XX.---NO. 4:2._ &35 t t ?.4*':14%,011 Or Ttrtso.LY ItY as Wt.® ; 1, A. M.llol' 1.4:r islattia: miYuk:e. -GA fl,l TES O ALI VERTIS/NO. s tu. ,i 4 in. Stu. 1.0 tu. 201 u. I 1 1 i i - 1 -,,-----,- ,-rj .31.; 5 i.2,, , Ji.t 00 Si ors owes oo $l2OO 11 ., ~ 1 1 ~ il .i 01 i 00 5 00 t. 00111 OD 10 00 ,„, , I j 3 ., , 3 u , a 00 7 00 13 00 1.8 00 1 ' , -- 6-1 I 1 „ l i c,),, 1. )))) 7 1 . 4 3 00 1 15 00 110 00 •,1,),1) - r„ , .) )., )1 3 D./.10 00 11 0u,'2.0 00' 2 8 0 0 l' ~ , , 11 ." 11 0.0.1.1 ::.".145 00125 00 .115 00 '' ..,„ )))''.) , i'. , )110 li! 00135 00 00 1.10 ~. ~ 1 .. ~;,., 0.) .:), 0 :ULIO , 10 00 100 00 : a, • C 'T I: the itteh iu Tangth ;dun Welt. t-t Le p:;1,1 fur becore In ,ri: ‘vheu butt ready [ A ttired. arrtlon. I _ I ~ ,~t,~u t itt.).lal eqluieus, on the lusertlol 4 Noth- ,1. :.n% 10 couts per line if 1;1, .1O CHUB for o notice of live ,:,.,t aticl DE&TH sinaerted will be charged 10 °outs , 11 p•r ,:citt allure regular ratea _ :1..c.: nr. IChS t $6,00 per Ye.ar. =EI Dirsiness Ca,rds. - F. A. Jousgo.N. Marl:tit' e' Johnson, , , .A.manieltto, Tombztoues, Table and see. 'Sliup, SValn st., l'a —July 3,187 u. • , coos-JELLor. AT , iogn • r 1, i.'7l -9111. C. 1/. Scyiau►ttr, ps. .0 bt!ALte:;s en ~olL I vit:IVC prompt atteittiob.— 6 e 0. .*er rick, AL . '..11'.-11'ullabAuo, Pa. I.ofllee 1u f; alai:: scrcet; aecuud. ~,., . .: eqinerolt, Ll,i, c*, ~ a s, and inourarice 1; Laid, ovur ,t - •- turv, Pd.--Jan. 1, • \Vilna Lo A.‘ Stone, „\ Al' , over C'. D. Kt•lley'n Dry (loud LIGLI. on Main Pireet. •...tvro,J.m. I. 1,72. J. C. Strang,' i3N1.1 AT I. AtV N. DISTRICT ATTOUNLY.— , • J s, Lsboro, 1; 72 C. N. DEI rtt, t,, wads v,;(11 the NEW 131PROVEDJNICI. nidCt.lol.l . tituu any tiling 011ie. 11:1).-2 1.1 11.1:;111. Block. if; j. it. Niles, IA :Mena 1)102)101y to bus • :11 610 01 Tiogu f.. P a.r, (Alt, Liu Ay..uuc.--WkAbiboru., Pa., ;!, 1, H, 4. JIIO. Alllllll3, LAY', .311,-1.1, iTioga 'cOUnty, Ya 4 1.1,1..16 1 . 5 16..,,t0i,11 W.-3 an. 1, 18;2. L, ccillecteci CO., Pa. C. I '1423 ware, Table Cul • , and ilousu, Fur -16. , a-vt. 17, 181'1. i 1 ono. ‘V. Gut!rl).e,y, .3 illlll . 1.,t di/0X south _ I .7., I li4Jaa couuty, Pa. =I Lt, N'l`, lt, P.l Win. it. SRIiLII, r 17.6u.rauce Aguut ...uu .s „t Li.c addi, 141 ii rc 'coins modurate.—Enux Itoy, I!:idz, 5 , ,t, Printing done 011 "• I , •'qlllru:ner. °facet!' Env:- tyt.r.-t-Jan. 1, ISI2. f 6tl;insrilio house. T Pa.—Br nn Pro's. Proprietors t, .3 tliorwighly renovated awl is u 11, ion to a ....orti,,l_tte WO traveling • 4 1 1, -4 for 1111ti,,er.—.13 , 1. 1, 1:873. I). Bacon, tai. D., isN I) : , ,711C1 LOS—May bo found at hie 1:14t of kiss street. p . o:aptly f.) uft)i , , —l , lol4l+or°, to., - Petroleinn Rouse, (7 0 ,0. clollo, Propriettir.—Ciond Re l.' •, I 1,411 man And be2sLi rea .ool •d attention g,heu to gue.ita. W. W. Burley, OF all elyle , 3 of light ital bca , ,y c..Triagee kept co r lantly on land. All Cornce a0..1 Buff Io StreotA, V. OrkWri hit With C.l l . lic/lcy. I:. R. Ilat•ley , , will ro.i.ive •,...I..n.—Jutw. a, 1110 A. - dr M. L, Otichtitt, t ,bind Wato of *Attiell will he lowost. HLI ir,vltus all to take m bef.tro elsewbere.— I lartt s Wagon Shot ) . t, \*(11.1 , 10. l' , L. n. 1f,1!1-1y. s. Mary Lamb. • ', 1'..;_,.—t.V.A0. •s. to Inf..:ln In - r listenctp mat thu ..,,,,,, , tl, that .-n,• has a large :.tact, Of Ntilltu , v. ,, ~, ~ ji u) ,.1 , weo kble ior the S0.1 ,, 11: which • pnitl $O.. i.2.t4CLIIY•• 1 , 7“2,J. :•11 . . 1 LI E. Kiln ,l3 ,h‘r•,..... "1 1:1 • 1p tk;.• : Int Innilinnii net at :Alt. 411.1 V". 1 .•. I • ... r ..tt •titl.• all i•X•L'I . I.tO tAY t. N••••:•• •;•• ••• .••• t , .. t'o 1•...... i oz 1VV.1.L•11:4 Mock. q t:•::. --;! • d Yale A', Van Horn. E:.211::::0 of ciu:ice , It ..t I , L ::•14 o'3l 4%1,111,4 :101u• 'tura oar own , r %Yak ralttl tn.•tu. \Vt: :I,,,rittwlit of got enc.:dug :aid Pip( i tout IIIy to tilt 11.1;1111, [Oita `co POllcUre..te , WllOlO. ti -Doe. • IA t to „John di. Anderson, Agt. r. • RE rAir. IN 11A RDW.4.2IE, Tt mornings. Me •'e~ •,I+, _.grtc•nanral Itiiplent.ino. Carriage 3p rin; c l , Table d W.,re. (tans and Ammunition. Whips. . ' - I .titd ifou—thu herd 4. - der In fin. Copper, and Sheet-iron to Ttu and Trun. AU work warraut -i.„ 1i*:1,LS110110 M 11N tiT.•& 'lllll AVIINUF., ‘vI:LT.4L:o}:;.), 8.8. HOLIDAY, Proprietor. :s colt 1e05t.24 : and is iii good couditiou tra,vellUg pithlle. The 4? .. roprletor I , l:us t) n 1& it a tirat•clasa liouso. All aid .1• part from thia house. Free " 41 4(:.(111 (111 (1 . .1i11+1. 11111UStriong bee. (1 1,,(71(/11NCO. ' 4, 11!, 11:2. -tr. JUST RlM;ErilEll, . 1 --; L1P. , 11: ,ST-:Cti. OF LEAVER, BROAD , CL ii q, (~ , , iEtLEIZE:VESTING9, AND TRIM" 1 .1 . `'••1•-}t 1 x:;11 so A tier} elleap Full CA 11. an 1),,E wiiortment or Goods over bro gilt to , ti ~. :1,1', i 15 styles. Elca3o call s d look •• erenatc aqd Repßh:lllg done wltb r 4 ,1 ctiv.tp Eli the cboapest. WAGNEItp eratton Street, Vellsboro, Pa. I'c 11.;2_1 MEI 3lrs. Geo. Campbell II kvp - D rot•lrned v W o e'labor°. and having fini4- qt,l,r trade in the manufacture of MITT ICIAL 11A.111 NVOlt.g, re . pectfoll say to her old friends' that - ahe 4rtg l ad to all who would favor la • with 44:ILL %ha ba found at the fume f 3 4+ 4tsillalltt• VON 21.1 4 18 ihtf. ME Generalinsurance Agency, Life, .rilte, and Accidental. liElf/M3 OYER 2.65,000.000. I. I— • r : ~ . - i Akims or c_OMPANIZA,' , , 0 • Alurnaula, of Cleveland, Ohio I l. 406.033.44 New York Lit° and Piro Ins. Co t 2/.000,000 Royal Ins. Co., of Liverpool II ' 10,615,501 Lancashire, of Atm:to/meter, Capital,— 10,000,000 Ins. Co., of North AmeriCit, Pit .. $0.050,535 60 Pranklln Fire Ins. Co. orPltila. Pa. 2,087,461 26 Republic Ins. Co. of N. Y., Capital, -- _ $7 3 0,000 Niagara Fire Ins. Co. of N. I' 1 000.000 Farmers Mut. Fire Ins. Co. York Pa . . . .. . —000,889 15 Phoenix Mat. Life Ins. Co. of Hartford Ct.. 6,081,070 50 Pena'a Cattle fns. Co. of PottsVlllo 60 0,000 00 ----- Total ..... ... 266,401,461 94 insnr.rmeo promptly efTectod by waif or othorwtso, on All kiwis) of Pcoporty. .A.11)0148e8 promptly atjtjusted and at my one.. ' All communications Inca:l44ly attended to—Cfilce or Still ritrcet 2 , a (Toler from Main rt., Knoxville Par WM. B. SMITH ' Jan. 1. 1873-tf. Agent. General Insurance Agency, NELSON, TlOOl CO:, PA, .11. EL &J. B. CAMPBELL A 1 112, issuing policies lu the follo thug Companteer agalnet fire and nalltlll2lo in Tlog and Potter counties : QUEEN. - •, - Aesiets, $10.000,000.00, CONTINENTAL of New Y0rk,..., ..... :.2,509,626.27 lIANOVEft, of Now:York . - ' 953,381,00 GEfiMAN AMERICAN, New Turk -- 1 2'2..000.00 yi'vw :visa-. of Wllkesbarre, Pa 219,68,4d' WI E.T.IAMAPORT, of War.vort t 13,06000 All tungnea,'4Dromptly attentika to by mall or other- Arlan. Losses actJuatod and paid at our ofilc.. - Nelson, D. 10, 1872-15- LOOK 114STI•NGS it L & _COL- bRUGS I MEDICINES, • P A TENT MEDICINES, Paints, Qils, Glass, _Putty, Supporter a, arid Surgi- HORSE LE C.I•77LE POWDERS, quors, Scotch Mos, Cigars, Tobactio, Snuff, &0., PinsrcLANs'' Pnasaupnoxe CARRFI7I3.Y CObM)I7N. VgD Groceries, Sigars, Teas, CANNED AND I DBIED FRUIT, Shot, Lead. Powder and Caps, Lampe, Chimneys, Whips, .Lashcs. BLANK & MISCELLANEOUS All Beleael Bootie in use. Envelopes, Stationery, Bill and Cap Paper, Initial paper, Mendorandums, large and small Dictionaries. Legal paper, Sabool Cards and primers, Ink, Writiu Fluid, Chess and Backgammon Boards, Picture Frames, Cards and Tassels, Mirrors, Albums, Paper Collars and Cuffs. Croquette, Base Balls, parlor games, at'wholosale and retail. Wallets, port monies, combs, pins and aeedlea, scissors, shears, knives, Violin strings, bird mgos. A great carlary of pipes, dells, inkstands, meaaura taped, rules, Fishing Tackle,' best trout flies, lines,' hooks, t , asA;ets-wid rods. - Special sttelition paid to this line in the season TOILET AND FANCY ARTICLES. AGENTS ron AMT.RICAN STE ht SAFES VILLAGE LOTS for ealo iu the control part of the Boro. Mnrch!.ls, Jan. 1, 1872 C. P. giVIITI - 11. ti -As Just return from New Toth with tho largest nrsortuielit of MILLINERY AND FANCY GOODS ever brought into Wellsboro, and will give bor custom ers reduced loves. She has a splendid assortment of suits. Parasols, Gloves, Inns, real and Imi tation hair goods, and a toll lino of ready made white goods. Prices to suit all. - Surveyor s !Notice. ED:A RD3lt;lEio rcrphies rvic e a totr prblo aßsurley. l teriiboren l ytoitopprompt. ly to all call . 11 , 3 may ho found at the law office of 11. Sherwood S.-. Son, In Wellaboro, or at his resi dence ou East ATenup. vkll4l>oro, Pa., May 13, 1873—tf. LIVE 11 7 1 STABLE. rrcilAm COLES proprietors. - 'First-class rigs IX. furnished n.t reasonable rates. Pearl street, op• pobite N.:heeler's Nys'enti shop. A PUBLIC HACK „ill he on O , gtret.t :at 01 3gratable hours. Pass eng. rs to (mitt - runt V)o.l..put ::Hy part of the town null t,e twenty-fis e ,ent4. For families or small partses foe p!c....ure. one dollar per hour. Welkboro, July 1.% 1.873. & UOLE.4. NEW DRUG FftlM TAYLOR & SPALDING DRUGS, CHEMICALS, P A TENII KEROSENE, I)YE - STUFFS, PEEFTEFIEBY, 'laving made Fpocial arrangements with the Elam burg Glass Company, wu can ilirniab Wass at ]owes rates to parties wishing to buy, in largo quantities shipped direct from the factory. • l'rescriptitmi and'Family R‘cipee Accurals- Spalding has had several years experience In the drug business, and is thoroughly posted In all its brunclar. TAVIDA 'SPALDING , . Virellsbor6, Pa., June 24, 1c73-tr. e CA.Ne , END llf yon arc of with CANCER, - come 17 immediately to the Cancer Infirmary of Dr. J. M. Qrane, Addison, R. Y. Whore. you willete promptly treated and cured, ft you come Intim°. When reach ing the R. R. Depot at this place, ask for the Amerl- Oa hotel oranibug; it will take you direct to the In- Armary IL you. wish for references, sOna -for arm; williont 414ifi •Cjuirge, isresSbnikbll4 . • . 'PR ;if WWII . . - .. .. . . . - • . , . , ~ ~.. .- -•- •• ~ - - ,: - -c, .."- - i •,-----'"; ' .. ~ ' ".. ...,. , -..,,. , ---' las - ,_. it ---- -- -- - , - , - , .., _ -,,, 40 14 4 in igtz - l- .. - - - - ,-; _. ; ~ ~,:-, • , - :J-* - - , - .%,.•:. ?!..-. 4 - ..., - ' 4:4 .: ,'L ; . , . „! 1, .t 44!•-• ....,,,i.,e-lA'L •4 . I 7A 'l2 •ei 1 / £ - I' '.°. . ..-- . .. - e, •‘.-.1 - • ,-; ..-...-.-: - .1.,... gi 11 . , .., i-A,k,.. • , „7.. c. via,' . Al, . 1 1tr . 44 . 4 15•. !; - 461 . - . -''' . • - :t'it 4 '• • . 44'. * \,--: a ii ~•,-,:- : .. . . ~ =i;-.1 - • %t! . 4-I. ,- ,f:, :g\' W , ':',.. Zi . '."-:. --. . , :,- A ' %-• .. , - •• 1 : . ~.,, . s.t . - ~ it-' :-----; 4.4,4.4 - • ' , • . ''4). ' " 9 ' i-- - - ..i "." '' t.4,-• - ~ . - liz.. kCT- • ••• '4 , - 1- • '• .. ~•', J• l '- : ' ‘.'• - • ', . r l. -'--- •.'-‘T1...•...• •--7- 4 1 , .. N. 1..4--U..„.:- r -..,•.0 4rU..•„_,.‘..R • -‘...tV.J. , I N •. ~ E- 4. - f -t 1 . 3 g . 9 r -; . • 1 ' 4 1 ..i .- T , • --;-,- " • - • ' , 4 ". . • . ~ t. -.,r . i . ‘ ‘• , • I‘ • A4 :?--.... ‘"- • ,tAx,.ll.Af -.,,,.,..,.-, •• . - , -•4• . •4 % • -' -, - 7.1 . : I•; L . • '4' ' ..- .1•'--; ,-,.•• } • -.-• • - ' . . ‘. . .-..,...- .--.-...:.-- -4- ''-* - - --.:.."-`-ik ',-;,,...,... '•' . , „ r . " - ' . , : ~ . • 7, ''. . ' KNOXVILLE, TIODA CO., EA. LOOK! ail Instruments, irtigt'a 0n0,14 in Great Variety, saumz o NOTItiIS. nAs - rrsas COTES NEW GOODS: Wholesale and Retail Dealers In PAINTS, OILS, ..11\TCY ,NETICLES, ko Iy Compounded E . - . • . ~.... ~• 1" : . lITIGH rOUNGAS ,, • Itigitante,Real : Steam s hipEstatel v . . . ... ......,-.. ..,—c,,e...._ . ... ... 4,-0 L , Bom;en's Block: . . .0119. Drafts mold payable In any city or iciwn In Europe. 'Ail - Cabin, Second Cabin, or Steerage Pailfili,ga tickets to' or from any town in Europe ,from or to Wellaboro, lit the Anchor Line, or the 'While Star Line of Ocean 3Wera. . . . . Real Estate bought and sold on Ciurnbtaion. i ArZ - 1 desire to call, parlictilar attention to the Inane. Rime faellitlem afforded by the old and well known Wellsboro Insurance Agency, -7-EkrIABLIMED IN 1860.- FIRE, LIFE ACCIDENT. Capital Repeated $11,000,000. 'ETNA, of Hartford, Cum. HOME, of Nevi York. FRANKLIN; of Philadelphia. • INS. - C(LOF NORTH AMERICA, of Phll'a. PENNSYLVANIA, of Philadelphia. WILLIAMSPORT .FIRE.f , ALEMANNIA, of Cleveland, Ohio. PHENIX, of Brooklyn, N Y. LYCOMING IMS. CO., Money. Pa. TRAVELERS LIFE & ACCIDENT, Hartford. Policies written in any of the' above leading com panies et standard rates. , Losses promptly paid' at my office, No, 1 Bowen's Block, 11UU13 TOBINE*. Nov. 29. 1872. We have Shed the Shan y ! / / , ii,BALNIA &CO IN And now havtrntit tithe to say 0 our blends and onatomara that we have good BARGAINS Our Elegant New Store ORSIRABLE GOODS at tb9owest prices to be toutal. COI and you will know how it Is yourselves. Oct lb, 11372. JOHN MILER TTAB the largest and best selected stack of FBOOTS-,'ANII SHOES ever'brought into Wellsboro. consisting of Ladies' "Xid and Cloth Balmor . ats and Gaiters, Ladies, IYlissez, Ch Wren and Gents' (Nth Boots and Shoes, Prince Albert Calf Boots, Boys! Calf cc:: Kip BootB, TouthB l Boots, In fact. all Mods of Alt!lia ; and Women's wear kopt In a flint-class Shoe Store. The best sewed Woman's Shoes ever offered tp thla roariut. I defy the world ° CUSTOM WORE. If Sou don't heathy° it, try ,Tnei buylonly tie best stock, and have (Toed Coiidwattirra as money can hire. - REPAIRING done neatly', and with dispatch. Leather and _Findings of all kind,' constantly on hand CASH PAID FOR HIPLS, DEACON SKINS, Ilavnig lust filled up my shelves with a choice stock, personally selected for this market, I respect fully solitit a fair share of trade. "Small profits and quick returns," I believe to be n good business max im ; and Iho d the best goods to be the cheapest. I keep no shoddy. 'My assortment is suftleient to meet all sizes and tastes, I invite one patrons and the public generally to call and examine my stock. No trouble to show goods. Always to be found, one door north of C. B. `Kelley'; store. Efain street, Wellebore, Pa. JOHN FISHLEn. Vol). 4. 1873-tt POMER.OY BRO'S & SETH, BANKERS, BLOSSBURO, Tioga County., Penn'a ~_ BUSINESS PAPER NEGOTIATED PoslBlloY Duo's Borer" TWA Pat , IrOiti ill WO; WELLSBORO, TIOGA CO., PA., TIT Ell TIOGA„ P!/, . , FOR THEM le filled full of T. L. BALDWIN Sic CO Baby's Shoes.._ PF I CTS AND FI.JI2j. W. H. 85:87% Btaisburg, • .i The Cloud. • A.' cloud came ov ;a land of leaves; (Q, hush, little leaves, hat it pass you by I); ow they had waited and watched for the rain, Mountain and valley, and vineyard and plain. With never a sign from the airy I Day after day had the pitiless sun Look'ddown with a lidiess.eye. But DOW! On a sudden a whisper went Through the topmost twigs 0+ the poplar spire; , Oat or the tast u light wind blew. (All the leaves trehibled. and teuintured, and drew Hope to the help of de-ire.) It stirred the faint pulse of the forest tree, And breathed through the brake and the brier, - Slowly the cloud came; then the wind died, - Dumb lay the hind fu lle hot suspense; fhe thrush on the elm bough suddenly stopped, The weather-warned s.allow in rnid•dying dropped, Thki linnet ceased Fong In the fence, \lute the big cloud moved, till It hung overhead, Heavy, bfwbosouted,and dense. Ah, the cool rush through the dry-tongued trees, The ratter and plash on the thirsty earth. The eager bubbling of runnel end rill. The llerinfi of leaves that have drunk their JUL The freshness that follows the dearth NbSV life for the woodland, the vineyard, the vale, New life with the world's new birth I —All Me Year Round Rest. Rest is net qiritting The bilsy carver; Rest is the• tilting Of self to cue's sphere Tie tho brook's motion, Clear without strife, Fleeting to MURIA After this lite. "Tie loving and Kerving httglient and beat; 'Tia onwsret. 1:11$35l ening; And this is true rest. LETTER FROM KANSAS. IMMIGRATION ROCTES-A RE AT WESTERN EXPOSITION-ENTERPRISX OF .4lt AGITA TOR 330Y-TITE: ETNA} OLAL PA NIC--TIIE ATCHISON 13ANICS PAY CASII- : -PERSONAL • GOSSIP-LOCAL POLITICS-CIVIL ItiGEITS IN ATCIIISON-TILE TRADE` IN TEXAN CAT TL.U. • ATCUISON, Oct. 6, 1873 To the .alitor of the Agitator : My last was dated Sept. Mill, and since Len but little has transpired that would be nteresting to your readers.. I learn from ) privy e sources that quite a number of your eitize is In and around Welishoro arc con templating coming West to settle, hence I would not have them forget_Ateldson in their journey toward the , getting sub. There Ire plenty of holnestentils left for all who may come. Not much government land, however, can bo had short of 150 to 230 miles west of here; yet there. is plenty at that distance, and some as fine land as the sun ever Shone upon. Many think that by going that distance west of Atchison they are going among the wild Indians. There is no more danger of seeing an Indian there than there is in your own town. The best route to the " noinesteed Area," and the one by which I would advise all to come, is eta the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad to Quincy. To whatever portion of the,horuesteacl. country the traveler de- sires to go, he will find the above route a comfortable, quiet, and safe one. There is no better railroad in the West. Thence by the HUnnibal and St, Joseph Railroad to Atchison. This railroad was the pioneer road to the Missouri river, and has justly been termed the Old Reliable." There are but few railroads in the country that are better equipped for comfort and conve nience than the world-renowned Hannibal and St. Joseph: No change of cars is made between Chicago and Atchison by this mum. The immigration to Kansas this fall is un- cceacuredin ceordine to-promise, your correspond ent, together with several car loads of 'other Atchison citizens, visited the St. Joseph Ez- position last Wednesday. It was perhaps the grandest thing of the kind ever held west of St. Louis, and certainly would have done credit to a city of four times the pop- ulation of St. Joseph. There were, I should judge, at least 20,000 people on the ground . on Wednesday, and perhaps 6Q,Q.QO. on the following day. St. 'Joseph is one• Of the oldest and wealthiest cities in the State of Missouri, and when she attempts an enter prise she bound to succeed. As an evi dence of the above, I will mention one fact —that about two weeks ago,.wben the build ings were almost completed, a hurricane passed over that city, and, among others, the Exposition building was altmast leveled to the groUnd. The next day the citizens subscribed $1.0,000 in a short time, and so the good work went bravely. on, both day and night, and it was not until the opening day that the work was completed. In the center of Floral. Hall the sight was most beautiful to gaze upon. In the four wingis - of the building were attractions of every kind, but it would be too tedious to name them, and perhaps would not be of interest to your readers. Prom Floral Hall we pass out of the building, and thence into Power Hall. Here we find all kinds of ag ricultural implements and machinery in mo: Lion. In the center of this building was a table, th? whole length of it, containing models df inventions, which drew thou sands of viaitors, and hundreds of things they there saw that they never dreamed of before. In the shovy of horses, cattle, sheep, bogs, ctc., Lhere has never hccn a finer display anywherejn the whole West. I understand that there were twenty-two States repre:tent ed, which I think is a pretty good success for a Slate that is so far west as INM:souri.— The Fair ceitainly must have proved a Fttc cess. in 0411 particular. This week the Leavenworth Fair is progressing, - with what SUCCefiS r cannot now say, but praiume they are not doing much, as the people out here are :ill tired out, for they have now had a season 'of six weeks' Fair-going. .1 must not forget to tell you that , during the progress of the Jackson County Fair Frank A. Root, an old Wellsboro boy, who learnidd his trade in the Aorrxrort,office, published a-daily at the flourishing town of Holton, the county seat of that county, Frank says he is always on time With the Express. The financial panic here has spent its force.' Of the four banks here, none of them Woe compelled _to suspend. Had it not been for Kansas city, the banks west of St. Louis would all have been open and do ing business to-day. Leavenworth followed Kansas city, and then came St. Joseph.— The Atchison bankers called a meeting ,to i take action upon what they should do— ol low the course- of her sister cities or k ep "open—land by a unanimous voice they ke solved to pay every cent demanded. er neighbors denounced our banks and pub lished all sorts of lies about them for not following their examples, but it was of- no avail. The stock men at Leavenworth_ and, Kansas city held meetings_ and denounced their banks in the severest terms, and praised i the Atchison banks, and to-day the Atchi son banks are the most popular on the river, west of St. Louis. The merchants and all the far-seeing citizens of Atchison sustained our banks and made their deposits daily, as I though nothing had happened, while a few of the more timid withdrew their money, Ibut returned it a day or two after. ' I was much pleased to meet two of my old Wellsboro friends, Wm. A. Stone and 1 James W. Donaldson, a few days ago. It I gives me much pleasure to meet Wellsboro 1 friends, especially:did it to . meet these two [gentlemen_ 1.-wa4 sorry they could not stay longer in Atchison. They had visited seve -1 rt 4 001 t 4 tli, WW I till, ipi 0‘; 1 44 1.0 - ! SDAY, - OCTOBER 1573. place t suited them as well as Atchison, and I' n''certain that if they return they keAtehison their Mime. It was •PleaV ' Me to -show-. them around our city an to give them till the information I could. Mr. Stone ;and Myself sat for two houri i a tic parlor of the Otis House talk ing eye old times and the goiidtime webad while n, the , Weldon Railroad, He dis tinctly •emetubered the time when he said Co. A •ouldn't throw him up in a' blanket; but the did do it. These visitors left here with th intention of going to Yankton, Du cota, b t I told them that it they went there• the Ind ans would scalp them, and I think they oly went as far - north as-St. Joseph, and too the, eastern bound train on the Hannib 1 and St. JoriePhltailroad, and have probablia arrived safely at home. Our county politics . are beginning to get warm. The Grangers are out with a "call" for a c cers, w tion a i nvention to nominate county_ al -1 ile the regular Republican Con yen meet on Thursday next and . put a 1 ticket i the field. Immediately, after the Democ eta will hold their convention. Pol. itics ar badly mixed; and no one knows how th fight will come out. The Demo crats ar getting. desperate here in Atchison county, and many predict they will coincide with th farmers, and put a ' ticket' in the field. ' ut no one, can tell just now what will he ; the result. Our county election, howeve ~ comes off in November. The col ored peOple, whci have generally_ been vot ing the Republican ticket,' may -go back on the Republicans this fall, froth the fact that when our Public schools opened they de manded admission to the same schools with the whites, but the Board of Education; couldn't "see it." The city has alreadkbutit them two brick school houses, and furnish ed them with as good teachers as are to be found aiywhere in the West; but that will not do;thk'y must be permitted to go to '' • - _ _ —Gatla. _ tlithe whites. They threatened to school houses and do other lids beesuse a few Democratic politi them it was their right and pri4q- school N born lb 4 chief--a deans tol lege to s ek adthission with the whites; the Democr: is thitiltin'g that if the colored peo ple were not admitted they would leave the Republi tan party. The thing has quieted i ) down n w, and everything is working and going al ng as smooth as clock work, and I expect the blacks will all vote the RePubli can tickit. 1(1 It wo id astonish . your citizens to see the Texas c the that are being shipped overllte Atehiso , Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad.— At least fty carloads arrive here daily, and il this poi t being the northern_ terminus of that roa , they. are fed and watered here, and the have the choice of four competing q Eastern markets. Alany of your ver saw a Texas steer; .he is a wild animal, with long horns, much an our native cattle have, and when )ose he will fight like a bill dog.--= 4f" them broke loose here the other ran down through the streets, de •rybody, and finally ran into the l i swam to the opposite shore. Rule, such as prairie chickens, rab"- •e, quails, etc., arc abundant, and ets are full of them every day.— 11 :ears ought to be out here, for be is lot on the wing. Buffalo , stock is .The weather is quite cool for flue he year, and there are heavy frosts lines to t: people nl looking longer 0 he gets Several day an•l lying ev river an Wild !; bits, gee.. the mar George a good plenty. time of ()Warship 'Women. Icently hanged in 31asssehu -uFeatiee on one who had his property in a girl. of course, but, he said 'lO had given herself surrender that 'a some sense his; ler involved erty in her -emity of 'tile re oc- A mai l setts for practica The mat an opini, to him i nom an that 111,1. 1 hi 3 dish was to death. was taking; 2 b ly disputee was a brute. . n that a girl the completes Lean make Was in [giving herself to an to 'nor, and that his pro r, ie defended to the ex e, A prominent newspaper, he facts of the case, takes t say that the idea of ownershi I in s the same barbarism out of wide evils and wrongs that the " wom mere is intended to remove. If to respond that ownership in worn blindly apprehended as it was', by al gallows bird, is the one thing; a us front the wildest doctrines , and • of the free-lovers, and is one of igest conservative forces of society, e likely wo should be misunder ut we shall run the risk and - make tiOn. is an instinct in the heart -of every which tells her that she is , his to e gives herself, ,and his alone—an which bids her to cling, to him while or' he lives, which identities her h his, WWII maims of him and her one tles, - h. When this gift is--once a true man he recognizes its signiti- Ile is to provide for her that which tot provide for herself: hi: Liffpro to the extent of his tcoWer; she is his home and to be his cloSeaxeom ills 'ownership l in her covers his pie-i Session and devolves upon gravest duties: If it was Other ly is it that a woman who gives her ty feel's, when she finds deceived, that shot is lost? ,that she ed with herself to' one who does not e the nature of the gift? and that ought.lo be ()wiled, and, by being honored, is disowned and dislionor -Ale is no tine, pure woman ten she givesllerself away, does not in the ownership which makes her the property of one man.' She is slave, to be tasked and abused—be he is the gift of love, and not the :e of money; but shri is his in a sense h she cannot be Another man's with toner to him mid, damnation to her- cording easion t woman grow th en mov we wet . : en, onl our bru I that say : practice the stro it is nui stood; the flbSe The!' Ivoinan NlllOlll 221 instinct SIIC life wi , utact,t tt canoe. she can tent bei to sh,t,r( plume. most s him tli %VISC, Lt self 'lc% heiselJ has par . recoani she wh owned, ed T nho,W rtjuim forever not his k.ailbe • purchn in whi out ills self. Our I allows bird was in hisbrutal way, If he he'd been living in, savage so ithout laws, and ,Ivith the necessity ding 14 own treasures, his act would en looked upon :ns ,one of heroism ie beauties and braves of his' tribe, !ak point in his case was, that his nip in what ho was pleased to call was not established according to Is under which he lived. He wasrrot married, and had acquired no rigjus ihe law to be defended. What :Ile used to consider, his rights were es !d contrary to law, and he could not to law fur their defense ; He took ran to himself contrary to law, he his property in her by murder, and hanged. Ile .was servedi - rig,ht.— 1 vould grow on a rock for such as he ' , re in the world.' There is no cure I • • man who seduc's and slays but a ,1 neck - right defy, N I of dual have b j by all ti The ow nersl " his the 1,1‘5, legally under was ph tablish appeal the Aro , defend he IA Hemp anywbi for tit I broke' The 'c is nothing more menacing in the of ,the social affairs of this country c effort among a certain class of re• to break up the identity of interest , ling among men' and 'women. Men ded to with sneers and blame as be. osed to the interests of women, as - the power in their hands—a power tl—to maintain their own predomi at the expense of woman's rights and '8.'141-being. Marriage, under this .f teaching, becomes a compact of ience- into which men and women 'ter, each party taking along the per independence enjoyed in a , single - ith separate business interests and c pursuits: In otherwords, marriage rded simply as the legal companion two beings of :opposite sexes, who Ileir own independent pursuits, ,with the bond is not permitted to inter- It contemplates, no identification of d destiny. The, man holds no own. 1 in woman which gives him 'IL right roily of ,children and a life devoted sacred duties Of motherhood. The •ho expects such a sacrifice at. the int his wife is regarded as a tyrant or Women are i to vote, and trade, actielaw„ nod Trench; and go to ess, and do everything that a man **MAYO 44 got !Awl° 444e, aspect thau 11 forme) and fe• are all jug op using USUI JILIDCC wonin kind eunvol sopa' state, ; separa; is reg ship O, ' have U which life u ersbip to a 1, to th e; man bands a brut and p Con& I 090 . •- Women are to be just as free to do any .thing outside Of their homes as inen They are to choose their carcers,and pursue them with just its little,referenee, to the, in: ternal administration of their families _as their husbands exercise-" This is the . 'ltith and logical end of all the modern doctrines concerning Woman's rights. The identifi cation of woman with man akt the basis of the institution - of the family'is - scoffed at.— Any ownership in woman that comes of the gift of herself to bim, and the assumption of the possession by him, with its life long train of obligations and duties, is contemn ed. It is /tSql Inca that 'interests which are and must forever - remain identical are op - - posed to each other. Men and women are pitted against each other in a , struggle for power. • - ,Well, let it be undeistood, then, that men are opposed to these latter-day dootrines, and that they wilt remain so. They are de termined that the identity of interests.ite tweet' inn and, women shall never bw tie- Stroyed, and tie sacted ownership In woni men bestowed in all true marriages shall never be surrendered; that the family shall -be maintained, and that the untold millions of tine women in the world who sympathize with them shall be protected from the false 'philosophies and destructive policies of their few misguided sisters who seek to turn the world upside down. Political conventions May throw their sops to Clamoring rennin"- ers, but they, -mean nothing by it. They never have redeemed a pledge to these re formers,- and we presume they have never intended to ilir so. They expect the matter to blow over, and, if we do not mistake the signs of tlie times, it is rapidly blowing over—with more or less thunder, but with very little rain. In the mean time, if the discussions that have grown out of these - quebtions have tended to open a broader field to woman's utimanly industry, or ob literated unjust laws from the statute book, 'let every man rejoice. No good can come to woman that does not benefit him, and no harm that does mit hurt him. humanity is one—and man aid woman rise or fall to gether.—Scrittner'ai Montldv. , The Democratic Party It is a favorite fancy of certain doctrin aires that the modern Democratic party is the great, original, American party, and that all others are but various forms of op position to it. The platform of the recent Ohio Democratic Convention, which is the last revelation of party orthodoxy, begins by declaring, with a solemnity which the artless unconsciousness of absurdity makes only the more delightful: "The Demo cratic party * * stands by its principles, which are suitedito all times and circum stances." In the old story the master!charg es his servant,' "If you can't get cake, get smelts." And the famous thief remarked, "1 prigs purses when I can—and pocket handkerchiefs when I can't." The Demo cratic principles which are suited to all times and places arc reduced by history to one— the principle, in Silas Wright's phrase, of " carrying off the spoils," if possible. After the Constitution was adopted, the two antagonistic views in the Convention naturally became the platforms of two par -ties—the Federal and the affersonian or the National Republican. The first magni fied and the second belittled the power of the National Government. John Adams would have had a certain sacredness attach to the Presidential person; Thomas Jeffer son called the whole national system " a de partment of foreign affairs." The second war with Great Britain, which was warmly opposed by the Federalists, and in which we gained a high fame for naval gallantry, and little else, destroyed that party. The wound of the Revolution was too fresh to allow the country to regard with favor a party which seemed British; and Mr. roe had but one electoral vote against him for his second term. Nov, that the National Republican party was very-different from what has been re- tnuttvr. ---- hr-o-ro. ht ssiUi ror mtirLdc .01-6..acnt the United States was chartered. Mr. Cal houn, Chairman of the Finance Committee, reported the bill. It was.supported by the National Republican, and opposed by the Federal party. Henry Clay, Lowndes, Cal houn, Forsyth, L . W. Taylor, and Ingham were its , especial friends. Daniel Webster was its great opponent. Henry Clay was as good a National Republican aslloratio Sey mour is a modern petnocrat. Again, in 1916, the protective Policy was ,sustained by Lowndes, Calhoun, and For syth, National Republican leaders,' and it was opposed by Mr. Webster and . the New England members. So, in 1824, Qovernor Yates, of New York, recommended protee ion, In 1827 a State Cbrivention was held klbany, which held-it to be' the duty of ressrto pass protective laws, "and Am --fencer, Samuel Young, Benjamin and other National .tiepubticans members. Was modern De lteir of fileie views? In 1827 Legislature unanimously ,for protection, , and even Nhat be was in favor of =O. at . Con_ ea_ brose ctit Knower, . were leadi mocracy the the New Yor - passed resolution: - Gen. Jackson wrot • , a " judicious" tariff. Up to this time wher was the great, orie inal,-American party kno •n as the Modern Democratic? Did the pri eiples "'which are suited to all times and c Tudistances" charter a hank in 181t5, and dest • ry it twen ty years afterward? Did they hist ton pro tection from 1816 to 18li0, and th ,p-pro claim free trade? The Democratic prty, •<\\ as we of this generation have known i the anti-bank, anti-tariff, anti-interrial in provement, - hard money party-was the par ty of Jacks < n and Van Buren. henry Clay was the last leader of the old National Republican organization which merged with Anti-Masonry in the Whig party. But if the Jeffersoniau doctrines of the liaifted function of government in general, and 'of the very nation bounds of our Na tional Government in particular, were nut acknowledged by the National Republicans, - Who chartered the bank and passed &Mee tly° tariln, how much less has his great car dinal doctrine of Inunadrights and equality ever been recognized by the Democratip party! The Ohio Democratic 'platforra calmly says that the party "insists upon equal and exact justice to all men!" Since when? The anti-Slavery a:dtation -began with the Administration of Jackson. All that Garrison and his friends demanded was equal and exact justice to all men. But Jackson's. Postmaster General broke open the mails to make injustice more ,''secure, and Van Buren in his Message denounced the Abolitionists as proyolting "'popular indignation" in the implied approval of the mobs and riots that assailed them. Joffer aonitta doctrines! Equal and exlidt, justice to all men! Why, front its beginning, the Democratic or Jackson party was the mere flexible machine of slaveholders, and its policy for a generation before the war was monstrous inequality and absolute injustice. Its adhetents began to suspect it in 1810.— They saw it clearly in '4B. In 1855 those who held to the original faith of Jefferson left the ranks and united with the Whigs in the Republican party. And now when that party is supreme, slavery, despite the Dem ocratic patty, abolished, and the Democrat ic theory of seeessien annihilated, the party of the principles that • are "suited to all times and circumstances" <blandly declares that it holds to equal and exact justice to all men, which is'preciscly its true as that it is the great, original, American party, When the Democratic party last year nominated Mr. Greeley, it was certainly a comical proof that what it now calls its principles were "suited to all timesrand circumstances." It announced by that nomination that it nu longer pretended to any-principles but "the spoils." • 1.1 8 con ventions arc therefore mere—impertinences. They stand for no policy, no measures, no principles. They are only meetings of pol iticians whose party name is fatally associ ated with the national disgrace of.shivery, and who seem to suprose that by "resolv ing" themselves to , be virtuous they will be thought by the country safer guardians of its liberty and peace and prosperity titan these who have secured liberty and con quered peace. There may he' sharp criti cism of 'the Republic:tut - party, and by un wise and reckless action its hold upon the country may be telaxed, - but so long as the alternative is the Republican party or.the Democratic, the Republicans ate secure.— Poor Mr. Greeley learned that truth fast year, and it broke his heart.—lludfer'a greqall, - • , • - • , . One half of the world don't know hoW the other half live. Well, is it *illy of their Professionals arid Amateurs. The unfavorable feeling - which professicin al men are apt to entertain toward amateurs ,fs.ebnipp-unded of two very different; and at tifist siitht" contradictory- Clements=---eon tempt and jealousV. But there is really no incompatibility in the two sentiments—be eatise the one refers rather to the theoreti cal, the other entirely to the practical bear ingof the ease. A. professional man regards an amateur or dilettante with contempt, or a feeling which approaches to contempt, because he knows _by experience how much time and trouble it requires to obtain even a`tolerable mas tery over his profession. As a general rule this appreciation is justly founded, and so long as it is not offensively expressed, no exception eau be taken,•to. it; but it some times happens that an amateur, by sheer force o'f natural ability, will beat second" and third-rate professionals at their own work.. Unfortunate circumstances may have. thrust a man into a profession for which lie is not best fitted, so that he can only apply himself to his real vocation as - ail outsider and amateur. Such a one will assuredly get The better of inferior profes sionals. The professional jealously Of amateurs, on the other hand, is chiefly a .matter of dollars and cents. TiM'arnateur - threatens, the professional's purse, because the former may underbid the latter ay — working either gratuitously or for a smaller compensation. This professional jealousy is sometimes feste.d in queer places, and receives odd illustrations. • At a well known European watering place - I once saw a person of for tune and good family who led a very scan dalous life. There were several professional [unites in the place., and I was told Watley were extremely angry with her because she spoiled their business by her amateur in triguing. 'Po take a more serious and important matter, it is well known that the reinunera- Mon of regular seamstresses is diminished by the occasional work of women who have other menus of support, and only take up sewing now and then at spare moments to procure some extra comfort or luiury. We must recollect that the-Icm amateur haqa petty wide signification, It does.'not mean merely a man of fortune and leisure who has a certain proft.g:iinal - ti,ste in nhi-eb he indulges, either simply to an use hitn§etf - ur with the hope of contributing -to the profit Mid happiness of the-community. Any persoio wllo, having one regular pr9-i fession which be practices, makes occasioir al excursions into another profession, is an amateur in eill this pareryon, as the old Creeks call4l it—this by-work, or side work, or ouitide work,—Carl Bow» in Gut a.ry. The Efficacy of Ideas The idea, even when it appears most ab struse and most vague, nourishes the con science, and so is filtered into reality. When we lose ourselves in scientific abstractions, we do not remember that those abstractions, like the Divine IVord, must become incar nate in substance and in, the form of the hu man race. The traveler lost on the Alps among the eternal snows, where he scarcely can.breathe, where, he perceives no atom of life on the desert of ice, does not easily re• member that there below, in the deepest valley, all that cold and imMobility and des. elation beentne the Rhine and the Ticino and the Illibne,'spreading the life and joy of fertility among the fields of Daly and Of France and of Gerniany. The idea is the sOul; the idea is the life; events do no mote than copy ideas, and that imperfectly and rudely. The whole course of social events is tilled ideas, which are like hydrogen hi water and oxygen ;: in the air. Fifteen slow centurie's \\ere required to form a soci ety animated by a pro!rressive'idea. Let us not clue for dultivc.f Titne is a relative idea. The delay will be long if it is compared with our short lives; brief, if compared with. dm-life. of nom sukty_LCl3, C.WP can cal necessary to form arid compose. the planet. on which we are embarked. Who can di vine the time that it wilt require for an idea to fall from the mind of a thinker upon his school, to ptiSs front the investigMion of the school to the militant forces_ of the aposto late, thence to the crucible of inertyrdom„ from. there to the conscience of ft party, awl from the conscience of a party to the laws, and thence to the customs? lint we have uo riiclit to doubt of the virtue and the chi. eacy - ei ideas after having been them issue frtnn the lips more subtile than the air on which they wele cartied, melting at one dash the bayonets of 'armies and the crowns of kings.---jilarper's. John Guy and General' Case. In years gone by there dwelt in Washing ton John Guy, a character in his way,• m connection with whom Colonel Pornewtells the following anecdote, or rather quotes it from - Daniel Dougherty, one of Philadel phia's ablest lawyers, Guy kept the. l. ..cation:Al Hotel - in Washing ton, and 'among his guests was Gen. Cass, then Senator from Michigan. Guy dressed like Cass, and although not as portly, his face was strangely . similar. One day a Western friend . of the house came in after a long ride, dusty and tired, and walking up to the office encountered Gen. Cass, Who was quietly standing there. ' Mistaking . him for Guy, he slat him on the shoulder, - and exclaimed.: Well, old fellow, here I am! The last time I hung my hat hp in your shanty one S your eler1:8 sent me to the fourtW.story; now that I have gut hold of you, 1 in pun a lower r00m.." i leneral, a most dignified personage, ck by this stortling salute, coolly abt,l taken a replied: • - You has commiteca a mistake, ,sir; 1 am not Mr. Gt;; 1 iIIeGOD. Cass, of Mich igan," and avert turned away. The Western mar; Niil33 elioplied at the urn. onnsciotts outrage be ,'had committed, but before he had recovered from.his utortitlcn lion, Gun. Cass, who had passed around the office, confronted him again, when, a sec ond time mistaking him for Guy, he •faced him and saitt: t "Here you are at last! 1 have just made a devil of a misttike; met old 'Cass and took him for you, and I. mu afraid the 3X:ich igander has gone oil mt What Gen. Cass svald have said may, well be imagined, if theitreal Guy had not approached and rescued the innocent offend er from the ttvice-assailed and twiee•angered statesnutn. —Harems's. Victor Emanuel at Windsor Castle. The most punctilious of existing courts is awaiting the at rival of the most careless of sovereigns, the' soldier King of Italy.— It is just after the domestic losses which crowded thick up9n and carried his wife - and his tot - alter almost at the same time. The Queen conies down, according to inimemorial custom, to the foot of the great staircase al, indsor, to welcome her brother sovereign. Of a race in whose veins flowed Stuart blood, King Victor Emanuel naturally commanded Queen Vietot ia's sym pathies. As she met hitn at the foot of the great staircase and took his arm to go up to the drawing room, she alluded delicately to his latest loss, that of his brother. His rather_ vacant countenance surprised her, and still more was she shocked when he answered awkwardly, in execrable French,, "'Yes, poor devil, be is deadl - Her estimate of his character was further shaken by his request on Saturday night to' be driven into London the - next morning, where he meant to attend high mass in his own " Sardinian chapel," a church so called from having been originally built under the protection and for the-use of the Sardinian legatiOn.— The poor Queen expected to see the King of Italy take it stand and proclaim what seemed to be his principles by attend ing the Episcopal service in the palace chap el. But the soldier King had not the "cour age of his opinions," as the Preach so pith ily express it • or rather he had no opinions, and in Ins outward policy followed the ad• vice of his ministers, while in bit private life the instincts of his race and edification kept him firm in the faltiltlor his ancestors. —Galaxy. a _ A gentleman who takes st business View of most things, when recently asked rtspect tug a person of cttlitei-a poetic temperament, replied: . ." Oh, lie is one of those men who have soarings afterlhe infinite arid diviugs after t l ol_ ueZathomalkil, but who Revel pay' tr+ool_ • L 4 Bache FARN,, I GARDEN 'AND HOITEIBIiOU. A. I correspondent of the Loudon (Hoag land) Garden, in writing of the use of the more or less-common plants for garnishing, expresses surprise that the natural and sim ple conditn,ents should be utililized to so. small an extent as they are: " With the. exception of sweet and bitter herbs, geßwrx,chielly for the purpose, and. parsley, (Which is neither bitter nor sweet, but the most popular of all flavoring plants,) comparatively few other_leaves are used.— Perhaps ought also to except the sweet bay, which is popular in rice and other pnd din as, and certainly imparts ono of the most pleasant and exquisite flavors. But, on the.. other halal, what a waste there la of the fist- • voring properties of peach, almond, and lauro leaves, so richly charged with the es senee of bitter almonds, so much used In kitchens. Of course, such lea - ves must be used with caution, but so must the spirit as well. Au infusion of these could readily be made either green or dry, and a tea or table spoon of the flavoring liquor used to taste. "One of the Most _useful and harmless of all leaves for flavoring is ,that of the coin mon syringe. When cucumbers aresearce, these are a perfect substitute in salads or anything in which that flavor is desired.— .The taste is not ouly like that of cucumbers, but identical----a curious instance of the co- relation of flavors .in widely different fami lies. Again, the young leaves of cucumbers have a striking likeness in the way of flavor to that of fruit. The same may be affirmed of- carrot•tops' which are ae like carrots in taste as may be, In most gardens there is a prodigious waste of celery flavor in the sacrifice of the external leaves and their partially blanched foot-stallus. Bores of sticks of celery are cut up into soup; when the outside would flavor it equally well or better, The young leaves of gooseberries added to bottled fruit give a fresher flavor - and greener color to pica and tarts. The leaves of the flowering currant give a sort of intermidiate flavor between that of black currants and red. Orange, citron, and Ism on leaves impart a flavor equal to that of the fruit and rind combined, and somewhat different from both. A. few leaves added'to pit's or boiled in the milk used to bake qtli rice, or formed: into crusts or pate, iMpart an admirable houqUet, Ia short, leaves arc not half so much used for sintsoa ing as they might be." STRIPPINGS.—AII dairy-women knew that stOppings, or last milk obtained from the udder, ate richer in butter globules than the other portions of the milk. This is ',pea -lolly the ease when the cows retnain at rest before milking. If, this is doubted, let the cows run from the pasture to Um yard, and note the result. Althougb7M make no difference in the butter proilect whethet the strippings, if taken, are &tarn , ed separately from or in connection with the cream of the other milk obtained, It does wake a large difference in both the quanti ty and quality of the butter produced.— Hence we have always insisted that cows for the dairy, and especially cows that are kept for furnishing the family with milk and cream, he nut excited to the detriment of the quality of the milk. In the case of these law , ' cows, the strippings are of sense , - cioence as furniahlug milli for eoffeo, etc., nearly equal in i ichness to the cream itself. Dr. AntlC;rson. of Edinburgh, Sootlniad,who has t:n inq:ll attention to subjects eon• m f e;cd with milk, has proved by actual an tildt the ht.l, gill of milk drawn from the mitier of it cow contains 'sixteen times the rat/mint of cream -incident to the first one, the separation of the •cream from the milk takinLt lam.: in part in the udder, par in.stanees where the animal is suffered to stand at rest for some time bi 3 fore milkiug.-- ITC:eta/74 Rural. 11.11.0W.N . sCcrAlt , ru • ter to the Ht-raid of Health says: 'lt stir prh.lal me to see your correspondent's reef ()mien:l:llion to use. brown sugar in the preparation of food. I queried whether lind ever seen the process of the manu facture mid relining of" sugar. Dots she i.now thati brown sugar means, simply and s4lelyonoro. and dirty sugar ? Doea she comprt, rid the quality and nature of the dirt NI constitutes its brownness? Thies she know that the pure loaf, crushed; or inanulatid sugar is not only perfectly free i rout dirt, and is incapable of adulteration ; but is much cheaper,puund by pound, even at the slight additional price usually charg ed it, than brown sugar of any grade, - because, you buy no dirt or moisture, but pure saccharine 'natty. ? Does she know that the notion that brown sugars are sweet er than white is a pure faney,_and that the conti ary ie true ? I suppose We aro peak and all ilestined to eat OUT peak Of dirt anon ear or later, but there ial dirt and dirt—and save us from the dirt thatAuakes brown au gar brown:;' _ . _ STA - MU G AND iron shirt bosoms as usual, and what articles are thoroughly dry, place time on a narrow, hard and very ' board, which has one thickness of cotton cloth over it, sewed tightly; have the "pol ishing iron" heated so that it will not swab, and rub it. quick and hard over the surface, up and down the bosom, using only, the roucitl4 pat t on the trout of the iron. A still higher polish may he obtained by pass ing a clamp cloth lightly over the smooth sdtb,, , l and then rubbing hard and quiokly cc ith the hot iron. It needs a food .deal of I.:ltient practice to do this admirably, but it is crowned with success, and when once kal lied is as: easy as other ironing. A "pol ishing iron" is small and highly polished, i li :t rot:n(1(A part which allows'all the it jc ; tjoi l to come on a small-part at one time, which develops the gloss that, may be in both linen and starch. These irons may be had let about seventy-five. cents each; one is sufficient Ica' a family. collars and earn; look nicely done in this ccay. WHAT UNDEFIDILKINING DollB.—lt dries the soil. It moistens it. It makes it per oni, and therefore mellow at the touch of the plow. it makes the land work easier. It war ,s the ground in cool weather, and cools i 4 in over hot weather. It is earlier in the spring and later in the fall in tillable condition. It assists the frost to a greater extent during the winter; is indispensable to grow grain sucees&fully, and grass that , makes good butter and cheese. It is the cure of malaria; makes a country warmer; increases the value of land. It stands the heavy rain, without harm, passing off the sui plus water and ,retaining its fertility. It will hear stock on' it earlier in the season, arp! sooner without harm after a rain. It is a comfort to know you have it. But, it muit he done well,*else there is a loss, often the loss of the whole labor. To Plefttr; ONIOYS —The following mods is ti .4. , 0d one: Take those that are small, peel ihuni, put them in cold water, chang ing the - m' talee a day, for two days; then pm, them in t;alt, and water for two days, Changing them tw icc a day; drain them well; lake tit the next skin; put them in jars, and spec and pepper them as for other pickle;; then boil vinegar and pour it, hot, over them. Pet a ',small piece of alum In the vinegar, whichl makes them firm., If you like, them red, add cochineal or :white vint,gar. Ijan73 WHOLE .NO. 1,030. Leavedand 'Their Uses. tit:11101131.ED Eaos.—Melt a tablespoonful of lama in a Saucepan; beat the yolks of Ay; ergs a few miautes;_ thou add to them tnlneapoonful, of milk and - .a tablespoon of salt; beat a little longer and pour them •icto the melted - butter•. When they thicken. slightly, pour in the whites unbeaten, ana n,ix them ',with the yolks carefully wiih a fork, and serve on pieces of toast in a, hot (dish, or if: preferred, omit the, bread. The whßtea should'not be beaten in hard, only stirred with the fork; enough to mix slightly with the rest. • RAw BEFy FOR CiIILDRITX—Take half a pound of juicy beef, free 'from any fat; mince it up very iinely,,then rub it, into a smooth pulp either in a mortar or with au ordinary potato-smasher. , 6pread a little out Upon, the plate and sprinkle over it some or some; sugar, if the child. prefers It. 'Give it with it teaspoo4 Or upon t buttornti aline of stale broad. It makess u ear.ggilia4 Pciii 404E0 1 4 $4O 4ilatiAT
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