“HISS of i»®sl bat tSlJT™ 5 bubd* par un, .ad f don't think Vml /S“I did*"not go down foTtSi «xtni inch. X fmrad u I kept on nnUl I got down 15 or 30 iocho., the .tr»w would grow 18 or 30 foot high, and that wontaUnd tho atonna of kDnneooU; bat it wa want long «traw and boatw whoat, w» nmat plow doap. . One inoh deeper mohTMr ia plenty, and if thin role ia followed atriotly. our farma will be in good condition 10C yeara to come.—
& XW «o«»r. A oomapondent of Agricultural write.:
ilafaring
dt the oppoaite ankle cruet of the hoof, the corfc.and there w,to Ml
ahoe, or the heel^ork, i cared by rant, good keeping, and h rubbing of the lega, thna ahowing
“ " - When
w Sbrfe
inch a caae the hoof abonld be , y on the ontaide aa much aa ia aafe, the ahoe actant on the i '' • ‘ho bearing of the foot don each aide from the oeu_„ — .. iKaEnitte-s a reputation of ahoeing interfering K "~ * “■—‘--Ithiaplan ho chalk
The average weight of a quart of milk when atrained and oooled ia 2 nonnde 2| onnee. Bieh milk wrigha lee. thai poor milk. Preaident Grant kaepa a fow'bow. oi the gronpde of the White Honae, and i them uTuie aamo"forr' 00ntl0ll< ' ^ 111,110 A'B,”’ ‘
tx 1UXUJ puou c ingTtmmeJ'SSi .^'rthebutteT Whan it ia daairable to raiao ealre. for milker* they abonld not have mm^ket does not exoeed fire per cent. S* ulfi f, 0 ** ‘ 3 , i ® ca3t thing to get in ttewhole line of fanner,' prodoo. ia bypoori doeanot
fighting after eating their grab. When I got thia meeeage it made
me aid aa though I acted for Allen David, and I expected him to join me
Allen David waa ahraya pushing p, and the Klamath chief, aaid -Jans. Thar Hiked aa though A1 David we. a big chief. »aaidthatwe ' not think the KUmatha wan the trouble and did all theMhting, and be did none.' It looka aa though they d to get me into thia acre pc. want you to know why I oommeneed i war. laat winter, — **— T —* Kiver, Applegate H. Bn aaid the lag chief waa oc
day, and held no talk or oonnciL I d —• axpeot that. I waa aalaep. I to. , a not to ahoot when my boya got gnna. ^The aoldlere ahot the flrat
began to fire upon
■J people acme of my boya '—*-
did not. I took my thing., aataal could to get away,
Old Sohonehea. on the re.erv.tion, aaid he had nothing to aay himaelf, only he brought, *
David.
As to Gan. Oanby’s things that be had i, ha aaid: “leant aay anything about it. I cut away. The boya who killed Gen. enby got the thing.. I waa thara. ant off aa aoon aa I found I could J^ack being interrogated, aaid furti “ Bogus Charley and Shook Nasty m called Gen. Canby. Allen David I vised them to kill Gen. Canby, so he did K. lam telling the truth. I did not kiU him. I had it done, bat did not Ha says in oonolnaion: “I don't lie. Bring the men that taw mo do thia thing. I want to bee them. If I had my chain, off I would tell all the men who did these things." Sohonehea said he did ahoot at Moslem, bat nil the Modoce knew he was poor shot, and oouldnt hit anything. Getting up a Failure. In Chios - jich had — ranchee in the leading cit i country. There people had bunt a pretty extensive. boeii! ’ >11 capital, and their credit ’__They planned, grandewindle.
— i Hunwhu air with a terrible velocity, and b ew of their bodice .track the ground
heavy “thud” waa plain!Ulrich, of SpringriUn, it u
down astride of oaw pice .. . while Lewis fell headforemost, with
itatretebed aa though diving into Sickened by the eight, the pari witnessed the oceurrenee asood perfectly horrified. Arouai their lethargy tkby ran to the i of the painters. Lewis Bred
difficulty, while both Frey and Ulrich yere found to be insensible. Medical asaiataooe waa promptly procured for. the living, while the hotly of yonng Lewis waa tenderly laid on a board and oarried to the house of Ida agonised, wife and parents, to whom the -“•< telUgwneo had already been cot Ulrich lingered in intense agony five o'clock in the evening, when i -i.i—■ ai_ .. u Frey, we are a survive the jhjnrioa being A sad scene was bronght about when he inquest waa ready W be hold. Mr. r. T. Lewie, the father of Joseph Lewis, .a the deputy coroner for the Ooetreville district, bat when he was —" - ’ upon he oonld not perform 'he „ —ipreeUing a _ jury and going through
of Mi
district might be ealletl form the duty, whieli request plied with, the deputy of the * tonville district responding. The jury rendered a verdict of “accidental *- ” * tin doingao they am Samuel Gross, the “I
The nailer
i but a bad ipeting with such an tage would bare no ohanoa at ; dial hla wtla are tenfold tougher than the former. As it ia, " poor man follow snail but houeleas vi lion, and are condemned to lira in < ‘ nnrd hand-gripa with poverty. In the deys ef President Madison and Monroe, and even later, straw bonnetmaking, waa practiced in every middleclass honae where there wheo growing families, and straw-plaiting formed the staple of domestic leisure work. At my grandfatber'a, around ttr — r^’c&'sL.ipi gaping ohimney, wnd Wo boya, who orowdod upon tha aettlo, used to paws winter evenings sptitiiag straws, while were dRneta, oove heed with a margin of a fool sreU-ahapeil^reeeaih’iii which dimpling amUea and^witehing^rorla^ nestled in will never reappear, unleaathe whirligig of fashion ahoaldgtide.'-‘-‘ u ‘ *— c "
challenge faun, which he accordingly did. Mr. Lincoln, althocgb not an advocate of duelling, did not tee how bo oonld consistently ref os# the challenge, sod so accepted it—naming broadaworda aa the weapons. He had
The duel waa to take place at ant the succeeding day. itr. Lincoln _ his second were flrat on the ground •elected; and finding some bnahea in **"• Way, Mr. L. commenced outting 4 away with a hatchet. 'While —
engaged, Gen. Shields
CoL Hardin. The laitet with the energy with which Mr. Lincoln engaged, that he oonld not repi — mirth. Mr. L. looking up, at o perceived the Indieronaneaa of K Son, and joined heartily in h. Explanations ensued, and they returned to towrAogetber without fight-
wen ever afterwards firm
editor bee formed the habit of carefully projecting the plan of his next inur, whether it is a daily or weekly, the frnita of the'system become speedily apparent. He fin da that his work ia done better, and done more easily. A higher end la also reached. The effect of adopting a system in his daily labia manifested in the whole character his paper. It no longer appears pt pose less and drifting towards vacantA motive becomes evident in all whi be writes, or causes to be written, prepared for print. The habit adopted aa a convenience for the regulation of labor, in the end begets oonacienoa and principle, which dictate or inspire every
A Mother’* Tact.
The mother waa sewing bnai nae eitting on the carpet beak ■d provided with dull, round) ton and acme old magazines, wi aa busily cutting out pictures.
■'Itwin littertb
andalgua forve
a hast Presidential election at' m naturally excited s greet deal
painter, in securing inch inferior lumber, bat earn "offset” to thia wo are informed that he waa nnjnsUy eenanred, from the feet that he had nothing to do -*“■ the proenring of the Inr 1 -—
The following i« the form at the decnation finally adopted by the English “— with regard to the meaning
A in fora oozy chat.
Mamma knew thia; but ehe knew, too. that a few mlnutee work wonld make all right again, and Josie wa ff/w’ent well till the little boy foun he had cut off the leg of e hone he cor sidered e marvel of beauty. It was reel disappointment and grief to th
little one.
he!d*i*nn°*’ “* ’ ““ luJt ' a7inK ' he “Play he'e holding np one foot,
mother aaid, quickly.
" Do real horses, mamma?"
“What eflbot has removing
'~m the night'* milk upon the quality 1 of cheese made?" waadia-
T -“~—» County (Ni
foiling the fs<
in cash. The —-louse wrote to the merchant, requesting him to forward M —t and grain to the Chicago firm'* eatabliahment in NswOrioana, draw on ths parent house *~
Scripture, — which from time to time have arisen in
tha ChnreK'of Christ.
“2. That Holy Scriptnre in divers place* doth promiae life to them that behave, and declare the necessity for all who wonld be in a state of eelva of holding fast the Oatbolio faith. • v i greet peril of rejecting the same, ao fa the Chnrch in tins Confession de---v .. . nbo vould be —i of bolding fast . Christian faith, and the great peril
rejecting the same.
'‘Wherefore the warning* in this Oonfesaion of Faith are to be understood
the xiahicit „ already exist The queetion as to who shall yote is detarmthed in each State by local law. The decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the
"la pofo,
be con-
I will" .And sunahine ehaaed away the cloud that in another minute would
have rained down.
little thing, the mother’s
—- ... — tha quick sympathy, the ready tact made all right The boy's heart waa comforted and he went on with his play, while tha mother sewed quietly, with no jar of nerve* or temper,
~’Uo*t non* of ita ~'~-
ma," said Joeie, "Well, get . - - bite of paper for wood, eni to bring me e load. Drat bat corner bv the fire, and ito the kindling box, pley
Tta SKimoii. CoxvmcsD.—Every Ivanoe in Medicine, every new remed - haa encountered an opposition, whit la the test of truth. Galen and Jenni iW ware believed when they had proved etr discoveries against opposition, out men are observing, ami benefits always make believers. No inrrednlit can stand the silent argument of goo
1 result*. When Dr. Walker prodaime
•t he had produced from the mod *1 herbs of California an Elixir that would regenerate the sinking ayatem and cure diseases not organic, the incredulous shook their heeds, let his Vixzoib Bittem ia now the Standard irative of the Western World. The could not be resisted. Under the operation of the new remedy, Dyspeptic* regained their health, appetite and strength, the Bilious and Constipated —ere relieved of every distreaaing aympim ; the Consumptive and Rhon—''" ipidly recovered ; Intermittent Remittent Fever* were broken np . taint of Scrofula waa eradicated I Who oonld gainsay facta, like these ? f even the Faculty. Skepticism ' routed. AH'doubts aa to the claime __ the Bitten to the flrat place in the first rank of modern medicines were silenced, and this wonderful preparation iato-day **■ at popular Tonic, Alterative, and Depnrent ever advertised in a. In common with other journal lata, wo are free to add onr testimony *- remedy. It is e 1 “ *-
' household
ine, and n mt it Co
id should bewith-
Dr. J. F -gar Bitters are a purely Vegetable - pnratton, made chiefly from the nai herb* found on the lower nuigse of Sierra Nevada mountain* of Cullfor- , die medicinal properties of which . extracted thersirom without the use .1 Alcohol. The "queetion Is almost hilly naked. “What la the cause of the mparalleled aucecae of Vixxoab BitrKssf" Our euawer Is, that they remove •he cause of disease, and the patient re- . health. They are the great blood purifior and a life-giving principle, a pernct/ReDOTirtor and inrlgenlor of the ayatain. Never before In tb* hittcry of tha world haa a BMdMna bean ccmpoondad' posaeaaing the remarkabla -inahilM of Vraaozm Bimma is haallag tha "ck of every diasaaa maniaUlrta they is a gentle Purgative sa wdjha a Toole; ilieving Cougsation er Intmnmatlan of in Liver and Tboaral Organs, In Bilious The properties of Dm WaunM VinoaaBirresa are ApulMd. DlartienlH Carminative, Xutrlllooi, Laxative. Dlursdn Sedative, Cuunler-Irrilaat, Budoaifio. Alunliiiuieiui i miusanils proalnlmVnr-
No Person can take these Bitters according to directions, and remain long unwell, provided their hone * -*- stroyod by mineral polauu u, uuier means, and vital organs wasted beyond repair. Billons, Remittent and Intermittent Fevers, Which are ao prevalent In tile vallcya of our great river* throughout the Diitted States, especially those of tbo Mississippi, Ohio, MlHoori, .Iimiois, Teiinciaec, Cumberland, Arkanana. Bed, Colorado, Brazos, Flo Grande, Poarj, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Roanoke, dames, and many others, with vast tributaries, throughout our i country during the Summer and Autumn, and remarkably so durlngaeasons of onusual heat and dryness, are Invariably accompanied by extensive dojments of the stomach and liver, >tbcr abdominal viscera. In their
How to Cure a Jealous Husband, There >■ » men in this city who ia itelv fond of hi* wife, that L_
i looka within forty-
pjnuat be notified el the plan, and ao the Ohioago prim' ' wrote to hi a New Orleans partners, I E.-3a, , s a u ,i'ni.&.2 . hng the commiaaion merchant's c. " fisim^aTSs;
of the United State*. Aa anch, - -ntitled to —v - . of tha Ui not confer ths right of voting in any given State. Who shall vote in a given State ia determined by ita laws. Mass*-
ho liad. it would break my heart.' hapa we ought not to interfere in thia matter; but, as we know exactly what ■- •»— With the young man, we ght to apeak ' *' reason with hir him togseify hinn^The rexl •ecurely upon hi* no**, lead him off to the dining-room, and ask him in a firm voice what b* mean*. H he won’t anaImrt h’ilh^d to loy* yon, let your finger* dall
I prond, tli •ter drew loed after load I were ell picked up, wit thfnlrfeg fas was doing anything bnt Pl *^Wel!, m declare,” aaid Aunt I “old aa I am, I've leaned ; to-day, and I wish Emily would in and take leeaona, I do. Five Deaths Caused by a Sun Fish. The ann fish is a large see fish, yielda in the average about *100 worth of and is SO called from ita habit of ' g on the surface of the water and ring in the rays of the nan. It ia ctimea caught with hook and bait, ia generally harpooned. A few week* ago a hardy crew of flahermen from Shark If'—’ - - - - - of these fish. They succeeded in spearing him, after which, for three or four *■' kapt carrying t! '
had pulled it
gtfa the ere
him up, and were about to the gunwale of the boat What then followed is beat told by Mr. Brady, the InsiMcitor of Irish Fisheries, in these _. _ - harpoon ia driven i him, ao that he may bo well seen fore and aft; the fish gets restless: me ooil of the first harpoon snap*, the head is free. Away be dashes, dragging ot'
him the eoil at aneh a rate that: ■ more than two inches into the gun>o? the boat; it eetehea in thelega
hia comrade* hy to aavo liim ; the boat goto a sadden heel over with the strain,
nine men ere precipitated into the r, five of them never to rise again; __ men are picked i ’ ’
ed by the aeoond bo
it hand. Theyhanl 5 „ went overboard with the poor man at the stern, end there he la found—dead, rJ
five degrees of tlio direction in which •he may happen to be. The other day a gentleman spoke to her and ho immediately threatened anicide. Hia wife was dispatched for a bottle of poison which she had put np at the druggist'oonsisting of a little water colored wil liquorice, and bottled, with a glaring poison label ontaide. When he threatened to take*eomo of it, and actually loured it into a wine glare, »*■“ ——- id for help and ran jnto sue rhere she oonld watch him through the key-hole, and saw him coolly open the window and threw it out She then roahed back, apparently frantic with grief, and implored him not to r the nah deed. He merely pointed the glare, and lying down or **-- *
began to kick ont hia legs lil ing-jack. She told him she
mined to share hia fate, and avail)
' of the liquorice water, wl
■he explained the ruse, anf hi mortified he tried to buy up thi alienee of the neighbors, but the atorj was teo good to keep.- He iajhoroaghly eared.—TUtuvilUs (Pa.) iSratd.
PAIN I PAIN I
-VgKgaciaa.-ta.*, .35K5w£SEs=S"S
by* student of the French Oollega of Bta.Barbe. Being missed by hia root mate in Ui* night, and hia partiality made for him, wil
viaiS’Sisst,
|yatam tli_. Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Headbc, Pain in Urn Shoulders, Coughs, ghtness of the Cheet, Dizziness, Sour “• inch, Bad Taate ttucks, Palpitaimmation of the
Scrofula, or King’s Evil, Whit# Iwelliaza, Ulcera, EtyatySas, Swvllisl Keck, Joltre, bcrofuloas Xollandaattore, Indolent

