Wellsboro agitator. (Wellsboro, Tioga Co., Pa.) 1872-1962, May 27, 1873, Image 1

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VOL. XX.---NO 4
the:, gtoitator.
rtmtmitsri svair ;Ittssoeieni,
13 A6ritiVriniei 'as rt.C)"fri
♦. E. BABNVis
iiir-TEIIIIB :-752,00 per annum in advance.'
RATES OF 4.DVERTISING.
rune. - lio 21n. 31n. 4 in. RieoMCSI 1 Col.
.. --
t Wcek $lOO $2OO $3OO $4OO s6o os 9oo _ $l4OO
Weeks 150 300 4- 00 500 701 00 16 00
a Weeks 200 300 500 600 808 00 18 00
Mouth 2501 400 6001 7001 900 15 001 20 00
2 Mou th s 400 60 0 900 10 00 12 00 20 00 28.00
3 Months 600 8001200130015 00 25 IV '35 00
6 Walla 800 12 00 18 00 20 00 22 00 36 00 '6O 00'
Year. 12 00 18 00 25 00 28 00 35 00 60 00 100 00
•13 , In length
inch.
fi
' Advertisementsare calculated by the Judi
of column, and any less space is rated as a full
Foreign advertisements 'must be paid for bi
0 Won, e icept on yearly contracts, when hal
ayments i p advance will be required.
Beaman Novel:sin the Editorial columns, on the
e eoond page, 15conts per line each insertion. Notb
ug iserted for lose than $l.
Lo sr, N °TIMM in Local column, 10 cents per line if'
m ore than five lines ; and 50 cents for a notice of five
Inca crises.
ANNOUNCEMENTS of MATIMAGES aryl fittarnatnserted
f roe ; but all obituary notices will bif charged 10 mints
pet line.
SPECIAL NOTICE s 50 percent abc Aregular rates.
110SINES6 CARDS 511DO8 KO per year.
Business Cards.
I. R. BATOR:ELDER
• BaicheidOr It Johnson,
Afatuitactuggra of Monuments, Tombstone% Table
Tops, Oodistav, Ate. 'Call and see.' Shop, Wain at..
opposite P.42fy; We'labor°, Pa.—July 3, 1872.
A. - Redfield,
ATTORNEY AND COIJASELLOR AT LAW,—Oollect
ions promptlyattendod to.= , -Bloaatturg, Tloga coun
ty, Penn's., Apr. 1, 1872-9113":
C. H. Seymour,
ATTORNEY AT LAW, Tioga Pa. All business en
trusted to his care will receive prompt attention.
Jan. 1, 1872.
peo. IV. Merrick,
A TTORNEY AT LAW.L-Viellsboro, Pa. Office in
Bowenfa Brick Block, Main street; second floor,
across hall faom AorrAlson °Mop.
Mitchell & Cameron,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Claim and Inv:maned Agents.
Wilco .in Converse & Williams brick block, over
Couverfe & Osgood's store, Wellsboro, Pa.=Jan. 1,
1872.
William A. Stone - ,
ATTORNEY AT LAW, over C. Kelley's Dry Good
Store, Wright & Bailey's Blocii on Main street.
Welliboro, Jan. 1, 1872.
Josiah Emery,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.--office opposite Court House,
No. 1 Purdy '8 Block, Williamsport, Pa. All business
promptly attended to.—Jan. 1, 1872.
•
J. C. Strang,
ATTORNEY AT-LAW & DISTRICT ATTORNEY.
Mee with J.ll. Niles, Esq.. Wellaboro, Pa.-Jan. L '72
C. N. Dartt,
•1
DENTIST.—Tooth trunlo with the NEW IMPROVEMENT.
Which give bettor satisfaction than any thing also
iu use. Wilco in Wright & Bailey's Block: Mils
boro, Oct. IG, 1872.
, ; J. B. Niles,
•
ATTORNEY AT LAW.—Will attend promptly to bus
iueds entrusted to his care In the counties of Tiogs
aun'totter. Mee on the Avenne.—Wellsboro, Pa.
tan. 1,1872
Jno. W. Adams,
ATTORNEY AT LAW, Mansfield, Tioga county, Pa,
Collections prompty attended to.--Jan.-1, 1872 -
C. L. Peek, • •
ATTORNEY AT LAW. AR claims promptly collecte
Wilco with W. B. Smith. Knoxville, Tiogo. (to., Pa.
I •
C. B Kelly.
Dealer in Crockery. China'and Glaass ware, Table Cut
lery and Plated Ware. Also Table and House Fur-
Goods.—Wellsboro, Pa., Sept. 17. 1872.
•
Jno. W. Guernsey,
1. NRNEY AT LAW.—AII business entrusted to him
.% ill tie promptly attended to.—Office Ist door south
t , t Wickham 6: Farr's store, Tioga, Tioga county, P:
J.m. 1, 1879.
Armstrong & Linn,
ATTORNEYS Al' LAW, Williameport, Pa.
Wm. U. ARAM/ICING.
tit \MEL laws.
Win. B. Smith,
PEN§ION ATTORNEY, Bounty and Insurance Ag6ut
C. , nuounicatfons sent to the above address will re
acne prompt attention. Terms moderate.—Knox
Pa. Jan. 1, 1872.-
Barnes 8c Itoy,
ob PRINTEItS. , = AII kinds of Job Printing done on
elwrt notice, and in the beet manner. Office in Bow
. Cohe'a Block, 2d floor.—Jan. 1, 1872.
Sabinsville House.
Tioga Co., Pa.—Senn Ilro's. Proprietors
hss been thoroughly renovatod and is
i o gond condition to accorublate the traveling
a superior immiew.—Jan. 1, 1873.
D. Bacon, 8g„,,D.,
PH 11101‘N AND SUftGEON—May; bu found at btu
lit dour ilist of MIAs Toatl's-9taiu street.
%vdt Itt,ort promptty to all rails.—Wellsboro.
lan
Seo.ey, COats & Co.,
As; KEES, Knoxville, Tioga Pa.—Receive money
..) deimAit, discount notes, and sell drafts on New
York Cily. Collections promptly made.
huh I, 1872
D. H. P;elcli6r,
M kNUrACTURER and Dealer in Tin, :Roves, Copper
of I Sheet IrJn Ware. Job work Pro nplly attended
1... Filet door below 4. B. n.—March 11,
Petroleum Hot . e;
tiVL'STI'IELD, I'A., Geo. Close, Pro' leter.—Good ae
munmdation for both man and Iw.st. Charges rca.
seeable, ,ma good :Attention giNeu o guests.
Jam 1, ItCL
DI. L. Stieklin, Agq.,
iu Cabinet Ware of all kinds which will be
sold lower than the lowest. Ile invites all to take
a luoji.. at his goods beam purchasing e/sewheref—
itenitmlber thwpiace—opposite Dartt's Wagon Shop,
West MairiStreet, Weilaboro. Feb. 2.5, 1873-Iy.
M. Yale ..t, Co.
We a ro manufacturing several brands of choice Cigais
waich we will sell at prices that cannot but please
Wo use none but the best Conucc
uur customers
kat, Havana and Yara Tobaccos. We Make our own
Cigars, and for that reason can warrant them. We
have a general assortment of good Chewing and
Hinoking Tobaccos, Snuffs, Pipes from clay to the
meat Afeerschaum, Tobacco Pouches, &c., whole
&Lie and retail.-Dec. 21,, 1872.
John R. Andeison, Agt.
WHOLESALE & RETAIL DEALER IN HARDWARE,
Btuves, Iron, Steel, Nails.uso Trinunle
chenies"reols, Agricultural Implements, Carriage
Hoods. Azles,•Sprhigs, Rims. &c i Pocket and Table
Cutlery, Plated Ware, (lone and A munition, Whips,
Pumps—wood and iron—the best In use. Manufac
turer and dealer in Tin, Copper,' and. Sheet-iron
Ware. Roofing in Tie and Iron. All work warrant
le,l.—Jan. 1, 1873.
WELLSBORO HOTEL,
COR. MAIN* ST. & TIE AVENUE,
WET:TABOR°, PA
B. B. HOLLIDAY, Proprietor.
This hotel Is well located, and is in good condition
it+ accouricstate tho travelling public. _The proprietor
will spare no painsto make it a ,first-class house., All
th,, stays arrive and depart from this house. Free
has to and from all trains. Sober and industrious host
lerg always In attendance.
Ntarch 19, 1873.-tf.
JUST RECEIVED,
A VEST LARGE STOOK OM BEAVER, BROAD.
CLOTH, OASS[MERE, VESTING% AND TRIM.
MINOS. which I will sell very cheap FOR CASH. In
tact. the best assortment of Goods °vet brought to
Vire'labor°, of various styles. Please call- and look
t hcin over. •
Making Sults, overcoats, and Repairing done with
dispatch and as cheap as the Cheapest.
Jan. 1 an-1y
For Sale or Rent..•
ROUSE AND LOT corner of Pearl street and Av
enue. Also for sale, seven village lots near the
Academy. APP I 9 to ELLIOTT & BOt3ABD,
00%. WellalKiro, A.
41372-44.
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tore In
[-yearly
Y. A. JOHNSOr
Jan. 1, 1872
* llAvii) Co_vrs, Kuoxvllle
GEORGE WAGNER,
Grafton Street,
Wencher°, Pa
. . .
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RAILWAY -, TI TI 11 TABLEff,
......, , , , m.t. ' —....„..-.... _
k• . t F____ .tt .. ,____ __t, -,
Blossbiltgit Coritl 1 g, & ifloga B. 11.
`Time Tabl No. 32.
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I
Takes Effect aa Y aline 3ds /87 2 . "
DEPART FROM CORM:NO.! ARRIPE AT BLOM:MUG.
qio. 1...... 800 a. ul. No. 1 10 45 a. In.
I e 8
~. 735 p.m. " 3..........10 20 p. au.
..15..... 220 p4:11, , r 115.:.... 625 p. TO.
' DEPART FOREELOSSBDED. . ARRIVE AT OORETEG.:
N 0... 245 p. ?M. No. 2... .. 5 35p.m.
..
... 705 p. m. .. 4. ...... —.lO 00 a.m.
No. 8 720 a. m. No. 8 1145 a. m.
A. H. GORTON. Sup't R. st: 0, R. R.
L. 11. SHATTUCK, Sup't TiOgaß.H. •
N. NI. GLASSMIRE & CO.,
WOWS) respectfully inform the people of ,Wells
boro and vicinity that they hare opened a store
next door to O. W. Sears's Boot and Shoe store, where
they intend to keep on hand a first-class stork of . '
DDDDD RIMER ' YYYYY WM
DD DD RR-RR YY,-. YY
DD DD .RR RR -YY YY
DD DD RR RR YYY
DD DD RRAR ' W. ,
DD DD RR - RR YY
DD DD- RR RR YY
DD DD RR RR . YY
DRDDD BURR RRRR. YYYY,
O r p S 9
BOOTS ANI) SHOES,
lIATS AND CAPS,
NOTIONS°
GROCERIES,
• Wood and Willow Ware,
T .71 1. ./INP HA EDT 1 1 .4 R
CROCKERY, DRUGS, &O
Which they will sell Cheap for Cash. —9
We
call your attentlop to our lino of Gioceries, RR
We intend to give this °Ur uttnoat care:
SUGAR, Coffee A . . 12?tc.
" Ex. C. • . . . 12
" Medium, • . .
Best M. Prints . . .
Muslins, . • from 10 to 15
Best Japan Tea, . . 1.10 •
" Gun Powder Tea. . . 1.25 .
" Young Hyson " from 60t01.00
Black Tea . . 1.00
WE. WILL HERE SAY
that we intend to let NO P.S'ITSON OR PERSONS UN
DERSELL us on the above and many other articles
too numerous tomention.'. '
Gives . tt Et Call.
REMEMBER THE PLACE.
April 22, 1873-3moa. N. M. OLAI3SA4IRE & CO.
General Insurance Agency,
KNOXVILLE, TIOGA CO., PA
Life, _EVre, and Accidental.
ASSETS MAU $65,000,000.
Amps JOY COMPANIES.
• •
Alemania, of Cleveland Ohio ' ~...436,033.44
New York Life and Fire Ins. Co ...... ....21,000,000
Royal Ins. Co., of Live of 10,615,501
Lancashire, of Manchester, Capital,- 10,000,000
Ins. Co., of North America, Pa $3,050,635 CO
Franklin Fire Ins. Co. of Phila. Pa 2,087,452 25
Republic Ins. Co. of N. Y., Capital $760,000
Niagara, Fire Ins. Co. of N. Y 1 000,000
Farmers Mut. Fire Ins. Co,, York .. . . 009,889 15
Phoenix Mut. Life Ins. Co. of Hartford Ct.. 5,081,070 50
Penit'a Cattle Ins. Co. of Pottsville • • • ..600•000 00
Total
Insurance promptly effected by ;mall or oti t erwlae ,
on all kinds of Property. All losses promptly nated
and paid at my office.
All communications promptly attended, to—Office on
Mill Street 2d door from Main at., Knoxville Pa.
WM. B. SMITH
Agent.
Jan. 1. 1873-tf.
General Insurance Agency,
NELF,ON, TIOGA CO:, PA.
J. U. BJ. D. CAMPBELL
ARE issuing ' , alleles in the following Companies
against fire and lightning in nog• and rottsr
counties :
. QUEFFA,_... • r ...Assets, $10,000,000.00
CON PINENTAL of blew York,. •- • • •• • • • • 2 • 609 , 626 . 27
HANOVER, of New York ...983,381.00
GERMAN Al ERMAN,Now York.. .1,272,000.00'
WYOMING, of Wilkettliarre, Pu 219,698.4;
WILLIAMSPORT, l et ..... 113,060.00
All business prinuOly attended to by mail orother
wise. Losses adjusted and paid at our of ice.
Nelson, Uoa. ifi, 1 6 721Y-
L00K I LOOK!
HASTI i NGS & COLES
FOE
DRUGS, MEDICINES,
PATENT MEDICINES,
Paints, Oils,
,Glass, Putty,
Brushes, nusses, Supporters, and Surgi-
cal Instruments,
HORSE & CATTLE POWDERS,
Artist's Goods in Great Variety
Liquors, Scotch Ales, Cigars, Tobacco, Snuff, &c., /Cc
PLIItSICIANW_PIO'.F4'RIPTIONS CAIIEFULLY COIWOITNDED
Grocelie's, Sugars, Teas,
CANNED AND DRIED FRUIT,
Shot. Lead. Powder and_Caps, Lamps, Chimneys,
•
Whips, Lashes, Sc.
'
BLANK & BIISCELLANEOIK
MOOMAD
All School Books in nee, Envelopes, Stationery, Bill
and Cap Paper, Initial paper, Memorandums, large
and small Dictionaries. Legal paper, School Cards and
Primers, Ink, Writinl Fluid, Chess and Backgammon
Boards, Picture Frames, Cords and 'Mewls, Mirrors,
Albums,' Paper Collars and Oafs, Crognotts, Base
Balls, parlor games, at wholesale and retail. -
NOThnM'
Wallets, port monies. combs, pins and needles,
scissors, shears, knives, violin strings, bird cages.
A great variety of pipes, dells, inkstands, measure
tapes, rules,
Fishing Tackle, besttroza flies, lines, kooks,
baskets and rods.
. Special attention paid to this li in the season.
TOILET AND F Y ARTICLES
AGENTS FORA &RICAN STEAM, SAFES.
VILLAGE LOTS for sale in the central part of the Boro
Mattb2s. '73-tf
Para, for . Sale.
MEE subscriber offers for sale his farm in Middle
', sbury, consisting of 159 acres; 90 acres' improved.
There is a good dwelling. barns and out honsea on the
premises; also• two good orchards.. The property will
besold all together or it will be divided and sold in
two parts, ono of VI the other of 90 acres.
down; the balance in five atmna..
payments.. A. B. A. BAIGOI3.
Midt;Mum Feb. 18734.
=NE
Thi1312.24; . w. 8:131416'14V: VA.tiVtisci.Nlll3p3
- - -
- R,U.MANIc.O 0 -
„ ,
New Firm,
BOTTOM PRICES.
c ipillti q ou m mE m
a G.QQII)B 11
falies pees (O oohs,
ALAPACAS, POPLINS, CAM
BRIGS, FRENCH - JACON
, ETS, ORGANDIES,
PEQ UAS, VER
. SAILES, .
BLACK COLORED SILKS,
Beautiful Summer Shawls,
BOOTS&SHOES,
,
Fresh Grocericily
A. largo and choice atocli of
TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
at very low prices. We keep the beat 60 cent Tea in
A large 'stock of Crockery.
$55,01,451 94
Opera House Block.
We have Shed the Shanty !
t
T BALDWIN 8( CO
BARGAINS
Our Elegant New Store
TIASTENGS & COLES.
I=l
• WEL •• SBORO, - TIOGA r,-
. :• , ; , • ,••. • • , - • ',.
ME
NEW ,STORE,
A large stock of
FOREIGk' it DOMESTIC; '
Con4!sting of
All styles, colors aud patterns,
-ALSO
YANKEE NOTIONS,
HATS if; CAPS,
Ready-Made Clothing,
and plenty of cloth to make more
Best White A Sugar, 12i cents
WELLSBOBO
Call and see us.
May 8, 1873
TRUMAN A: co
i'lOl.lA, PA
1
Mid now have but tiuie to . say o our friends and
customers that we have good
FOR THEM
Ie tilled full of
a •
DESIRABLE GOODS
at the lowest prices to i.e round
OaU and you will know how it is youraelvkia.
Oct 16,1872,
New Goods,
i 1
11111
1 c`
Such was the capricious tyranny of the
King that Mr. Knighton was hardly sur
prised. "It was probably some execution,"
he whispered to his companio , On they
drove. There were still no sign of any in
habitant so to be seen; the house were eve
rywhere closed; a sort of bre hless terror
seemed to reign in the city. P sently they
came to ,the body of a .lad sit ilarly, man
gled lying by the side of the rod, and they
stopped once more. On the top of an ad
joining house they saw one of the King's
troopers looking intently up,the street.
I " What is the matter?"
said Mr. Knight
t' on. . .
T. L. BALDWIN & 00
Deoqvition
BR WAIMINGTON OLE.DABLI. " ;,•
gate let'irs watt
Till the grand procession rase; .
The marshal. first. in Inarve I thus' state;
' /With thp drums mid sounding brass:
Then the 'veterans bravo in blue draw near,
With a sober, soldierly air;
And the halt and the maimed are riding here,
And the priest and the poet there.
And now the troop of children comes. .
• In wavy, hesitant files,
All bright with the blush of .the early bloonis,; ; -
All wreatited in roses and mulles.
They aro halting now at the graves of the boys;
And a dirge will be softly sung; . • 1
And e parson will give to faith a voice,
An the poet to love a tongue, i
t
Bu you and I, my starry and Bess,
:
Will turn froth these well-meant words i
Apart throngh tho woodlauji silences 1 .
Alone with-the bre'eze s and birds.
Here, at this grave, where the pine boughs grieve,
When the solemn south winds roam, I
Our rosemary and one rue we'll leave,
And carry ottr heartsease home
Did I promise? Well, there is nothing neW,
But the joy and the pain are ono, •
Bit down on the bank here, Bossy, and you
Lie here on the grass, my son.
Fourteen next mouth! Yon were only four
When your father went away;
And you, iittio•queen, were scarcely more
Than a babe that desolate day.
A sudden and terrible call had come
.For au,army of volunteers;
And the tidings brought to our happy home
Hard struggles and boding fears.
That night he sat in a silent, mood, • -
And held yoltboth to his breast;
I saw on his brow the shadows baled
And darken—l knew the rest I
He carried you up to your crib that night, j
And watched with you tin you slept;
Then, praying that God would guide him arlgh l
The strong luau wrestled and wept.
I found him praying, and left him there'
Alone with his Father and you;
Till the Helper lifted his loadfof care,
And lightened his sorrow too,
And then he came forth and told me all.
I couldmeither strive nor cry;
He would follow his suffering country's mil,
Who should dare to forbid? Not I.
Yon know the story—the parting word—
The year that drearily passed,
The droning pain of a hope deferred,
The blinding blow at the last.
But hero is a picture you never aim—
On this side Mother and' Bess,
Hal on the othe4 the little flaw _
Is the din tt a ball, I guess,
He carried it'always here, by ids heart;
And, when they led him away
Faint from the field, where he bore his part
So gallantly on that day— .
When they laid bird down In a sheltered nook
(The chaplain told mejthis,)
Re drew it forth, and, with many a look, -
And many a . ,passionate kiss,
He gazed till he heard the order " Rest I"
And then, when his splrit passed,
It dropped from his hands upon his breast,
And they found it there, at the last.
That is all, my darlings, I have to tell.
Like another diviner Friend,
Having loved his own in the world so well,
He loved them unto the end,
The love that lie left to you and me
Is our fortune and our pride;
The truest, manliest man was he—
And he loved us all till he died
Como hither, Harry! I'll lean on you; •
Ms brow and his mouth are More;
And yours, little Bess, are his eyes of bluoi
And his wealth of golden hair.
So here at his grave, where the pine boughs
When the solemn south winds roam,'
Our rosemary and our ree we'll leave,
And carry our heartsease home.
The Strength of the Horse
HY. THE AUTHOR OF " STONE EDGE
We are so completely in the habit of re
garding.the horse as a docile slave, expect
ed to minister to our necessities with uncom
plaining complaisance; unresisting generally
under ill-treatment, often half-killing: him
self by struggling to draw loads beyond his
powers, that we are apt to forget the tre
mendous strength which he can exert if, he
pleases to put it forth.
I saw lately a small pony running divar
with a little carriage in which were two
large, strong Men; one sat in his place drag
ging at the reins with all his might, the oth
er was on his knees adding hia utmost pow
er nearer the head, but in. vain. They were
just able to give some sort of direction to
their course, so as to avoid the carts and
carriages, which fortunately were not many,
and in turning several sharp corners, but
they could not moderate the pace ithe
least till it' pleased the pony to stop a the
ni
door of his own stable. They set heir
strength against his, and on the tenderest
point, the mouth, and the pony won.
The great dray horses of a I,ondon brew
ery are almost like.elephants ip weight and
power, yet are so good-tempered that they
can be guidedy a child. TIO strength of
the neck, of II e heels, of the 'teeth of such
a beast is fear ul indeed, if they were used
against instead of for the service of man;
and it may help us to treat him with greater
respect to hear how powerful and at times
how savage an animal a horse can be. We
have much to learn in our treatment of him.
'An Arab will make his mare go far iloOger
distances without suffering than we can Our.
horses. In South America the " topping
merchant" of Santiago used always to have
at hand horses which could be ridden to
Valparaiso, sonic ninety odd miles, and
back next day with no food but hay land ti
little chopped straw. The Hanoverian
troopers in the Peninsular war were able to
keep their chargers in good condition, while
those of many of the English cavalry regi
ments were dying by wholesale. The Ger
mans were more kindly anxious for the wel
fare of their rough, ugly beasts than the
English " horse-subduers, ' as they count
themselves, Irpre of ,their fat superior ani
mals. We Apt theni up instilling dark
stables, with fresh air, an& with abomi
nable smells, while they are by nature hardy
creatures, belonging to temperate climates,
and used tp,exposure. It has been found
that the mortality in some of the great cav
alry stables in Loudon has been diminished
very greatly by admitting more air and
light. .
The courage which horses will show in a
charge during a battle; the temper, when
in a mob; [the good-natured giants of the
Household Brigade back their horses, so as
to disperse a crowd by mere force of the
terror , of their heels, or the switching of
their tails, without doing any harm to map;
woman, or child] ; the intelligence ' with
which a horse _who is set to move whoki
lines
. of trucks and carriages at a railway
station understands the complicated com
mand§ made to'him by word and sign, all
show powers and qualities of which-at pres
ent we make but very indifferent use.
A curious proof of the strength alp cour
age of the horse is to be found in a book
some twenty years old, by a Mr. Knighton,
an Englishman, who was in the service of
the King of Oude in 1835. k lielells the fol
lowing story of what he himself once wit
nessed at Lucknow.
'The King, whom he, calls "'a sensual,
cruel, savage," kept many wild beasts, which
lie somebimes set to fighting with each other,
as in the Roman games. One day Mr.,
Knighton was driving from the river Goom
tee to one of the palaces in a sort of little'
open gig. As they passed along the streets
therewas not a creature to be seen; if any
one came in sight, he was rushing hurriedly
off. Presently be saw in the middle of the
road a trampled bloody heap. He stopped;
it was the corpse of a woman terribly 'lace
rated and corn, the face crushed by teeth
into a shapeless mass, the long, matted hair
clotted with blood.
" The man-eater is loose, wallah! Look
out, Sahibs, he is quite wild to day."
I had heard (continues Mr. Knighton) of
a savage horse belonging to one of the troop-
ers theft was called Kuuewallah, because he
had destroyed many men.
" Ile is yenning ' he is coming!" shouted
the man'suddenly,from the housetop, "take ,
care, take carer"
' Far down the roa d we could see the wild
brute, a large bay horse, savagely shaking
a child' which he had seized in his jaws, and
he was.evidently coming our way. In an-j
other moment he had seen the carriage, l
i ,- -,
_on
•-, ~.' + '; 1 •-.., 7" . drain '
1 tbrdYV4 _ , the ;'4ioafl on flie roitd-4ea
. d 0 n.lSt , '• , -Mtil, OA ed ' fOrsVard Wien sIY- tOlit:,,
:{llc' us.. We ttirried; - eUr herio„aluieSturi.;
Manageablo Wititterror, and Aroy - 'nn'at ne
pad gallop" toivii4 a , sort "of yllti, which
was clesed in by strong gates. '1 ,e could
/ vir.
hear tlielson 3 lioofs of the man-eater clat-:
toting over the 'road in the anent 'street, , as
hepursued us at break-peck speed.
.. : , •
.We gained - the inclosure, and drove with-,
in the doors, 'which': were luckily open, -.1,
jumped - out and'thiew back the gate, which
fortunately shut With a heavy iron belt in a,
socket. - As it fell •in the man-eater, came
thundering Up; his - head 'and Cheeks covered
with blood, his jaws steaming with the re-;
cent slaughter of his victims. Ile stood
looking savagely, through the rails, with
cocked cars,. distended nostrils, and glaring
eyeballs -41 ferocious-looking , mQll2ter. Our
horse tremblealrom heats to foot, as 'if he
was' shivering. with cold; , the man-eater:
glared at us through the bars, walked around
to try andlind ,an opening, but: it was all
hard iron railing. &Wailed that lie was
baffled, he turned areund, rattled' his iron
heels against tlie"bals, .and with heed and
tail erect, and cocked ears, 'galloped oft'
down the road. • Later in the day we heard
that the trooper had contrived to let fall it I
noose over his head, That lie had been upset,
muzzled, 'and taken back tobis stable.
I mentioned what I had Seen to the King
'when I came to hiM shortly after. " lle is
as savage a wild beast as 4.1 tiger," said
The fang laughed. Then he shall tight
the tiger Burrhea,'! said Ite• ' so called after
the name of a village ; at the foot of the
Ilimalaya, front which the animal had been
brought. r
There was a courtyard lathe palace about
'sixty. yards square, surrounded by thick
bamboo railings on two sides. - On the third
was a gallery in which the -King sat sur
rounded by male and female slaves.ftinning
him with peacock fans: The man-eater was
lured on into the yard iafter.a little mare of
which he was fond, and the tiger; who was
withoUt food or drink, 'was let loose into
the inelosure.
The horse stood in easy attitude, with one
foot advanced; awaiting the attack, moving
as Burrhea moved, with This eyes fixed on
the eyes of his enemy. Suddenly, with. a
light bound, the tiger was upon the mare;
with one blow of his paw he threw her
over, his teeth fastened in her neck, and he
,drank her blood, enjoying his draught, but
with his eyes lixed'meantime all the while
on the . man-eater,.which, with-his neckpro
trudedz cocked ears, glaring eyeballs, and
'twitching tail, watched his enemy intently
in an easy attitude Of attention.
At length the tiger began to move stealth
ilk around the courtyard like a cat, quite
noiselessly, the soft balls of the large paws
put slowly down, the long, lithe back work -1,
ing as he went: In the middle stood the'
horse, slowly turning as the tiger turned,'
the head, cars, and neck bent forward,'
while on stole the tiger: Not a sound was
heard; every one WAS in - mute expectation;,
at last the tiger bounded like lightning, in-'
tending to seize his enemy by the head, but
the l}rse dodged aside a little and received
his antagonist on the haunches; the claws
sank deep into the flesh, while the hind feet
of the tigei made a grasp at the fore legs of
the horse. Suddenly the man-eater -dashed
out with his iron heels, and in a moment
Burrhea was sprakvlidg on his back; be was
up again, however, immediately, and steal
ing around once more, as if nothingwas the
mutter. NoiseleSsly around and around he
went, his broad head always turned to Ills
wary foe, while the horse, though his
haunches were bleeding and lacerated, with
an indignant snort resumed his former posi
tion, his head and neck still lowered and
protruding, one foot still out to admit of
that rapid drive and thrust by which he
turned his enemy'sflank. This monotonous
circling Vent on for eight or ten minutes, or
even more, the man-eater ever facing. bun,
and_snorting angrily from time to time.—
Once the tiger paused by the body of the
dead mare as if to eat it; then suddenly,
withOutlhe smalldat growl 'or preparation,
he sprang again, as if lifted by , galvanism
in the course of this monotonous gyration.
Kunewallah was, however, not taken by
surprise; his head ducked again, and again
he received the tiger on his haunches. We
could see the broad, round head for an in
stant near the tail of the horse, while his
bind claws reached to the bicast; his body
was quivering uneasily, with the belly near
ly on the horse's beck; .it was only, howev
er, for an instant. Again. the ferociorts
beast dashed out with his hind legs, almost
as if he would throw himself on his side,
and his iron heels came against the tiger's
jaws as he fell sprawling on his back. lie
soon arose again, but now only%'to try to es
cape. His jaw was- broken; and with his
tail between his legs, he cried out loudly
with pain, like a> whipped spaniel. - The
man-cater watched him narrowly, thinking
it might be only a ruse.
.Now the King ordered the door of the
cage to be opened, and Burrhea rushed into
its shelter, evidently having bad quite en
ough:
Proudly then the man-eater snorted and
pawed; he scampered up to the mare and
. spurned her with his foot, then,' with his
head aloft and tail arched, he trotted around
trYing
.to get at the attendant servants. Ills
blood was up, and, tiger or man, it was evi
dent that he did not mind any of them.
"Let another tiger be set at him," cried
the King, " I will have my revenge for
Burritea."
13121
—lndn>rn
The keeper of the tigers was summoned,
and came in salaaming in fear. " May it
please your majesty'S greatness, the tigers
were fed two hours ago."
" And why were they fed two hours ago,
you scoundrel?" shouted the King.
"May it please the royal greatness of
your Majesty, it was the usual time," said
the poor man, sajaaming again, and trem
,bling in every limb.
You shall go to the man-eater yourself,
if the tiger won't attack him," cried the
King furiously.
The court was oppressively bet; the King
sat, fanned by the great peacocks' tails and
surrounded by his female slaves, watching.
The second tiger's cage was brought up; he
came leisurely put, but only when poked by
spears, and then quietly surveyed his antag
onist. , -He was larger than Bttrrhea, but not
so highbred, nor •so beautifully streaked,
neither, se light and graceful in his motions.
He Bcpiatted himself down on the dead
mare, and tore it leisurely in pieces with a
strength of claW and limb and jaw very ult.
pleasant (one would think to watch) for the
man-eater, who remained on the defensive
on the other side of the' ourt..
" RenioVe the carcase, you fools!" shout
ed the King, angry at the delay.
This could only be done by , driving away.
the tiger with red-hot bars. A noose, was
then flung over the dead ware, which was
at length drawn out - The tiger, much an
noyed, stretched himself at•full length and
lay growling in the middle of the court,
wbere, he could not be , reached. At last
they contrived to strike him with a spear of
immense length; he seized it in his mouth,'
ran along-its length, and began to shake the .
bamboo rails, but nothing would induce
him to assail the horse, which went on as]
befote facing the tiger as he turned. He
showed his glitterhig teeth at the then, but
refused. to inovc in the direction of Kuno
\ VA) ital.
We began to feat for the poor keeper of
the wild beasts, b t the King had now for
gotten his threat, 'a d shouted that the =h
eater was a brave fellow, and ho would see
what he could do with three buffaloes.--
There is no animal so fierce as the buffalo
when thoroughly aroused; ,he will put a
good-sized elephant to goring him
terribly with those tremendous weapons; his'
horns. -
When the beasts came in the man-enter
seemed much disconcerted Itit the sight of
the uncouth monsters, and lie retreated,
snorting, almost with _fear but as they re
mained in the corner where they came in,
huddledlogether and never dreaming of au
attack, he took courage, pawed the ground,.
snuffed at them with distended nostrils, and
came slowly nearer and nearer; step by step.
Still they paid no heed - to him, Lut stu
pidly crowded on . each other. At lust the
horse's head altiost touched the side' of, one
of the buffaloes; he sniffed and smelled at
the hide,. and at list seeing that the un
wieldy brute - took no notice , whatever of
him, he wheeled around and lashed up furi
ously against' the ribs of the meditating buf
falo, who seemed stunned by so sudden and
unlooked-for , an attack, and then they all
three shook their heads, but prudently ab
staimd frot.any,l:epl. •
The King laughed-on
man-eater deserves:his-11
him escape.", ,
TherbenstAingtliew,attro
led 'forth to his -stables—
• By my father's head, ho is a brave fel
low; he shall have--a cagecto live in, and bi
taken,care of for his life." ,
Ile'had-arfiron cage made for lain: twice
as: big as many London drawing ,rooms,
. where he snapped his teeth and lashed out
.with "his legs at admiring visitors; " and
when I left Lucknow," says. Mr. Knigikten,
the man-eater was still one of its sights."
The enormous strength - in the muselia .of
a horse's head and neck; shown by the man
ner in whire man•eater-was able to lift
a human b ing from the ground with his
,mouth and shake him, might show - us that
this power ought to be used iu our service,
not wasted, andzthus help - in emancipating
the horselrom a grievance very commonly
inflicted even, by Mime - who 'should- know
better. Tlw bearing-rein utterly deprives
ins (and us) of this advantage in the draught
of a.carriage or cart. ' It puts the• beast ; to
-great suffering, as may be seen by' he impa
tlent, of the head of a horse
so, braced up, and it takes away from the
IneansAvhich nature has given him of . mov
ing a heavy weight by throwing the center
of graVity_farther forward; as well as of the
free use of his muscles. Therois not a sin
gle advantage connected with its use; but' a
fancy -that it inakeh the horse look better,
which no one who knows anything of the
real action of the animal-would-agree -to for
a moment; and nothing but a barbarous dis
regard of his comfort 'and feelings and ig
norance of our own advantage could- have
preserved the use of such an engine so long.
Leon Gambetta.
.'' " Fear is the curse of this country. Fear
is the source from which our tyrants and
traitors have drawn their principal strength!
On fear they founded their, ascendancy, to
bear us down, after twenty years of empire,
to degradation, to mutilation! Front fear
they extracted that fatal plebiscite Which was
to drag us into war!' Of fear was born that
impotent reaction of the
'trading
of February,
18711 By fear , - with fear, trading on fear,
reaction always triumphs over us! Oh, let
us once for all rid ourselves of fear In our
political actions!"
These passionate words are taken from
the speech delivered last September at Gren
oble, in the southeast of France, by M. Le
on Gambetta. They illustrate etlectiVely
-the principal characteristic of the orator
himself, as well as that lamentable national
peculiarity which he has so powerfully and
justly described. "The chronic malady of
France," Gambetta exclaimed, "is politi
cal fear? So brave, -generous, ardent, hero
ic, disinterested as France is on the field of
battle, so is- she timid, hesitating; easily
troubled, deceived, befooled and terrified
in the domain of politics." Nothing can be
more. true than this. The bloody carnival
of the White Terror came front the panic
caused by the red reign of Robespierre.—
Fear bf the Red Republicans made 'France
fling herself into the arms of Napoleon 111.
The plebiscite was carried by playing on the
fears of the bourgeoisie and the peasantry,
and persuading both that a new lease o the
i,
Emperor was the :only possible me ns of
warding off battle and social disorder. The
same influence of fear drove republican
France two years ago to erect a National
Assembly which is a sworn foe to republi
canism. " Let.us have peace;" was the cry
—" peace at any price. If We give too
much poiver to Gambetta and his Republi
cans they will try to carry on the war still.
Better anything than that!"
But Elambetta's complaint against France
illustrates by the law of opposites his per
sonal character. His success-as an orator,
a politician, a ruler•of populations, has been
for the nest part duo to his utter freedom
from anything like fear. Not less than
Danton does he trust to audacity. • Any risk
for any'object appears to be his•principle of
action and of speaking. Stake all yoU have,
Ricca after piece—the luck must turn some
time. Make ' afiy promise to-day; if you
can't keep it, , make anothevpromise twice
as big and hold to-morrow, and increase the
day after; some day or other you may be
able to redeem all. Prophesy with the most
earnest brow and in the most thrilling voice
that the sky is going to fall; if 'thereby your
votaries obey your commands in the morti
ink, who cares though the prediction must
be falsified by the evening? , t
This seems to The to be broadly the prin
ciple of Gambetta's career, and one 'grand
explanation of his personal success.' In
tense belief in himself, complete devotion
to his own hopes, a faith in his cause which
for the moment seems to render failure iin
possible, the temper to say anything and do
anything which the inspiratioin of the "Mo
ment suggests, no matter how it ihay be con
futed by the realities of the next succeeding
moment—these are the elements of , that
strangely audacious character which has al
ready stamped its Timpress so deeply upon
the political life of France.
* x• * * • - *,
The career of M. Gambetta is now in its
fourth act. Many persons believe that the
fifth act will see him President of tbe French 1
Republic. I thiii it would at alt events be
safe to predict that the next great chapter
of his history will show him fin power or in
exile. No middle way, no commonplace
course seems possible for him. I cannot
imagine him "subsiding" like Jules Favre,
or patiently content to wait in the back
ground like Louis Blanc. There is proba
bly no man in Europe whose temperament
and mental constitution make him. More
thoroughly "irrepressible." (4 ambett WS
physical. health is not strong, but the fiery
soul would carry him along to anything.- r -
I am not myself a .cordial admirer of him:,
Be does not appear to me a man of great
intellect. No, capacity . for broad thinling
shows itself anywhere in him. Therelsun
doubtedly a dash of vulgarity in'the n Wire
if not in the language and manner f his'
speeches. Iti is nothing but vulgarity o de
nounce the Prussians, whom Gambetta
knows,_as Well as we all do, to be the .Most
highly cultured people in Eurbpe, as barba
rous savages, merely because they wally' not
lets-his raw. levies conquer them in the field.:
It is essentially vulgar, no matter what.
showy examples may seem to sanction the
practice, to keep perpetually feeding with
flattery the miserable (.Iqm:flume and infla
ted national vanity which have brought so
much disaster and disgrace upon. France—
. ways, to my mind, stamp Gambetta
as a democratic leader of an incomparably
lower type than• Mazzini, for example, with
whom truth, duty, and principle were al
ways the first considerations, and the suc
cess of the hour was always a secondary oh
ject.--Galani. - .
-
Advertising Medley.
We learn from an exchange that a Ger
man mush - flan interals to compose a series of
airs to a medley/ - of newspaper advertise
ments. The idea'seems to us to be a good
ono, and it has occurred to us that we may
help the composer a little perhaps •by ar
ranging a few advertisements in a suitable
form for adaptation to music. For instance,
suppose it is a tailor's advertisement that is
selected: , We Elliould work it up into some
such tender strain as this; " •
Oh t coin/ into theigarden, Maud,
And Hit )beneath the rose,
Awl nee 111 e prance around the bed 9
Dreesed In my Sunday clothes.
Oh I come and Ming your 1111Ciefi, Maud,
YOUE filltbrfi, and your
And - tell OMin Manson made my coat,
My waistcoat, aud my pants.
This is pathetic and practicaL The 'crse
is tilled with' sentiment and with a sweet
melodious cadence peculiarly its own; and
yet it makes Johnson's pants charmingly
conspicuous, and call;; attention to his waist
coat, while it ideakizes'and spiritualizes that
useful but comparatively uninteresting ;at ti•
de. Then, say we want to set to music a
tobacconist'S advertisement. Would w•not,
choose some such fairylike verse as this?
Oaily young Forguson
I . Bought his cigar—
Bought it at Mulligan's,
Where the beat are.
When he %man Ilffe cut or
Snuff for ii MSC,
ciaily young Ferguson
Purchust , s those.
Few pocts could soar as we do thus
into th realms of fancy frith such a theme;
but it is eycr thus with genius when its sal.
ary is, prOpiptly paid, as ours is. We would
soar higher if the compensation was larger:
As it is, we have given exactly the money's
It will perceived iero that - the ming=
rl if
ling of l ackerel with emotion, and Lim:
burger ch cse with Iteartfelt.effection,.gives
to each oh ect a peculiar exaltation, and, :as
it were, to ids ro fill, the sympathetic spirit
with=wit 1-L-11,11 it with—but never mind:—
Take anot er 4ase. We have an umbrella'
I,
man to del wi h. We desire to embalm his
advertiset ent in verse, and we therefore
offer it, let us s iy, in the form of q serenade:
Ohl' r lie. dearest Tilly, -
And let while I tell a .
Story or where you may 1 .
- Buy in umbrella.
Oh! ga. to ltrOulunlgan';‘,
Ail r.r a gingham, -
&silk, .r alpaca,
And Wm the man bring 'em.
II you 'itnt ribs put In, ,
Ora ew cover,
Como t. WOuiunlgran's—
porn with your lover. i
We char' e our German friend nothing for
these stiggl Lim*. As far as be is concern
cd,-..we olle• than in the interest ,of ,art. 'lf
these . song, —the labor of an idle hour—
shall make', any sorrowful and dare-laden
soul happii , r, or shall bring consolation to
any strieke, heart, we shall not only be am
ply repaid ud deeply gratified, but we shall
be exeeedi 1 gly surprised,Er.
ological Peculiarities.
'nos are said to have no word for
The Italians have, no , equiva
_
The Din
a "friend.
lent for out " humility." The Russian dip
tionaty giv s a word, the definitiohdf which
is " not to have enough buttons On your
footnian's. vai4coat;" a second' means,to
" kill over again;" a third, "to earn by
," ant to mean only a " whip ofl
dancing," chile the word "knout," which
we have alldearned to consider as exclus ve
ly Russian in meaning ' and applicatt it
prove! upo investigation to be their w rd
"knuny
kind.' Tlt 1 Germans call a thimble a " an
ger-hat," w • ich it certainly is, and a grass
hopper a " ay-horse.": A glove with them
is a ' hand ithoe," - showing that they wore
shoes before gloves. Poultry are "feather
cattle," whi st the natnes for the well-known
substances, f, " oxygen and ' hydrogen," are,
in their lan f tinge, • sour-Stuff" and "water
stuff." Th s French, trange to say; have
no verb ".t I stand," nor tan a Frenchman
speak of " 1 ickinp" any one. The'nearest
approach he , in l is politeness, makos to, it
is to titres . eu to "give a blow with his
foot," these me thing probably to the reci
pient in oitl er case, but it seems to want
'lre directn gss, the energy of our " kick."
lie any wortl for " baby," nor
" nor "comfort." The terms
' and ." down stairs" 1# also uh
french. In English *4 " cure"
icure" sick'people, and we like
Neithei ha:
for " home
"up stairs"
known in 1
meat and "
"quick," but never wish to
ast."
our girls to
see them "
'deice to Travelers.
minks out the true character of
delv t il -never yin -asked his vie
: a . I Walk with him. You will
in finding your companion out.
,s will fall away f from him. As
,pen hiS character is laid bare.-- 7 .
and most private self will come
It matter little whom you ride
be not a pickpocket, for both of
ry likely, settle down closer and
Walking
a Irian. 'll
tints to tak
not, be Ion!,
All disguise
his pores
His deepest
to the top.
with, so
you will, v
firmer in
corn by the jolting as the jour
s. But walking - is a more vital
the relation is a closer and
measure o
ney procce
copartners'
one, and you do not feel like
; paces with a stranger without
e fastidiousness nf the profess
'r in chooting or admitting a corn
-1 hence the truth of a remark of
ntt ypu will . gen,crally fare better
'• dog than to invite your neigh-
Cur dog is a true pedestrian, and
Apr is very likely! a small politi
clog enters thcnimghly into the
enterprise; he lis not indifferent
sympatheti
walkinletei
ileum tl
Tonal .walks
panion; JO .
tmersok . t
to take you
bor. Yc l nu
your neigh)
elan. Tile
s )irit of lb
ied; lie is constantly sniffing iid-
MEE
)1 , at every spring, i looks Upon
OEM
every field
explored, •
something
414(1 wood as ft new World to be
Over on some fresh trail, knows
imporMat will happen a little
=l=
further o
whatever the spot or - whatever
ids it good to lie there—in short,
happy, delicious, excursive vag-
ng eyes, a
he road, 1
s just that
abond that touches one at so many points,
and whose iunian prototype in a compan
ion robs nil es mill leagues of half their fa
tigue.—Gafaxy.
About 1111'
The Rev' Dr. Macleod (father of the late
Norman lil!teleozi) was proceeding from the
manse to ehnrcli to open a new place of
rite he passed slowly and grayely
crowd gathered about the.doors,
flail with the peculiar kind 'of
In in that district—bright, smooth,
dilish brown—accosted him;
worship.
through II
an elderly
a wig knot
and of a r
if you please,
_I wish to speak
" Doeto
Well, punean," says the i>ene
ir, can ye not wait till after
" No,• doctor, I must speak to
it it is a matter upon my con
.
to you."
ruble duet
worship
you now,
` Oh, since it is a niattercif con-
science,"
me what it is; but• be brief, for
science, tt
'' The matter is this, doe
the clock yonder on the face of
trch. Well,- there is no clock
c—nothing but the face of the
ere is no truth in it but once in
time press
tor; ye se
the new el
really ti,te
clock. TI
the twelve'
very wron!
that there
house of t
hours. Now, it is in my mind
and quite against my conscience
hould be a lie on the face of the
in Lord."
‘131111(.! 1, I will consider the point. .-13nt•
I am glad o see you looking so well; you
are not y nueg now; I_ remember you - for
many yenta; and what a fine head of hair
you have . till!" "Eh, doctor, you are. jok
mg now; it is long since I have had any
hair." " Oh, Duncan, Dune:int are yougo :
ing into LI e house of the Lord with a lie
upon you head!" The doctor beard no
more of 11e lie upon the face of the clock.
Somnambulist Singer.
l 'us case of somnambulism is re
,acing recently occurred in Troy,
somnambulist being a young lady
A emit
ported its
N. Y:, th
residing i M a neighboring State, but visiting
some - friee ds in that city. There-was a so
cial gatheing . at the house of a friend to
which ski Was invited, and during the_ eve
ning she '•as asked tol sing. Being an ac
complished musician and a singer of more
than ord nary sweetness,- she responded to
the demo i cis of the company for repeated
songs unt ! l it is probable . OIC quite exhaust
ed hersel . The company broke" up about
k, and at tiro the young
d. In apont, an hour the most de
ains of Music were heard proceed
] her room. They Continued so
One of the members of the family
upon entering the apartment of.
lady, found her ]}sleep and sing
dl her power. She tried to awaken
to calm etas tut midi-fit. She con -
sing, going from One song to an
upWard of an hour, / when nature
JO he exhausted, and the fair and , =
tmnambulist sank nto real sleep:
king the next moilning the knew
id co Id scarce-
0110 o'clo
lady Mir,
licious st ,
ing from,
long that
arose, nl'
the young ;
lug with
her, but
tinued to,
other, fo
seemed J,
musical
Upon aw
Mr=
MEM
that she had bet
sittimels ettjoyme
.I.liiheard,her."
ly believ
source o
to those.
lON OP TOER.---Japtinese, Chinese
'anti Betionin Arabs are almost
ual, 'from continued practice,
heir toes nearly as roulily as their
Short an cramped as they are in
cattier shoes, we have scarcely any
r over . them. But Chinese and
EDUCA
artisans,
quadrun
they use
fingers...
our stiff
will•pow
Japanes,
with the
handled,
dueled,
hands.
wnikineti - actually piek np tools
r toeg, anti work ' with them tints
while other operations are coli
till
other illnittlilifollts iri their
We have often geen held by
indle with the heft hand, while the
lett, the cutting (..,Ige in turning
fornis, in a lathe in Constantino
rkmen there are 111WaYS tq l ated on
cycifin planing Sl' The
'aid ropt.:;ot ills their toes and tin.
print; concert.. is - therefore
certain that toes may be Wu-
Act With rapid movements. -
a long ii
toes gui,
beautiful
ple.• Wi
the grou
Arabs b
gore -lab
positive
cated to t
lIIM
ME
=I
-
ose the, - composer
• adVertiStment; to
' l l O l ll 4 . 03r0,hin) a
"ow:iog.piagert as
-
- ty SE -AinvatiGGESTIVII
. 31
_ of
, - , 4 1 P? n9tAile * .4l t... ._ , M
,hecifOil.
• Siliett gives hardness and stinno %"o the
straw and leaves of cereal grain. When
Wheat Or rye is sown where a brusit-heap or
pile- of logs has 'been litirned 'to - aishes the .
straw will he iintigually stiff, Ida ' the leaves
mach harsher than other straw growing in
the vicinitjr, but away frorh the area Oi the •
burning. The potash of the ashes and the
silica found in the soil are taken up by the
growing plants, and form a coating of liq
uid
glass, which is spread 'evenly over ' the
straw and leaves-of the growing grain, as a
metallic' Icoat of arms was used m old-times
to cover the body - of aosoldier. , ! . When the
growing straw of wheat is encl sed in a thin
tube of elastic glass, the innumerable spores
which frequently fill the entire atmosphere -
like flakes of snow, and which prOduce rust
do not find a congenial place: or their lodg-
ment and complete development. But when
the plants do not .have access to a generous
supply of silicate and potash the stems are
'so limber that they 'are easily prostrated by
driving storms, so that•thetars pf grain will
be developed only in
,part. When- silica is
available only in small quantities the spores
from which fungi springs adhere' to the
leavesaad stems, where they find a suitable
spot for their development,. and thus ~the
productiveness of the plant is seriously im
paired.. The practical value of silica is far
ther perceived. in the yield of excellent fruit.
If the soil near an apple or a pear tree, that ,
has hitherto borne knotty and rusty fruit,
receive • a liberal., dressing of sand, •which
supplies silica s and of wood-ashes,• which
furnish the potash—the substance required
to make glass—nature will employ those-in
gredients to a great extent, in coVering the
leaves with an elastic glass, and the fruit
with a thick, transparent varnish, produted
from the silica and potash which will pro
tect - the leaves from blight , and the • fruit
from rust, scales and cracks. This fact has
been demonstrated repeatedly in some 'fruit ,
producing localities, where wood' ashes or
coal ashes have been scattered around about
pear trees and apple trees so liberally that
all grass and weeds were destroyed. Flint,
sharp sand, and quartz are composed, for
the most part, of silica. Hence the proprii -
ety of mingling scouring-sand with the Soil
in which flowers are cultivated. Divest the
soil g all silica and alkali where useful
plantsend beautiful flowers are to be grown;
and not one would attain to perfect devel
opinent, simply because silica and potash
..
are eminently essential to impart stiffness to .
the 'stems and elasticity and tenacity to the
leaies. When grape vines for example,
which are growing in a.sandy soil, have ac
cess to potash in abundance, the- leaves will
appear as tough as leather, an& no milaw ,
nor rat will ever affect the foliage nor in
ure the fruit.— Tilbu ne."
tlao the molasses
• fills) golden awl clear;
n glasses.
now, were net dear.
Thomirsqu'a smoked
t' Limburger cheese,
vas not gammon;
.Tane, "on my knees.
Charcoi ,edioine.
Nearly all sick horses and cows are made
so - in the,first place by eating improper food,
or too Much of it. As soon as the owner
finds reel yof his animals sick, it is , he coin-
mon custom to begin dosing mediclne.--
"We mum% leave the animal o die, we
must do something !" and so all manner of
hurtful drugs and poisons are thrust down •
the throat—saltpetre, copperas, turpentine,
I
etc., quite sufficient to make any well ani ;
mat sick, or kill a sick one. "You didn't '
give that poor thing enough—you should
have given it oftener—you can't expect your '
beast to get well if you don't do more for
its" Our rule has always been to give noth
, ins unless we know exactlywhat tOti; and
in the meantime attend to every, .exterior
I comfort practicable: If the weather is cold, '
place it in warniquarters", avoid all exposurq,
and attend to pure air and strict cleanliness.
But there is one medicine thacan-never db
harm, and is Commonly be eficial. This
is pulverized charcoal:As w have just re
marked, nearly all Sick anim s become So
by improper eating, in the first place. Nine
cases out of ten Aie digestion -is wrong.
Charcoal is the mt efficient and rapid cor
rective. It will cure in a majority of -cases,
if ,properly allininistered. An example I pf
its! use; The'llireil man came -in with iltlie
intelligence that one of the finest cows Was
very sick, and a kind neighbor proposed the
usual drugs and poisons. - The owner being
ill, and unable to examine the cow, coat
ded that the trouble came from over;eati gt -
and ordered a teacupful of pulverized char- '
coal given in water. It was mixed, placed
in a junk bottle ; the head held upwards, and
the water with the charcoal poured down
wards. In five minutes improvement was
visible, and in a few hours the animal was
in the pasture quietly eating grass.
• Another instance of equal success oc
curred with a young heifer which becOme
badly bloated by-eating green, apples after a
hard wind.- The bloat was so severe that
her sides were almost as hard as, a barrel.
The old remedy, saleratus, was tried for the
purpose of correcting the acidity. Butithe
attempt to put it down always caused cough
ing,'s.nd it did little good. Half a teacup
ful of fresh powdered. charcoal was next
given. In six Hours all appearance of bloat
hadhad gone and the heifer was well. I .
We disaipprove of quackery, where, with
out a precise knowledge of the disease, pow
erful remedies are given at random, indis
criminately. The objection of'quackery
cannot extend to the tise.of charcoal, .!or it
can do no harm, and goes directly •tq the
seat of the trouble in most sick animals; "dial
if timely applied effects a cure. —Live ;Stook
. -
Journal. I 1
A correspondent of the Cincinnati Tithes
ad Chronicle Writes: "I am an old Man.—
Was born in a land where schools were few
and far between, so I was not brought up at
the feet of Ganudiel, neither have I read
(ireeley's books on agriculture. ' - What I
have learned I have studied from the - field
of nature. Young men, I write to you.
Thke it for what it is worth. . I
•
"First, all lands produce their own ma
nures if farmed Wright. The best of land
may be made worthless by bad farming, and
any land can be improved every year. The
soiljs made of deeayed_ matter; and this it
is necessary to renew. ). Some men o ject to
•stable manure because it brings weeds. I
don't care if th4y are up i4to yourihorse's
back; turn themindex with a heavy plow,
andn good crop, I of grain may be looked
for; as the land Will be improved. You may '
turn under some decayed matter. Turn,it
deep,—the deeper the better. The drouth
will not hurt your crops, for the ground will
hold moisture. My father made Its wait a
month for dry weather in the spring to burn
oil the ground for the plow, but ,the fact
I was the ground , itself was burned: Never
burn any thing you can plow under. Bad
rise is made of a
,fire ona farm. Don't burn
a grub, fodder, straw, weeds,nor !any veg
etable matter. Haul it all to some place on
your farm. Let -it rot there, and in a few
years it will be as good lag #as you have
got.
years,
farm has been farmed for forty or
fifty years, and is as good to-day .'as when
first ,Tettled, if I was tot, live a thousand
year i my farm would' improve, and I never
need to buy one pound of, manure."
FLAVORED VINE° tn. —I name but two
herbs, little known for that• purpose, though
deserving to be: &dragon, much used in
France, and Farragon"(Artemisi . o dracunen-
Ins). The latter is now a common plant in
Pennsylvania, is perennial, and, by' the
French, especially, is frequently used in sal
ads to. correct the coldness of .other herbs.
The leqvca fltake an excellent pickle, have
a fragtitnt Smell and aromatic i taster The
use of them in PerSia hds over been general
at meals to create an appetite. The famous
vjnevar-ofMaille, in France, ones its supei
rtor flavor in-Farrago».
the'unwitting
it and surprise
-?
,
.
WIEOLE NO. 1,009:
Save Your Nanure.
CIINAM W ITU TWO; Titre t
tumblerfulls of. milk, .4 tablespoonful's o'
flour, t cup of sugar and - 1 egg: Wet . th
flour with some of the milk, beat the eg
and sugar together, stir themtand the Bon ,
In the milk and continue stirring until it jus
boils; flavor with vanilla'. Thdcrusts "sito't
he very nice and thin, espdeially the uppe
one. Bake the;crusts; ; then-pont' the bane
between theta and also in upper
. erust,
This is a delicious pie;, allure ( atmons fo
the reeipe.after once tasting it: •
„ -
Cherry trees, to be:lank-lived, should not
have their rOok disturbed by digging about
theta. We have found them to do best lin
gra , ;s. Care must be takettmot to bruise the
bark of the, I rank, as it villcankerand may
destroy the tree. It seldota recovers entire. :
ly frolix a bruise,
:.- i ~
ME
- ;l'.. • -'- -'' ...3 ' '' s'-:fd
"
,z_-,-