. m
A. H. C10111 . 0 , N, Sup't 12, & O. R. R.
L. R. STIATTUCE. Sup't Tioga It. It. _
Osltiwissa
i.m.tv,ard,
:co. 12.* ,no. 4.1 o. B.t 1
in
•22 25 p ...... .. 1 1000 pm
14$ " a bglp mllO 12 pgic
220 " 825 '"t 1 1135 "
005 01.‘2. I'l3o " ~ zi 15 e m
1 ( , 0 p tn. 0' 3) " 1 -.....-
723 " 'l2Ol - 1431 "
803 " 12 Omni . 5n "
Lo io .. ; 2 115 - II 18 ••
i !
100ana 11110 " 1320y..731
iomezALoc4.l.7i.tuam sTWAR
IC Sy: SU Z.: dft 73, f:-.7= M4-1.1:1 .
INO N. ABBOTT.
Gsrel Baser Aet
r \
New Boot, Shoe, Leather
AND FINDING STORE.
C:5. W. EileDvons3.
Nets' Shop, New ;_itoek, and first-
t r e ire from a Rand Cad: to A aid Orator Beat
A
Ladies' Kid and Cloth, Bal
morals and Gaiters,.
Ditto Children's
and Misses.
Gents' Cloth, 'Morocco, and
: Calf Gaiters. Oxford
and•Prinee .filbert
Ties. -
A
e coalizio of OVEIISHOES, and a fall Roo of
) FINE BOOTS,
rapong In ?Ilea &tau $4,00 to Sixt), pegged tuld se wed
CUSTOM. • BOOTS
Prom r 5,011 to L 15,00, will worth tbu money every time
Leather and Findinge
at the lowe.st rime, as usual.
The undersigned having spent twenty 'years of ids
life in WeLlsborci—muchruf the time on the, stool of
penitence, drawing the Ord c &Meilen for the good
of salsa; believes ratjaer in hammering titian - blowing.
Wherefore, ho will oily remark to hie old customers
and as many new ones as choose to give him a call,
that be may be found at his now shop, next door to B.
T. Van liforn'e ware rooms, with the beat and cheap.
eat stock Tioga conntY, C. W. BEAUS.
Welliboro, A.Dtll 2i, 1872.
WISHART'S PINE TREE
MAR CORDIAL,S
NATURE'S GREAT REMEDY
•
Throat and I.Aung
It le gratifying to us tc. inform the putiic het Dr.
t. Q. Wleharre Pine Tree Tex Cordial. for Throat end
Lung Diseases, has gelned an earls:As reputation
from the 'ittlenticto the Pacific; coast. end from thence
to some of tll9 fast famitel)c>i Euryps, not through
the arena alone, but by persons throughcvut the Staten
actually benefatiLd and cured et his office. While he
publishes leas, ■o say car reporters, he is unable to
.
BE
7 /ger_
7 45 •
1960 •
8 00 '
1208 pm
12 43
236 •
supply thsdetzlitud. It irAns and its repute
tion—
First. :Not by stopping couish, but by loosening,
anc). assisting nature to throw off tbe 'unhealthy mat
ter volle4ted about the ti 7 cnst .and bronobial tubes,
causes irritation.
EMUS
tSenond. It names th 6 oettee of imitation (which
proflUnee cough) of thel mucous membrane and
,
bronchial-tubes, atitsto the luxes tnact and threw off
the unhealthy eeoretione, naQ pariffee the bland.
Third. It is tree trona 'equilla, ipecac and
opium, of which most throat end lung remedies are
composed, Nchicli ,flay megla only, and dieorganize
the stomach. It has a s'oothin¢ effect on the stomach,
acts on the liver and ]Cdr eye, and lymphatic and
nervous regions, thus reaching to every part of the
system, and in ita invigorating and purifying effects
it has gained•a reputation which it must hold above
all others in the market.
The Pine Tree Tar Cordial,
Greet.Ameriatn Dispepsia Pills,
WORM SUGAR DROPS.
Bart under ray immediate direction they stall not
Irma their curative qiut!ltea by the ilea of cheep end
irtiptire artia l fs.
HENRY R. WISHART,
Free ©f Charge.
Dr. L. Q. C. whiharrs Parlors are oven on
all Mondays. Tuesdays and Wednesdays from 9 a, ro.
t 9 5 p. m., for eonaultation by Dr. Win. T. Mt.gee.—
With him are associated two consulting pbyßicians of
acknowledged ability. This' opportunity is not of
fered by any other ineUtution in the city
All-. hitt r ?att.!, t': 1 , ! , <iticiresi..d tv
L.Q. C. Wishart,,
No, 232 N. Second street,
)
Nov.: JO; 1812-43 m.
B. B. Irotrwe
E. B. Young & GO.,
(13tmocigsore of Hugb Yottne
Booksellers and Stationers.
•
Wall PAW'.
Window Shades,
INlnidoar Fixtures,
niiuss cal Instruments
Tanker ,Vorlona, -
Pioturo riii.USII 1112 Q Ghee,
Picturee, all sorts, ••
Picture Cord, •
Law Blank.
Justice Blanks,
Blank Books, all sires, '
Newspapers, Zl4ealtiada,
Writing. Desks,
Artists Goods,
Law Books, '
Medical Books,
Religious Books
and every arado lo our Pao of trade
York Denim at One Dollar a month.
—Elmira Dailies at 15 Cents a month.
—Subsaripiloni far a week, or indath, or year.
--Orden 2Ca'BOOks not in btook promptly attended to.
Ezprew pokanige recelyea from New York ov
ary Clay.
—We are Agerits of the Anchor Line and the Guion
Line (AL. S. Mail Ocean 4tettru2ri. Passage tickets to
and from any point in Europe at the lowest rates.
—Sight Draita'aold on any Ben ) in Europe ci cur
neat rates of Exchange. L
.11. 24,1872-Iy. F.. B. YOUNG s CO
To Suffering Humanity.
Da. TIPPLE'S P.ILE SiTALU'LI:. is warrst,64 to
owe every mac of GonstiDation an 4 m""7
refunde,,d.
80/11b7 Jahn E. Piero,. Wellaboro, Pa.
18?12.43m0b
4
WE,LLSBORO, TIOG A CO., vA., Tvxsivi. JANTJARY 28, 1873.
•72i THE F7F-1,1) stieDi
Wt,rk
rort Tax
iIaTC2O°X I XIO:II3..
iD
PROPRIETOR.
PHILADELPHIA
WM. WHAZIYO
sad De/dews In
Love Songs.
mum OTEISST.
Like a breeie from a garden.
Matte sweet with the scent ,
Of the fresh blooming Went. -
. 4 r3he.came and she went; - -• , •T.
Pure spirit 4111111711110 n,
Pelt retheritutu known,
Fain would I have held her
And made hes my Own;
IPA all the uncordlous ,
breeze blease and,gose,
so went she, more blswatnt;
And bleat than she kri , vre.
nt Tag oArtrnizi.
When Macs were In blossom,
And all the air was sweat,
I saw her standing Up-toe
Upon a garden-seat:
One hand drew down the clusterti,
The other bent a away,
Held it a little minute, \ 4tar
And let It allp away.
Lilacs, your ]lie is lengtheutdl;
but you've inlased the very beat,
The beat brief Life or lying
And dying on her brat I
•
TII,L. DAYI3BIIAN.
Away to her, fresh morning breeze,
uplift and blow aside
aer snowy certain,,and with ease
Approach her undoniad.
And lightly kiss her mouth and eyes,
And lightly lilt her hair,
And blow about her where she lies
This scent that title the air,
Of apple-blossoms nweet, that elm,
Alay, waking,leng to know
What newly-flowertng shrub or tree
Sweetens the moruitig so,
pest the elstfly curtain there
Lean forth, perhaps, to Bee;
Sweet, fresh, and lair, and unaware,
.Ese it4lllllersolf by me I
THE MOOMSIC
'Ls long, long after sunset.
And cloudless is the sky,
Yet strangely faint the stars are,
And strangely faint am Zi
Behind th 4 hiding mountain
They know the moon is near;
And shining at her window
Soon will my Love appear.
—From the "Altdine"Ar January.
FROM THE PACIFIC.
SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 20, 1872
• Dear Agitator :—While waiting for, the'
steamer which leaves here to-morrow for
Puget Sound,i W. T.,1 write this hasty_ de
scription ofOur route across the States, and
of the countey around its Weitern terminus.
I have no Indian story to relate, as ell was
quiet and peaceful on the front. . •
One day in Chicago gave us Sufficient time
to discover that the rebuilding of, the main
portion of the burnt district is very rapid,_
as well as beautiful and substantial. The
air there was exceedingly Cold and piercing.
From that point to Cheyenne, Wyoming
Territory, we stemmed , a strong tide \ of
wind from the west, severely 1 cold and
steady. This is a ride of 'abOut three days,S
and a very monotonous one, for there is
nothing visible the whole way but the wide,
level land and occasionally a little house
built - close to the ground that the wind may
not carry it. attny. One cannot comprehend
the vast extent of this great field, even after
having passed over it and surveyed it- with
his own eye.
In lowa pork is worth Se and $3 60 per
hundred; corn 12 cents per bushel. In Wy
enaing Territory and 'Nevada there is noth
ing produced from the land in the vicinity
of the railroad; everything' islimported;
hence a meal costs $1 26, and everything
else in proportion.
After leaving Cheyenne we begin to as
cend the eastern slope of _the Rocky -Motna,l
tains. Here is an entirely different SOH.—
Unlike the fertile States of the Mississippi
valley, this region hes a ieed, barren sex;
face; everything has a brown, unpeodeer tee
appearance. .The grade is exceedingly .
heavy till we reach Sherman, the highest
point on the route, over eight thousand feet
above the level of the sea. Here is a sta
tion. We stopped long enough for the pas
sengers to step out and take a breath of air
that seemed to come directly from f the Pa
dile with such force that one could scarcely
brace himself to the ground. The old rusty
rocks have the appearance of great age, and
indicate plainly that the waters, some day,
have washed and worn them to their pres
ent novel shape. •
Thence we wend our way down the west
ern elope to the valley below, where is found
the narrow, crooked, and peaceful Hum
boldt river. This valley is said to be a good
grazing, but not a good' farming country,
as the surface is mixed so thickly with alkali
that It is as white as a November frost, and
so thick where it is drawn out by the sun
that it is easily gathered up with the hands.
It has the precise taste of soda. This valley
contains a vast tract of level land, and
grows an herb on which stock will feed and
fatten all the year. -
Soon we are mounting the Sierra Nevadas.
Here is the first snow ;west of lowa. After
1 a long ride up the slope and over the
, summit we come to the snow sheds, which
in our case shut us in almost' total darkness
for a distance of nearly forty miles; and all
this time every one is anxious to gaze out
upon the vast pine and fir timber region that
surroundeess on all sides. The pine is me
dium sized, and not the mammoth pine.—
' Presently we are greeted with the balmy
I breezes of the Sacramento Valley, the lofty
peaks, the deep canons, and the green ver
dure peculiar to the western elope of this
range. The scenery is both grand and beau
tiful. When the train, as though it were
following a cow Path, winds around the
thousand peaks of this region, and runs out
around a point where the awe-stricken pas
senger looks down directly from the car
window more than a thousand feet to the
valley below, and is surrounded by still higher
peaks on either side, the scene is exceedingly
grand. The train stops here for a second
view. When we meet one of those little
valleys—green with many kings of shrub
bery, alive with Joyous birds singing in the
soft stmehine like that of an 'Enetere
mer day—it is beautiful and plef k g,.t k o.,.
I Soon the train runs from a lone trestle
work into Sacramento city. It ie• the oldeet
city on the slope, and hu a populeline of
admit 20,000—located in the ri and
tiful valley of the same name. This valley
is very productive, and yields a great varie , y
of fruit and much grain. Passing on, the
train goes - through the two flourishing cities
of Stockton and Oakland, having a popula
tion of from ten to fifteen thousand each.—
Thence out into the middle of the hey to a
depot on trestle work. Here we dismount
and take the ferry. In about ten minutes
we are in Sall Francisco, among the deafen
ing shouts of hacknaen, the thundering of
, cabs and street cars, not unlike the scenes
and excitements of the great cities ed' the
East, San Francisco, has a population of
about 160,000, and a great portion of it lies
on the-east side . of a hill, hence its streets
fate frequently quite steep. Unlike Sacree
nsento, it has not beauty of location, but is ,i
far superior in structure, and, like all other
hrderican 'cities, contains a great deal of
tinder which may some day feed a quick, I
hot fire. Every stre , ilt seems to be ,e husinee,s
'street, full of people, drays, and street cers.
In fact it is a city of business and not of
fashion. The people seem very genial and
friendly. You meet no beggars On the
streets. All seem to haVe a little coin iu
their pockets, although it is viOrtli 18 per
cent. 'Greenbacks are not:used on the slope.
The people say thee dig gold and
,silver,
and they' pieferto use it.. Nothing less than
ten.cents is used much, ,as live cents is too
little
to.,f)Sy•troubled,• with.. I should judge
that'tli*VetMle, - or a':elo.ss of thorn; are very
j(iittre.titkfrhyd, of much 'merriment, from
thii*iittlift . in'the - t!Race•of one block, last
night - eight "large iittECirig' lialis, all'
FMPrAiekwith good music and a plenty , of
claneera,V,4 looked lutoi one of them, And I
upth,ing that laclioated a very high
11. dies included, kept
the bar thmier,busy wh le the Musician 9 se
eted,aulOther: tune. •
Ther6,l4 no question but that the climate
of this slope not excelled on the Ameri-
Carl continent. The variety of climate is so
great•that nearly all if pot everything, that
Is needed,in a progressive country Can be
cultivated in one or another part of this re
gion. - i3an Francisco has a medium climate,
between the extremes of the North -and, the
South. The middle of December is, the
coldest part of the year., Since the 13th in
want the_ weather has been unusually cold
on account of Want of !ilia, and the heavi•
est frost Was sinillar to the October frOsts
of Wellsbero. cot a flake of snow has
failen,liere this year, and the coldest weath
er hag :passed. 'Today the sun shines las
bright;. and the air is-as refreshing as on, the
most :plensant days of au Eastern Indian
Butnutee,'SThe extreme heat of this portion
of California is much, the mime as that !of
northern Pennsylvania. The rainy sea-sou
is expe‘ted to commence at once. It con
tinues, as near as 1 can ascertain, during
most 'of
,the winter season, keeping pace
very neatly with the snowy season of the
East, but is not usually so long. The grass
just begins to spring up anew,, and grows
until about the first of May, when the dry
season sets in. This growth, although it
dies, gradually from that time, ilfurnishes
good feed for • stock during the
Thus the summer of California is like the
winter cif the East. The farmers here are
now very busy ploughing and sowing.
yesterday saw a man dragging with a team
of eight horses all abreast, with a drag to
correspond. -There was not a stone, nor 'a
root, nor-nstump to interfere, and besides
the ground *spites ;La - allow - _aa 'an fish, bed.
This is the natural condition of the valley
soil *of California; it has the color of the
black ash swamp. rarely found In the Beat
and West: :I met a vegetable wagon in the
country yesterday. By inquiry I found
that the driver raises his supply and ped
dles it the year,rotinc; This' is not only a
convenience for therfeb, -but a luxury for
the most humble la -earthly fortune. Just
now is the tithe fora person from the East
to appreciate these things, after digging out
of the show banks and throwing off his
heavy overcoat ancl buffalo shoes. ' •
\ The young men here would do *ell to go
East to get wives, and the women, especial
ly teachers, at the East would do well to
come, here, as teachers are rather scarce.--
A woman who will do common housework
can get from twenty to thirty-five dollars
per month, but she is not to be had for that.
Teachers in the common schools of Wash,-
ington Territory, Oregon, and California
receive from 'fifty to one hundred dollar's
per month, while those la the higher schools
get from seventy-five to two hundred dol
lars, and board themselves at front four to
seven doll** per week. Lporers working
in the lumber woods get frOm thirty to fifty
dollars. per. rn_onth. teamsters get
from seventy-ve to one htlndred and eftY
dollars. Goods aaeoAr'S gel from fifty to
one hundred and fifty dollars. Mechanics
are secret, and well paid. Farmers can't
pay so much, es the business don;t seem - 'to
afford it. Every than with whom I have
spokW that has a so»rk of ambition, says
he is wall satisfied to remain here; he- sees
prosperity on every hand. %Very truly,
Aunt Polly Quimby's Adventure
Oh, my, but didn't the wind blow? When
I went around the house that night locking
doors and 'windows before going to bed,
there 'was just a breath of a breeze sighing
about—nothing more; but by the time' bad
fairly plumped upon the pillow, the gale
was going it like mad. When I first came
to this Western country I was surprised at
the quick, unceremonious way storms had
of coming upon people—half thetime, it
seemed to me, out of a clear, inmpent-look
ing sky.
In my old home I prided myself upon
reading the signs of the skies; but here,
goodness me, when I thought it would
snow it was sure to rain, and when I coeld
have taken a solemn oath that the' cloild's
were going to pour, why, whisk they'd go,
and the sun would shine out as though it
was in hi• h glee at having fooled me. So
I gave u being a weather prophet, and
took.lit jut as it came.
1
• ,
That isi ht everything out of doors seem
ed to be i commotion. The loose shingles
on the 4 use clattered up and down, the
windows shook,' the blinds rattled, and half
the time it seemed to me that the bed on
which I lay would be blown through the
side of the house. I know Pin, a foolish old
woman, but at the thought I couldn't help
setting my ruffled nightcap straight, and
smoothing back my hair, because if I sho'd
go, why, there was Deacon Albee's house
'opposite, and—but Lord bless me, what am
I saying!
• - Well, naturally, I was loneso.ine enough,
without child or chick to speak to, but I did
-very well until somehow I got it into my
head that burglars always choose just such
nights to do their mischief in. After that I
started at every sound, and as there were
' thumps and clatters on all sides and in every
direction, it isn't to be appposed that I .got
much rest.
I didn't stop to reason that there was very
little in my poor little house to tempt evil
doers. I knew I had forty dollars and eighty
cents laid away in my poor departed Jason's
old wooden chest, and I felt that to lose
that would be a terrible thing to me.
The house was a cottage, with a hall run
ning the length of its two rooms—an "L"
being built beyond. •My "room was at the
back, opening into the hall and the front
room adjoining. So my eyes went from
one door to the other; lingering, I must say,
with morcodread upon the one leading into
the bldi.
" If I should be robbed of that forty dol
lars and eighty cents—" said I to myself.—
Just thou a blind went whack, and spring
ing up in bed ; I began to say the prayer my
mother taught ine—" Now I lay me down
to sleep;" though I'm sure it looked a great
deal more as if I was sitting up to sleep.
" What an old fool you are, Polly Quina
byl" I began to say aloud, tiving to get up,
my courage by the sound of my own voice.
At that moment I was sure I. heard a step
in the little hall, and before I had time to
move from my place the door hitch 'lifted,
the door swung back, and there lie stood,
the very object that I - had been dreading,
Dlr. Burglar himself.
" Good evening ma'am," he said in such
I
a polite way that found myself in the mo
tion of bowing back and saying good eve
ning, too.
lfe was a middle-aged man, wig'
and whiskers, and he had tke, hr
that I ever saw in a person's I
hair on his temples was quite gr
all, be looked like a respectahl
gentleman, and not like a midnil
" Quite a windy' Evening,
went on as he stepped into t
" You must he lonely here by yl
Somehow, this touched tut
forgot who was speaking, an
Vack as tart as could be:
" I prefer to chov6e my comp,
He laughed and shruerred 1.1
ders.
"You do, indeed! So.do I.
I have my pr Terence—not you
Then he sat down leisurely I.
cbair, and stretched out his fee
he intended to stop awhile.,
" Will you be so kind, sir, as
your business? What do you
. ,
self, sir, to be intruding upon the privacy
of my room at this hour of the night?" -
lie leaned his head back upon my bright
worsted tidy, and laughed lit to kill himself.
" No barm.is intended you,! my charming
woman," he said. "Z swear it—no harm-is
intended you."
And saying this, be laughed louder and
'longer than ever.
' .q)ci you come into my house to make
game of me before my'very eyes?" I asked,
my temper pretty much stirred up. I" If
youi‘vere a gentleman, sir- -".
"A gentleman? Oh, aw—that's too good
If I professed to •be a gentleman, you'd
stand a good chance of getting your throat
cut, without so much As by your leave,
ma'am,' to begin with!' A gentleman? With
all my faults, thank heaven, that one is not
among them!"
" You needn't have gone on that way to
prove it," I said tartly. •
" Well, you are a sharp old damsel, you
are!" turning his big eves upon me, and
twisting up his mouth In a comical way,
which I shall never forget. " I swear you'd
be pretty good_looking if p . m didn't wear
such a wide ruffle on yoUrnigfitcap. Jolly,
isn't it a lunker!—big enough' for a grave
yard fence."
"Sir!" I said, looking very aavage.,
"Ma'am!" he answered, imitating m
volob*and tone to perfection.
," Oh, if I was only out of this bed, sir!"
I began.
"And pray, matlam,.what is there to hin
der you from getting out? I'd like to know."
"Do you intend to insult me, you good
for-nothing,creaturer Oh, if the wind only
'ould blow you away!"
" If one.goes the other is sure to go, too,"
'he said stolidly.
"If - brother Joe would only waken," I
said.
He cocked his eye knowingly.
" You want to make me believe that be is
in this houseriomewhere, eh? My dear
madam, you are as transparent as , air. Had
he been under this roof, you would have
•screamed ' - bltui murder long before 'this
time."
" Oh, oh, you varmint!" I groaned in pure
agony of spirit. " What do you want?'
" Well, ma'am, since that is a fair, honest
question, I will attempt, to answer it. To
begin with, ,my financial affairs are in a com
plicated condition. Money I have but little
of—credit hone; so I am forced to levy a.
trifling tax upon my friends in this and other
neighborhoods to eNtricate me from my dis- -
estrous condition. glOll as, I collect a
certain amolnit I intend leaving- thl coun
try for Prance or Italy, never, perhaps,' to'
return. Do not shed taws at this, dear
madam, for wherever my footsteps tend.
your imageruffted nightcap and all—will
remain forever imprinted upon my heart."
" Yon old gooser,l said.
"Please do not Interrupt me, madam; I
have but a few momenta longer to stay, god
I must go to business at once. I have learn
ed that you have deposited in a trunk in in
adjoining closet forty dollars and eighty
cents. 'The forty dollars I wouldlike to
borrow of you for an indefinite length of
time; the eighty cents I do, not care any
thing about. You can retain that as a tri
fling evidence of my generosity in this great
emergency of my life."
" vu are a robber, a thief, "then,'.!. I said
spitefully,-
" Eith'er, at your service, madam," rising
and making a bow for all the world like a
French dancing master. " Now the money,
if •you please."
Ale wasn't joking now, There wag a
determined look ill his eyes and about his
mouth.
"He that giveth to the poor leudeth to
the Lord," he said, speaking just like a
pre9.eher,
"And Ile thnt steals from the poor, whet
of Von?" •
"My Bible does not dispose of Ms case
especially, mallatn."
" And you came here to rob rne--ine,
poor womanr
"I came to borrow of you for an uncer
tain length of tinith"
I saw it was trieless to waste words with
him; besides, I didn't altoeetber like the
look in Lis eyes. I closed my lips tightly
together, resolving that I would not seat.
again.
" If you've no object:On, tfla . tall, I'll look
around a bit," he said, taking up the lamp
as he spoke. "If I hoar any noise from
you, my dear, or if I see in any way that
you are becoming nervous, I shall be obliged
to quiet you by the use of—"
He held up a small
G. eV. LANGAN
" Chloroform!" I gasped
" At your service, madam."
" Irwould be the death of me," I moaned
" I should be sorry to bring such a loss to
the world, but, believe me, all that rests in
your own hands. This door leads into the,
closet where the trunk is, I believe," be
said, making straight for the closet where!
my forty dollars were put away for safe
keeping. •
I didn't pay a word. To tell the truth.l
the chloroform had scared me nearly out of
my wits. He turned the ;key in the door,
(I bad always kept it locked,) and the trunk
was at the further end of it. Let me say
here that this closet or store room was in
the "L" part of the house, fully a foot low
er than my room. Mr. Burglar was not ac
quainted with this fact. Glancing toward
me with his sharp eyes to see if I was quiet,
he took a step forward and went sprawling
on all fours. I don't' know to this day how
he managed to save the lamp as he did, but
it was not broken in the hill,' and burned as
brightly as ever: My wits came to me here.
I sprang as lightly as a cat out of bed, and
before he could get upon his feat', I had the
door of the closet shut- and locked upon
him. He grew lamb-likeln a moment,
" You've done it. now, haven't you, my
charming creature? I swear I'm in love
withyou from this hour to the end of time.
You've got me tight and fast. • What's the
use of money now? I'll take the eighty
cents and you may have the forty dollars, if
you will let me 0ut..."
" - No, sir; I am going to roll the neigh
bors," I said, -resolutely.
"Going with that nightcap. on? You'll
make your fortune. But don't hurry, that's
a dear; let's have a littlelfriendly talk. Say,
3211 give you a hundred dollars if you'll let,
me out."
" Yes, and leare you free to scare some
other woman nearly to death—no, sir!"
", Well,
_then, I'll give you two hundred."
"No, sir."
" Name your price, then, dear girt • I
suppose every woman he.s her price—they
say every man has." .!.
No;• it wouldn't be right," I said hesita
tingly. . .
• •
I. heard him chuckle: "First step toward
it; she begins to talk:of, what is right."
I thotight of my poor girl'out to Work by
the week, stal so anxious '.to :'• get an educa
tion; and I'm sure it isn't to be wondered at
If I did begin to think of setting a priee.—
But I said
" Look beret' I'll put live• hundred dol
lars in good46und gold under the door, and
you can count It as I push it •throngh pi e ce
by piece, if you'll only let me out pi this
cursed hole. I'm smothering."
" Try some chloroform," I whispered
through the keyhole.
"Curse-the chloroform! you let me
onti"
th mustache
ightest eyes
head. The
ray. Ali in
ale Christian
fight thief.
ma'am," he
the room.-
-ourself."
temper. I
d answered
nny, sir!"
p his shou
In this case
ray rocking
as though
,o about
of your-
I had a light by this i time, and bad slipped
into a calico wrapper and my slippers.
"If I got the-moneyi, how could I let him
out of the closets" I-wondered. " would_
nUt dare to meet him;l he'd rob me again,
and perhaps murder Mel" But Isaid, "I'M
take the gold," resolving that I would try
to get out of it somehOw, just for the sake
of poor Reheesa, who so much wanted to
go to school. .
"Your heart is in: the right place,!' he
said, and the nest moment a big round gold
piece came' through.: the creek under the
'actor.
I couldn't - c:ltiatio)(l an exclamation of de-
'`lt's right enough now, ibn't It?" be
sneered, " There's nothing like gilding
over our sins a shale. Bah t' nil the world's.
alike', Here gAsex smother, and another, awl
another. Count fast.,' my pions darnqet.
dare Say there's no confessional in your
church"
therein voun?"
" Well, if tkiere was, gets into that
sometimes, they ely. Auld tast.there, you
have got the last clinker; now set me free."
air a minute."
"But I won't wait.
1 / 4 ' Can't you help y
"Well, no, not ml
in'g in here. Can't you take pity on a Poor
fellowP
l'tbrned to the kitchen door to ,see if. the
lock all right. Then I turned the key
with n sharpiclick,, which Sbunded. to me
like the report ofTa pistol.
"There!" ,1 cried, and 'sprang into, the
kitchen, locking the door behind me. 1 *
He came out .of his prison oven : ring like
a trooper.
" Sharp• old 'Satan, die's. locked - herself
up•somewl ere," trying the' kitchen door as
he spoke. "Good night ; Madam De'il—
good night! You've got the best of this.—
'You've robbed me. Good night—get down
end say your,
And I did. What is more, cried like a
baby over my money, thinking what it would
bring to ,
I never saw Mr. Burglar again, and in a
few weeks Rebecca was comfortably, eatab
lished nt school. '.No one ever knew where
the money came item. An uncle,fdied about
that time, and some of my neig,hbot..4 sus
pected that he had left us something,•,but
had nothing to say upon till, subject.
About six months after. my 'adventure
brother Joe came Ito, me one day anddaid
that he bad been stopped in the street by a
strange man that Morning, nud that hel l had
begged him tto ay to 4.ladatu Quimby that
"the frill of her nightcap was just a little
too wide." So saying, he passed on- - Joe
naked, "What did it mean?"-.
_
" Nothing i only4hat he was crazy," I an
swered gnieltly; but my feel we 4 as red as
a blaze.
A gentleman who spent an evening with
Mr. John Morley in the winter of 1.807 re
lates the fOllcAving: Mr. Morley was well
acquainted with 1" George Eliot," Whose
" Middlemarch" has just been published by
the Harp era, and Ithich is regarded by her
self as the hes:t c f iter Productions. ' Lee de
scribes her ws a very plain person, hat with
a most benevolent expression of counte
nance. She is exceedingly pleasant and ge
nial in conversation, and is fairly adored by
her friend ,, , By nature she is of a decided
ly religious disposition, and is moat- deeply
interested in subjectsof that nature. There
is something very ,striking in her manner,
and:Alr. Morley sail she always reminded
him of St. Paul, As might be., expected
from her nritings, shed has exquisite sensi
bilities, and acutely sensitive of pain and'
suffering in others, so as to be much affected
by the disagreeable sights that are daily to
be met with in the streets. She lives a very
retired life,
and sees but little society on,' ac
count of her marriage; while, like her hus ;
band, who is the most brilliant talker in
London society, she is alinost. always sick,
dlng to the inability of het fide Organize
to bear-much strain. She is a follower
Comte. - Mr.• Morley says no woman
Whora he had ever • fifer, impressed him as
she had done. There seemed to be Saline
thing'apo.s.tylic. about her, while her intel
lect was of the first order. An Atherican
literary lady who visited her not long since
describes her as hating a very masculine ap
pearer_ce, with.bomelf - features. Her 11)1111-
ner. however, is exceedingly womanly, and
the rever , .. masculine. Her married-life
has been happy cud calm, its only drawback
being that -die has been childless. Like:the
ha •monic,us wedded union of Carlyle, Mill,
Br. wniug, 1...0we11,1 and Longfellow, her
married life goes fur to disAruve the oft-as
ser.sid theory that two petsoris or literary
taint are nut fit to mate with each other
A Sight of Carlyle..
I had imagined that the nuttiest thing to
seeing En6rhend would be to see Scotland;
but as this letter pleasure waS denied me,
certainly the next best thing was seeing
.Ico.tlanZi's 'reateet son. Carlyle has been
so constantly and perhaps..justly represented
as n stormyOtnd yirstliful person, hre.:Ving
bitter denunciation 'for America and
Americ-es, that I cannot forbear to tnention
the sweet cud genial. mood in which] we
found him---a gentle and sEectionate grand
la..l,er, r.ith eelielous Scotch brogue and
rich, cociediol:2 talk overdo - ,ying with re•
rel•:!. - CP"C',3 t his cerher life, of Scott, and
t:r'd Edinbetgh, and other men and
places he lis:d licown Learning was es
r • mil , : interested in birds, he discoursed of
the iatk and tughtirigale and mavis, frarn
in,z his tetearks ':bout them in some episode
orlits personal experience, and investing
their songs with double charm of his le
scripti.m and his adventure.
" It is only geese who get plucked their,"
said m 3 v.ALptinion after we had left—a man
who hild known Carlyle ifnitnately for many
years: " silly persons who have no venera
tion 1-_-r the great man, and i'potte to convert
him or change hiTconvictions Upon subjects
to which he has devoted a )lifetime of pro
found thoight and meditation. With such
persons he hasuo ptitience.'!:
Carlyle had just returnedlroin Scotland,
where hehad spent the etntamer. The hills
and mountains of Scotian 1, he said, had an
ancient, mournful lOok, as if the weight of
immeasurable time hid settled down upon
them. Their look waa in Ossian—his spirit
reflected theirs; and as - 1 gazed upon :the
vendrable man before me, and noted 'his
homely and rugged, yet profound and mel
anehofy expression, I knew that their look
was upon him also, and that a greater than
Ossian had been nursed amid those lonely
hills. Few Inert in literature have felt .the
.burden of the world, the weight of the
exorable conscience as has Carlyle, or drawn
such fresh inspiration from that source.—f-
However we may diEer from him,
(and al
most' in self-defense one must differ from
a man of such intense and overweening -per
sonality.jlt must yet - be admitted that he
habitualqr speaks,out of that primitive
lence and' solitude-in which only the heroic
soul dwells. Certainly not in (*temporary
British literature is there another - writer
whose bowstring has such a twang.—John
Burpaug'‘e, . •
I swear I won't."
urself?"
h; but smother-
" t3it down hat oil thd, floor," I said. ,
I heard him plump down as obedient: as e.
lio6l boy, ,
4 ` Virbat next?" ; •
The Author of "Middlemanh."
The Grass Tree
Among the anomalies of Australiais
singular. growth of the forest that deviates
as much from a tree as a kangaroo front the
ordinary types' of animals, although it is
called a tree. Thetrass tree grows to rocky
places unfavorable for other vegetable pro
ductions. Absolute barrenness is a -Spot
where the plant flourishes best, apparently,
though element's must abound there which
are appropriate nourishment. A xuass of
01 - ass-looking Ilberl'gradditlfy rise otit of the
ground. -From day to. day 'there is an, in
crease Of. bulk and liight . -very%intreli . resent
blin an'elecked tuft of long gra.4 graCe
fully falling off frOin a central shaft. 'Those
pendant threads are leaves Very soon from
the top of the pile7a.slender , stnelt•slawts bp
'Perpendicularly from four to ten feet, ter
minating in a spike. . That is sought by na
tives forspears, being hard and somewhat
elastic. ' the pith is an- article of
fool In the r'ud'e and savage .condithln of
the inligenous .Australians the grass, tree
furnishes a..weapen of extraordinary useful
ness for meeting the circutitstances of a bar
barrilJs state of society: Without it no Other
equally efficient. instrument defedse
' against enemies, Or for contending with fe
rocious animals, is at their commend. What
says science in reference to this provigon:in
favor of savages? „,
Cousumptiim mid Veutile.tiort
The census returns for 1870 exhibit some
alarming facts in regard to pulmonary dis
ease in our country: • The New Engteed
States. average i,wenty-flve per centu i tn of I
deaths from consumption;-York
fraction less; ...Illinois eleven per cent.; Col
orado eight, Utah six per cent., and (.. - .l2lifor ;
nia - 14 per Cent, Going fro:it North to
South the ratio of decrease IS P, ti 01.2 t)7 +.4 same
as from East to West. Michigan shows Ili
per cent of deaths from this cause,) New
Mexico only three per cent. New Mexico
is the best place of residence for - per. , Ons'(,f
delicate lung% and the Nctw England States
with New York the most fatal localities.—
These are siguitcant ii urer Why, shod
this - climate,be the home this icourge't—
The answer may be summed up in
Frequent; and sudden exposures to
high grades of heat and cold, and breathing
impure air from eight to ten hours out °I
the twenty-four An sleeping rooms and at
our places of hat , ine,s. This latter cause is
more productive of . disease than any ,other,
I and yet etrange - tO eV, more ignorance- ex
ista in-the community ott .-this subject than
on any other branch of hygiene.—.Ez
lIIMit
OM
IM
=II
,
Old - and - New Warld:Hiunee. -„. -.:;:,
A recent English - .writer-says the-438 C..
..
lung that struck him in - AMeripan land : .
tainting- waa the absence of iniati JO*, - :;,„
lomestie antunds from the pictures, -4W , e .-
V
n'epondersnee .i.)f rude, wild. - natur4; It
•lis first viesyl,oflthis equitry seems . t,_ _e
aile,tthe same 'inipresaton. But it is. 'f• .
44
sinly't rue that the - traveler through ":.. Ast
ur older Stites livill see ten - houses, - 1
nlitatioas, to on d .
ein Englaner . 1 .t• '.,
though, as a matter of course, itature • 'I
r),
I.)oks much lets domesticated and= ' !-•` -
1 - xpre , isive of 'human oecupanO, and 465.1 -
t et.. The Oki World people have
chtiitrio 1
} i,
tie soil closer and more loving] Y -- thafiiS . o ,
,0. The gt'ound has been more l - TM - 00i s. '
ri t 'hey have had none to wastcelid bite
matte the most of kvery inch of 4 - Whek
ever they have-to lobed they iltitye ; takio,
root raid throve as best they cotild. The, "..
the Atn,erican is more tosmopolitimandl* l t?
domestic. lid is not so local iu his feellfige ,
and attachments. He does not bestow OM •
self upon the 4atth or upon his imine,F§, NI 1
ancestors did. I :ale feathers his nest 001
little. Why should he ? lie trig _ 'tolgiat . ii
t.o-tioi i r,w znid build awn he .. e - -- „taiikri
the pzethenger pigeon that lays .i.,,eir.gl =0
y i
r
.ens itl .youn7 upon . a little latiOrniOf
limit,: twigs. to ur poverty And If aketinesea. ~~
in this respect,. I think, beyond
,Ali?
~ - -
There is nothing nestlike,about ourlis - ' .
...: t11('1. Iti ,t heir
_interior or exteriQrs,... - .A.'
t% cal ill unti l taste and foreign aids rarely „ 'A
tin that cosy, mellowing atmosphere',
..
plervacles not only the lowly birth-p/aCesbut )
ti, , ie halls and inanott-houses of - older latids_i
And what do our farms, repr.esent..but,-„se_
Much real esthte, so Much cash value ,' - c - „ ~ ,
I Only where man loves the soltrusd - heW
I%s to it clbsely - and long, -- will it take °trail
beneficent and human look which, foreu
travelers miss in our landscape; .and• qui,y,.
where homes are built, with fondrielii:ifW
emotion; and in obedience to the social` tree'
ternal and doidestic instincts, will they.hgld:
the charm and radiate.,ancl-.i.vc waim. - # lllt
the feeling I have de,sdritiecl, , : :.: , ~,
And while I am upon' this subjeCt,'l.#-111 1
add that Europearr eitie,s diflerfrdm: odfilak
this same particular They h.aveit 1300
024
character—more their of thvelligg:
,
the abodes of men drawn together forLotgt
durpotes than traffic: • Pkibj>leciertiallf 1W
i I them, and findlife sWeet Ancilestodlzrit
what,does our greateet 9/47,'....Newti r ie ';
rreSs besides cotorn-- , -- -- 'WO' --- wlii;
cther ileason las
of cOurs.t. ) 7 .ltr'
modern worldly
which more ark
itmind l.v.hich led
ountrymetf-that
oro, 'liar, ptupi
ain_persuaded 1
ble also to the
iir social and col
act that the mP
Serious and en .
any other peep.
livary Galaxy:
' .04. G9untrk Gentlemenouattithetiwitt: c
_English authority ,(and all- 1 he -Atiter444:f
Writers copy after' him wltho 4.111114.14: '
trouble to think for :these ,es , -- , bi. - nia# '
‘lases then'are all In a rut,,li - unity - otthd
'elf-constituted teachers in politics; t ellginal:
and materia medica of the present dsy), , •
says • "This unpleasant noise,. knoypn au?:
by the terms 'clicking;"over-reitch',' .- ite . "
arises from the toe of the hind foot striking '
against the shoe of. the fore-foot. In a trot
cue fore-leg and the' opposite hiad ; leg are
first lifted from the ground and moved for-' '
ward, the other foreleg and Vie - oppesite'r
hind-leg remain fixed; but to keep-the.
ter of gravity within, the base, and ~ as !9;ka, : •-,
Stride or apace passed over by these legs _is
Often greater than the distance between the' ' i 1
fine and hind-feet, iris -necessary that the—
fore-feet should-.be moved
~aJternAtely 914:Qt ,
Fite way fro the hind-feet to descend:". ; ~..,- )
Neither Ynuatt - nor any modern writer; , •
so- far as 1 have seen, oiler suggestionli:4o
get the fore-feet out of the waYpf_the hirat . --..
feet. Y.ouatt, not knowing' what. else to -
say, 'suggege the following:
," Nothing eau . 4
be ( - Acne except to keep the toe-of the hind-'
foot as abort and as round as - it .can' safely. , ,
be." ..
. ..„ . —...,
. ..„ ,
If a . .mechanic cf ordinary" skill 'shoUld
find that any part of the machinery of Whick
be was in charge moved too slowly 'for that !'
';which Was to follow, he would at Once,:aW
wit to work to get the former to mtayr.,
novice
of the way of the latter. - Now - let aw
iiovice clap his flat hand on the table Old
inOVe his fore arm in imitation of 4;C:ht:intikes •
fore-foot, and then double up his fist .end-•
Oerform the same motion, and he wi.ll;reiiid,-;':
tly ace how much quicker a horse can get
ks fore-foot out of the way of -the hind-foot
ith a short hoof :than with a long foot
toe-calk. .
Let the smith shoe your horse behind /to . '
usual; no clipping, rasping or 'shorted-kW—
peyonci what is usual, but to prevent click - 04A
ng, cut off the tde or crust of .the
the hoofs of the for .feet, placing 1110 - heel
t he
in their, proper places, and you
will;
have no clicifing.t-E. J MCC., -401, 4 - •
N. Y. 1.
'
To Preserve and Purdy eider,
, •
The Cleveland Zinder says the followine
was sent in by a well known gentleman
that city; and his recipe is entitled tO consid-%
eration : . .
Ilse five eggs for etich - barrel, beat Went_
well, yolks and all, and pour them Into etc... •
bunghole, stir well with a stick, and add a= z'•
spoonful of course salt. In about two weekii •
the cider will be 'as clear as crystal and of 1L....
light color. Thoie,who like cider can dt. ft -
while new, but fermentation will be invite
diately arrested at any desired time: It.w111: '
keep in the sante, state for years, if drain
off down to the sediment 'and put intb
,q
clean cash; whichshbuld be done 'after It =:-
ihas become clear; but without that prooe'Se: , -"-'''
will keep for a year, but loose some.of Its -
[tine flavor, unless separated from.the *must
or dregs at the bottom. Any one ctlriou3' •a
on this subject can see cider so preserved at''•• - •?;
the I)ining 11a1046 Rider street, which.
'from two to Wu years old, but I believ,e hei c s : l:l
did not rack it od. - The writer was
ed, by the due: appearance of the- cider'
that place, and: obtained the.above formulfv; , :z4.
fer preserving it. -I tried it last ',fall
perfect success, and i4nyone who 'will make;
the experiment will thank you forgiving '; t li
this publicity. •
. .
„.. .
•
• HOw to Talie , tlisetise. " 7 • .-4%*;
'
:12fqb24
. astys
gious,diseaSes the ordinary klidare*inai,'-.
as are communicated bycontatt;i4y
near enough to' a, sick person tobreathi4
to this lunge; and swallow with. the sail**,
into the .stouitteb i . , certain solid •particlea., , -
which have beco m e detaohed from, the - in:.!..;% > e:. ;
valid, and - iihiehspeedily find thole waY4. l l r
to, the blood and Olson it 'Amoiig kc r`"
are the foilosving half: Typhusferer;
typhoid lever' scarlet fever, measles, .dip-:
therla and sniall-pox. Persons whq,breathe
through the'no3e only, and avoid swilldwz
ing, in the sick chamber, may conic out. Of
it unharmed; for the solid particles era
rested in their long eircultons passage...
through the dampened channel which le'
from the . nostrils to the windpipe. , An.
id safeguard is Wait so that the draught
i.)f air may bel from you toward -the patienk; ;;
hence, not between lfirn,aud the prep - lace,
toward which there is always a current"
passing, Whether there is any tire-:there. or:J.
not 1.
LET tie ELA.v>~ ettsy-tO
that light is a vital stimulant, 'arid' abeoliate
iv essential to healthy life. , Give a piautaity
the conditions of growth; . a prOper.•
ternperature, 'moisture, and ,air, btit
-hold light, and though it :livei for a
it becomes pale, feeble, loses ,-functionazidj
finally dies; under these circunastanceg. , ,iti7/ ,
eproductive; powers are alws.vs.lost..
man or an animel in SitniCar "conditlonl k ':
~.m1 silaillhave similar results.
injustice is donelo criminals, and fr,equAtut- , ;',
.tv to the ineune, by depriving them of
ICo one can be reformed by darkness: 2 1.f.the
poor of our 'cities are to- be elevated 'fn. the- 4:
scale of humanity ; the that step Is -to .:opfiti.ll
broad ways IfOr the •.adcnissinn of sun i igh,;
into our - tenement houses, and cblistrtict..`,
scindows so that direct sunlight' rimy
every portion of .the rocims://cOald , of
Heade. • , . • , -
1 ~ _ - w - -~ - ~it . t
110 LE --N0:9911.' :
TmEruL AND StreCiEtitira,:.,
Over-Reaching-in-ge i .
A young iguwer—a barber's baby.
, 1,,
E
•
y R I
UM
ME
El
IV
~ 1
1
11
M