GKEEX MOUNTAIN FREEMAN, JIONTPELlEIt.VT, llali-p in the Brick Block. Houd of Htoto Street. THUMB! 1.50 if paid In advance; otherwise, $2.00. 1'a yuiont may bo muds by mail or otherwise, to H. H. WUKELOCK, Editor aud Proprietor. Tlii FitF.KMA n . midi,r tlie rooent law of OoUKress circulates free in Washington County. Ou all papem sent outside B'asliiiiirtoii County, the nostaire ia paid by tiiu publiHhor at the office in Moutpelier. TERMS FOR ADVF.lt I ISINU. 1'-'" U'UIV Ii' lf .1, (f ltf t VUt OTift ti M-i.in. At fr . t.itiw..,nu-it (pupi'Mo , 26 ct. Ji'imhIj - r.'iilior nf I si-i'H'.ii 'i r ninrlm-l mi Mm nyV':- -4 t v' i... f...,11:U. 1 ii .til r.. I ..-it rtl hf(tiPit lilfl'U? tl MIDI CU;i UU Bllil 'llllfM'H H'tvur Mi -f nj tne y nr. I'Mlijite bd'-I Oiiuiijif HtuMra' NotfucH, $: V!T. Nottci-aof Uhenitimi, KHirnyR, tii Kormitlr.u md DlHboliiMniiof OOM'urtiiprtliii..i, utf imrh tor tnr. luttfinioiiB. If uuut by umil ta luuuay nuiHt uc company the letter. Xntieen In tiflwa oolt.mnMOewntu per Hue encli inner tloii, but iio ciwtxoH uiuilo of lens thaii WceiiU. NrttiPfB of rpthfl anrl Marrlairai lusorted trrnthi, hut nxtendMd Ohltiiarv NoticHH of Poetry will be churifwtl at the rate of 6 utmta por Jiue. VOL. MONTPELIER, VT., WEDNESDAY, JULY 4, 1883. NO- 27. XJj. jioxri'ixiHii, vr: WEDNESDAY, JULY 4, 18H3. Sunday School Lesson Notes. l'.Y KEY. .1. O. SHEIIBuHN. July 5tli: Tub 1'laiuB of .lerirho Joshua 6:10-0:1-0. As llio children of Israel h:irt now escaped the condemnation which cnrue upon llio generation that came out o Ejiypl because of thoir perverseness, it wus time for them to renew their covenant relations with Jehovah. It appears that during thoir wanderings they hail not cnitiuticd the observance of tho p:ssover even. Much less had thoy kept the cmitiiand to circumcise their children hence a generation had arisen who were nit in a literal sense God's people, tbey had never received the rito by which then men were admitted to covenant relations with God. Admitted to the chinch, we say. As toon as tho people had passed into tlio lam! promised to them, they began n"ain to observe tho ceremonies and set- vices (3d had enjoined upon them. They k 'pt the passover on the appointed day at even in", their own flocks doubtless fur nishiiiLr Iambs for the feast. Then on the diy following they began to cut of the product", of tliu now land upon which they had entered. Critics declare that we are misled by the rendering "old corn Thev say that nothing in the original wild li as any veleronue to the crop of the former year; but rather that the indication is that on llio day after the passover, ticonrding to the command in Lev. 23:10 14, they offered the first fruits of the current harvest to tho Lord, and on the next day they began to eat the same. The fuurtcenih day at even, we should say the night of the fourteenth, was oiuidered with them a part of the fifteenth day. Then on the 10th day they began to cat of tho products of tho land which had been abandoned by tho fright ened naii.es. t will be remembered that the Jevi-h year began with tho passover month, Exodus 12:2, so it is said that they did cat of tho fruit of tho land of Canaan that year. As was onlv natural, I lie supply of manna ceased when they began to find a supply from the soil of the land given them. Though God is freo with his bounties, ho does not waste anything needlessly. lie had fed his people with the corn of Heaven, and as lie was now supplying them with tho fruits of the earth tho sti) ply from above is withheld. Ii-.it Israel are now in tho laud to conquer It, and God would have them ready for their arduous work. It is necessary that their leader, Joshua, should In just as thoroughly lilted for his work, and lnarlo just as courageous in it as may b. Ho, as the narrative would indicate, while he was in tho plains of Jericho, probably making plans for the attack of that strongly fortified town, there appeared suddenly before him in the way a man with a drawn sword. Joshua, seeing the warlike habiliments of the stranger npprojchcd him with the question "Ar1 th iuforrs or for our adversaries?" The question was oniy a natural one for a practical soldier. Ho saw a man in armor, and wished to know whether he was friend or foo. The answer, "nay," was calculated at a check upon tho earthward thoughts of Joshua, and a preparation for the disclosure which his visitant was to make. The answer virtually was, "I am neither friend or foe as you understand tho matter, r.ot man at all, but captain of the host of the Lord." At this announcement Joshua ft 11 aduringly beforo the heavenly dignita. rv, and in the spirit of ready obedience asked: "What sailh my Lord unto his servant? It is interesting to notice the similarity of di.-positiun manifested by Joshua in this early time, and by Saul on li is way to Damascus ; both make the same eager inquiries to the way of duty, and both reverently acknowledge the authority of tho heavenly presence which addressed them. More than this, there can be little doubt that both theso men were met by the same divine person. To Paul it was particularly dttlarcd "I am Jesus whom thou perseculcst j" and we find in this case that Jcshua worshipped this Captain of Hi3 host of the Lord, and that worship was accented without remonstrance. Again wo find in this immediate connection that fin Loid is speaking to Joshua, and that witlie.ii', any intimation that Ihore has b:en a change of person upon the scone. Beyond all these considerations it is to be noticed that the same mark of reverence is demanded of Joshua on this occasion us was demanded of Moses when God appeari d to him in the burning bush. To both it was said, "out off thy shoes from tiiy feet." From these considerations we eo:.e!udt that this Captain was nono other than lie who is now termed the Captain of our salvation, tho Lord Jesns Christ. lie it was who was with his people in the wilderness, and now he comes to give encouragement to his people, nay more to assume ill -it-leadership in person. Since then Canaan is not to bo conquered by human prowess or stratagem, wo may lok for some plans such as man would not niak'-. The inhabitants of the country about ,Ici ieho, hi aring of the wonders wiougbt at Jordan. (Many of them doubtless ccing the same) were filled with fear and sought relngti in the city which was woll walled. lint the enemies of God are no safer within walls than without them. Ii is God's power that gives coherency and strength lo stone and masonry, and when In- chooses to relax that bower thev fall r, 7ueecs in a moment. Now while God a 'f unit's leadership of his people, while he pians and executes, he would have their ulieilii nt co operation. So he gives ordors to dosha. i as to the part tho people are lo lake in the siege. Ho gives them only so much to tin as will prove thoir obedience, while he pledges lo secure the victory for them il they obey. Bettor to accept the 'livine leadership, I hough his methods Mf.ni strange, than to go any warfare at our own charges, Hotter walk round and round a city at God's command though no results seem to follow, than to rush madly into au undertaking without llio divine guidance. Success. Swarms of young men and women urn just graduating from our public schor ls and colleges, a great major ity of whom must go to work at oneo and earn a living. .Many of them have aiready selected their vocation. Others have not made a decision, and have no lookout. Most of these young graduates are moro or less anxious concerning Iheir fu uro All of them desire to he of tho happy numher who succeed in lifo. It is n great thing to succeed. A fail success in business is worth all it common ly cosls of devotion and industry. And thoro is, at least, ono way by which sue cess may ordinarily he obtained; and that Is by learning how to do somnthin" Hint people want done; by doing it woll and striving each day to do it better. II you are a doctor, you should seek (o be the best doctor of your neighborhood. Even if, you soli lisli. you should bo sure lo deliver them fresh, in nico order, at the most convenient time, and for a fair price. Yours should bo tho neatest store, where tho promptest attention is given to cus tomers, and where the greatest variety of U'li sola in your neighborhood can be found. If you uro so unfortunate as to publish a paper, never rest until you have made it tho best of its kind in the world. You probably never will placo it at the head, but you must always seek for that rosult. If you do your paper will be a success. Sixty years ago, l'oter Cooper kept a little grocery store in the Bowery, New York, within a few yards of tho snot where the Cooper institute now stands. A man came into his store one day, and said, i built a gluo factory lor my son. He can't make it go. I'll sell it to you for two thousand dollars." Upon inquiry, Peter Cooper found that all tho best gluo came from Russia and brought a high price, while tho slue made in New York was verv poor stuff', and was sold at a rate that forbade all chance of prolit. Ho said to himself. Why can't gluo be made as good in quality here in America as in Kutsia? 1 think it can be. I'll try." Ho bought the factory. Then he commenced studying tho processes by which glue is made. Ho tried endless experiments; superintended every boiling himself; kept trying for years, always improving his product, until Peter Cooper's giue coinmantiea tno inirtiest mice, and literally ruled the market. hat lie did with glue, Gillot with nons. Jonas Cbickering with the piano, Fair- bunks Willi scales; and, il you succeed fairly and hansomoly, you must do just so Willi somiuuwj. American Agriculturist. Tltl'H WOllTll. liv Al.n-K OAHY. Trim worth Is boliu, not soeminjf- iu (l'iti etich day that iroes by Sonic little irood, not in dreaminir or tfrout thiuifS to do by.aud-by, l-ur whatever moil say In their blindness, And soito of the fauclei of youth, There Is nothing so kindly as kluduoss, And uothinif so royal as truth. A Header's Complaint I have never wished that I had been born in somo other century than the linetcenth. Our age, ii not a i-ietnte-riiie one, ami 1 think it has Is picturesque aspects is, without dmilil. tho most comfort iblo lo live in, take it on the whole, the world has yet known. Il seems to me that persons of rational mind and humane uisposiiion cannot be loo thankful to belong to it, for it is hard to see how persons could ever havo enjoyed lie in earlier limes as union as we of the latost days can. The world haj certainly gone forward and tho feature of its prog ress mat l eiiieny rejoice in is its advance n humanity. 1 be elder world-the world but a veiy little elder Ihan our own was such a terrible cruel one! The only objection to living in the present time that I know of is the increas ed quantity of tilings ono must know. ighteen century people riuln t havo to read Lecky's history of their times in four volumes, or a hundred thousand other books it now st ems obligatory upon all cultivated persons to acquaint themselves ilh. Now-a-days one is required to read a small library every year, if one would have ova n a smattering of knowledge on the various subjects that invite an intelli- gent man's interest. llio specialists, in tho ivbundan ic of whom wo glory, carry investigation so far lorward, each in his own, line that the general reader cannot hope to do more than accept a number of hings at second hand, or be content to have no understanding at ail. It is hard to esign one's self to ignoraneo of so many ntcrcsling matters, and vet that is what one seems driven too. One finds that the first tiling to learn is "how much need not no known,'' which is perhaps a sort of sour graces wisdom attainable. SipUmber Atlantic. Ingratitude. It is an old Baying that if you do a man nineteen favors, and for any reason decline to do the twentietn, he will forget the nineteen requests that you have granted, and only remember tho one tbat you have refused and for that refusal ho will hate yon for ever after. This is true of somo men ; il is true of mean and narrow nature -, it is not true of all It is as natural for a noble soul to cherish a lively recollection of kindnesses received, as it is to breathe. And while we are often shocketl to see acls of friendship toward others, which have cost us a good deal of time nnd of labor, entirely over looked and forgotten, we not unfrcijtiently, on the other hand, are surprised by the grateful reciprocation of some favor long since rendered, and the very performance of which had passed from our own recol lections, until reminded of it by the recip ient. We have always regarded gratitude as a feeling which is hardly susceptible of being taught to any one. A lecture on grati! tutle, to whomsoever addressed, instead of awakening that emotion, is very apt to engender a feeling of indignation anil hatred. People never like to be told to be grateful. And it is of no use to tell them. If it is not natural to the soul to appreci ate the good nature of others it can never be taught such appreciation. Thoro was uioro than a joko in the sug gestion of tho witty and caustic English reviewer, that ho never read a book before reviewing it, because the reading nn'i'ht prejudice him. The severest critioismsTof any gootl work usually come from those who are poorly informed at the very point of their criticism. This is pre eminently the truth in itilidcl criticisms of the iiihle. A striking illiistratralion of it is given in a recent "review of his reviewers" by ihc most blatant ot American infidels. He says of llio manuscripis of tho New Testa meiit: "They are ail written in Greek. I he disciples of Christ knew only Hebrew.'' Yet as a matter of fact, it is a question if any one of the twelve apostles could read Hebrew, or write it. 1 he Septuagint, or common version of the "Hebrew Scrip tures," in their day was in Greek; and the Hebrew proper the Hebrew of the Old Testament was then actually a dead language among the Hebrews of Palestine. But of couse Ihe inlidcl "reviewer" is ignorant on such a point ns this. That was lo be expected. Tho priuio cause ol infidelity is sin; the secondnry cause is "hinvlnciblo higiiorancc." S. S. Time. A Lightning Ryclcle Ride. Our irinc, the Spondulix of Colorado, was I ho highest of the range. It was 2070 leet above Silvor Brick station, and nine miles distant from the village. From the works up lo tho mines there was a broad, hard, smooth road, used for carting ore tlown from the mines and hauling supplies up. The average grade down the mountain was 300 feet to tho mile; in some places it was steeper, and at intervals almost level. By constant practice I managed at last to rido my ,i2-inch university roadster up the whole slope to the Spondulix, of course resting itt levels, but my chief delight was the coasting down again; it required sum, a gooa deal ol nerve and a lirm grasp ol the Drake. Ono evening an accident occurred to one of tho men at the mine. I instantly got out my bicycle, explaining tliatl could goswift er than a horse down the slope. In a few minutes I had on my riding suit and was oil. the night air was clear and crisp; the full moon, except in a few curves, shone directly into the gulch, lighting up the road. Leaning well back, with my legs oyer tho handles and a firm finger onlhe wane, l allowed tue wneef to glide down the first long slope at a speed which I had never dared venture before. Finding the motion safe, I allowed the machine to run faster und stili faster. Over the first level I shot like an arrow. Down the next slope I seemed lo glide with the rushing wind. Then I turned a curve and ran into llio shadow of the mountain upon the next level. Knowing every inch ol the road however, I did not slacken my speed, except very slightly. As I Hew over the top of the next slope, a sleep plunge of nearly half a mile, another curve completely shut out the moon, making the road almost as dark as a pocket. Hero I put down the brake hard and checked my speed materially. Still I knew the road so well that I bud no fear. But just as I was on the steepest pinngo of tho slope- Clink: Something flew from the machine like a bullet. Instantly the wheel darted forward like the rush of a frightened brd, while tho brake lever came home to the steering bar under my linger. The brake hail broken short off at the elbow! There was nothing to check Ihe ma chine, which was running away with me, with over live miles of mountain grade before me, and tho chance of meeting a team at any moment in the tlark. I might have leaped backward off the machine at the instant of the break, but fivo seconds afterward it was too late. To attempt to dismount would be certain death. There was nothing to do but slick to the saddle and take my chances. When ihe accident happened to Ihe brake I was just en ering a dark curve in the shadow ot the luountain. The wall on my riglu appeared a dark, almost invisible brown, while the chasm on my left was of an inky blackness. As I rounded the hollow of the curve I could see iho moonlight shining lar ahead on the point of the elbow which I ruunt turn where the road was channeled into the wall. As I approached it I had tho sense and neiye to run on tho outer side of the road, close to tho edge of the canyon, thu; giving myself as broad a turn as possible I found by the track of the wheel afterward that at the sharpest turn I had actually ridden within three inches of the extreme etlgo for several rods, where, if I had been going at a less fearful speed, the wheel wouid certainly have slipped over the edge and carried mo down a fall of 1000 feet. Safely past this, tho worst point, tho remaining curves were easy. Inns far there hail been no lime to think. My actions were more instinctive man reason ing. My mind was a wild, confusod whirl of sensations and fears. Hut now, as I shot down the last steep incline, i suddenly experienced a ternb o mental shock. It was caused by hearing tne tinkle ot a bell lar below anil seeing the spaik of a lantern such as the mine teamsters carry in front of their wagons There was a team, perhaps a train of teams coming up ihe road! In a few seconds I should be upon them. The shock made me think, and that clearly. If the teamster was walking beside his team lie would be on the inside, next to the mountain wall, und the team would be in the middle of the road. If he was riding, the team would be kept near the mountain wall at a safo distance from tho outer edge of the track. Kither way my best chance wus to pass on the outside. As approached, therefore, I ran close to the outside edge of tho track, and flew by in safety, hearing the teamster shout as I did so. neroiiwas nicKy inai l was going at such speed, for the teamster saw the red light of my lantern yvhen I was nearly a mile distant, and, recognizing it at once, lie started nis team towards tne outermost edge of Ihe road, so as to give me the safest passage on the inside: but I had passetl him before the team could be driven over, otherwise 1 should assuredly nave run into luem. And now ihc wheel rau along the level to the bottom ot the mountain; still my irigniiui velocity ma not perccptlb v diminish. I ran on past the works and into and along the village street. Luckily luo auto, wa wni,n UIIUIJT Willi BHOU ; not enough to make it bad riding, but sulllciently to gradually stop a coasting wheel. My speed slackened perceptibly. Still I ran nearly through the village, and then managed to turn a broad corner up mo slope ot a siuo street, which final v checked my speed so that I ventured to drop my feet cautiously and take the pedals, after touching them as thev came up for a number of revolutions, to help chock uic maciiine. And so I finally stopped and leaped to the ground, exactly in front of Dr. Cam eron's house. On mounting nt the mine house I had looked at my watch after a habit I havo. and now, from the same habit, I looked at it again. i was not astonished to Hud 1 had made tho nine miles from the mine to doctor's in a few seconds less than 13 minutes. Allowing 0 1-4 for the first two miles before tho brake gave way, and I must havo made the last seven miles in less than C 3 1 minutes. I firmlv believe that I covered sevon miles in less than G 1-2 minutes, incredible as such speed seems. Washington National Republican. Kind words produce their own imago in men's souls, and a beautiful image it is. They sooth and comlort the hearer. Thoy shame him out of his unkind feelings. Wo have not yet begun to use thcmin such abundance as they ought to be used. Men siiccringly remark lhat religion is for Iho women. It Is because Christian ity appeals so truly to their innate purity that it finds moro favor with the women than with tho men not from any differ ence of intellect. IiiONist;. Anold handkerchief or piece of Muslin placed between the iron and collar will prevent the sticking. Iron over this until tho dampness slightly ab. foi bod, then remove it and go on as usual, Tho old-fashioned method of stirring the end of a tallow candle in the starch is very satisfactory nnd prevents much annoy, mice, Afc'rlc-iilluriU Chemistry. (A paper read boforo s moetfiia- of the State Hoard of Agriculture by Jl. 11. jjav ol Bradford.! I have called tho caption of this paper Agricultural Chemistry, yet nono of you but may nt some time have taken lip a concert hill nnd have read on the program the announcements "violin solo with variations" and it often happens lhat tho "variations" are the essential part of tho performance; and if I should digress from my subject I trust you will pardon me, even though the digression should prove tho essential part ol this paper. In a former paper wo attempted to treat in a familiar und elementary way of the various organic and inorgtinio elements which contribute to the support anil nour ishment of plant life. As the soil is the grand labratory in which oivilized man works out the problems of lifo and suste nance let us first briefly consider soils. The main constituents of 'all arable lands are clay, loam and sand mixed in varying proportions, and while all these elements me necessary to a fertile soil it is a wull known fact that lands whicii are all clay or all sand are absolutely barren neither one containing enough of tho elements of plant life to support vegetation. A sandy soil is probably regorded by most farmers as the most absolutely worthless of any, and yet this very sand, chemically known as silica or silicio noid, is a very impor tant element in agricultural economy but is one of those things of which enough is as good as a feast and better. Sand or silicic acid at ordinary temper ature is the weakest known acid but put it in llio eruciblo and raise its temperature to the melting point nnd it becomes one of the most powerful. Potash has the power ot dissolving it and making it available for the sustenance of plants anil as ail ol tne cultivated grasses and some of tho grains are silicous plants i. e., requiring a larger amount of silica- potash is a valuable fertilizer for such crops. Iho form in which it is assimilated by the plant is that of a soluble silicate. and this, I believe, is the onlv form in which plants can tako un silica and the rule is that potash can only be assimilated in Ihe same form. The office of the silicates is to form the skeleton of the plant and to give them the strengtli which prevents lodging and without whicii they will nut be able to witnslana the fury of the da or the breath of the zephyr. A plant which did not contain the silicates would be like an animal without bones practically useless. Caustic soda has the same power of forming silicates with sand or potash, and in a less degree common salt probably has the same power. Tho well known fact that sandy soils will not retain a sufficient amount of wntor to nourish vogotation has led to u great ileal of discussion as to whether such lands leach or not. So far as practical results are concerned it does not matter whether your ferlilizeis are carried down by the rain so ntr as nol lo be aval ab o for the support of your crops, or whether thev evaporate or go off in tho air, they are gone in either event, and the power of such lands to retain fertilizing material is ust as llmitod us its power to retain water which is the grand solvent, the universal and only vehicle bv which nil fertilizing material is made available for the procesesof plant life. A soil lhat is not reasonably retentive of water cannot retain fertilizing material well hence it would be poor economy to put tho same amount of fertilizer upon such soils that might be profitably applied to moro reten tive soils the rule with such must be, light and often the nftnnor tho boitor. The properties of clay lire too well known to require mention ; but there is another substance that enters into the composition of nrable lands tho importance of which cannot be too highly estimated in deter mining the value of soils and that is the rich vegetable mold, formed of decaying organic matter nnd technically called humus. By the general term humus, we must understand a mass of brown decaying matter, partly soluble, partly insoluble, partly acid and partly neutral, which with the uninterrupted presenco of air. heat and water may be still further decom posed, and thereby carbonic acid and water are Indispensable to the nourishment of plants hence in a soil rich in humus the plants will grow moro vigorously, because they find there and absorb by their rootlets more of theso nutritive substances than they could in a soil poor in bumus. Moreover this substance exerts a beneficial effect upon vegetation because it loosens the sou by the development ol ctrl'onic acid, because it possesses the power of attracting water from the air and of retaining it for a long time and because of the acids contained in it. it is able to abstract from the air and also from manure, that very essential element in the nourishment of plants, ammonia. The good farmer knows by experience that the humus diminishes in his holds, and the more rapidly as the crops are moro abun dant. He knows the fields rich in humus are more productive than those that are not therefore ho seeks to restore the humus either by manuring or by fallow ing. Tho value of clover as a fallow plant depends upon the large amount of roots which it leaves in the soil which by tneir decay tenu to tne restoration of Ihe humus. When vour fathers first settled on the lands you till, lliey found a soil ncu in bumus, and which the custom. men prevailing, of burning the limber on the land on which it grew, gave a rich dressing of the soluble alkaline salts, and tney were, lor many years, able to raise without much trouble, such crops as you with your more careful and improved methods of cultivation may hope to equal bat may not hope to excel: but with vou the case is different this dressing of suiuoie sans nas long since gone nnd the uuuiub m mpiuiy uisappenring, ana your lives if you would succeed as farmers must be a constant struselo to renlann hv artificial means the elements vour fathers louuu in aounuance. How must vou do 1.0 T-l 1 ... i . J ur no inorganic elements, viz: potash, lime, soda, phosphorus, etc.. are ennbw ed by some authors the principal ones and a due proportion of them is absolutely necessary to the development of the perfect plant, yet the man who relics wholly on these, might bo likened to tho man who should attcmnt lo rai.sn nn animal all Uones. I know that somo farmers unwittingly meet with tolerable success in the latter attempt and unite ikely wonder how it all happens, but I have never heard such men classed ns succcsslul farmers. And whilo tho inor- ganiu elements must bo supplied to the soil, you must on no account neglect the organio branch of the question. In many fiolds the organio matter is already imm. it is diminishing in all and tho inexora ble law ol sell preservation, demands that in fertilizing your fields vou should pay attention to this matter und should supply ns fur as you may tho loss of organio mailer in the soil. Ihe true theory of fortihzat on consists in applying to the soil a duo proportinn nr all the elements necessary for the nourish ment of plantlife. Any other theory is faulty and imperfect. You can buy tho inorganic na ammoniacai elements of forti zaiinn if you nave mouey enough; but the organic elements, 10 lorm ino humus, without which vour farms must lose their fertilii must be looked for on the farm only. The weakness of the whole system of com mercial fertilization is this: that while it proposes to restore to the soil tho sails, pbosphor!o acid and ammonia taken from' it by cropping it makes no provision for the restoration of the humus, without which nil your efforts must fall. Every farmor knows tbat if an animal were fed only on rich concentrated food that animal would not thrive there must be something fed for bulk. So with yout lands, then must be something for bulk else the best of them will wear out. I would no' condemn altogether the use of concentra ted manures: thev may, and probably do have their place in agricultural economy. out, mat place is, anil in tne nature ol things mnst be, enlirelv a supplementary and subordinate one. Thoy may be, and doubtless are, useful for purposos ol special fertilization, but for general pur poses your reliance must bo In such ferti lizers ns can be secured on the farm, thai is stable manure carefully and freely applied. In the use of such you can make no mistakes as it contains within itself more of the elements of plant food than any other substance used as n ferti I i 7.oi, provided you apply it freely enough. lint in the use of concentrated and com mercial fertilizers it is quite possible to get the right thing in the wrong place and it ono would use these things with eoono my, be must know the exsot needs of his land so as to buy just what he needs and nothing elso If bo needs potash, let him buy potash ; if phosphoric acid, let him buy phosphoric aoid. But vou may ask how shall I know the exact requirements of my land? The limits of a paper like this necessarily preolude au exhaustive answer to such a question it would require a volume for tbat but doctors diagnose ihe diseasos of their patients by the symptoms, and with a little careful study and practice I see no good reason why you should not determine the wants ol your land by the symptoms, and make as few mistakes ns the doctors do. Yon are urged to try experiments with "plots" ot land and note tne effect ol various methods of treatment. That is all right and it is only necessary for mo to urge you to be exact and careful so lhat the results may be something better than mere guess work; but if you will first study the requirements of the various plants and especially the grasses nnd learn the effeot of the different elements of plant food on tho growing plant, you will bo saved from many discouraging failures and will more easily attain that exact knowledge which is the object of your endeavors. And now before we leave this part of the subject I want to ask the man who buys commercial fertilizers, if he is very sure he is saving all the n anure about his own premises that bo might save, If not the money so spent represents only a big leak in his management and I usk him to spend as much in the future in making manures as ho has spent in the past in buying them and I believe he will get a much more satisfactory return this way than in any other. A single dealer in this country sold the past season over eighty tons of ono brand of a commercial ferti lizer, which at forty-five dollars a ton winid amount to the sum of thirty-four hundred dollars und this would indicate that the tulal sales of such in tha country must have been at least $20,000. I ask you to consider for yourselvos how much of lliis large expenditure represents simply tho bi loak and how much ol it was iised with a real knowledge ol the Wants of the crop to which it was applied. I wish now to call your attention to the composition of some of the commer cial fertility's. Take the last report of the Vermont board of agriculture and turn to tho analysis of Prof. Sabin of the different ones found in the Vermont mar ket, and you will find they all consistof phosphoric acid, nitrogen and potash in varying proportions, with organic or inert matter enough to bring up the bulk to the commercial standard. Now bear in mind tho fact lhat bones contain nearly one fourth their weight of phosphorio acid besides gelatino and other carbonio acid and ammonia forming substances: tbat the excrement of fowls is rich in nitrogen, and that tho fertilizing property of ashes Is potash, and you will inevitably come to the conclusion that with a few hundred pounds of old bones nnd a little sulphurio acid lo reduce them a little hen manure aud somo ashes you can at a compara tively trilling outlay make a commercial fertilizer equal to the best in market. It is not many days since one of the best farmers in a neighboring town told me that he had prepared it for his own use with perfectly satisfactory results lhat he should continue to do so and could do il at a very considerable saying of expense; and I am glad to note lhat there seems lo be an increasing disposition on the part of the farmers of this section lo inquiio into these matters nnd see if the nt-cossary fertilizers may not be prepared at home and the neavy outlay lor them saved and I am happy to assure you that with a little time spent in careful experi ment in this direction you will meet wi h perfect success. I wish to allude to another idea lhat has been prevalent among farmers, and that is the notion that ihe value of a fertilizer was in proportion to the vilcness of its smell nothing could be further from the truth it is nol neces sary lhat any fertilizer should emit stench es as ninny and as vile as ever had tho city of Cologne; and Ihe principal effect of such villa.nous smells is only to make your boys disgusted with farm life and farm work. A perfectly prepared fertil izer will be comparatively inodorkss and tho various gases which cause these born- ble stenches will be fixed and absorbed bv cue use 01 me proper agents, it is not many years since we have heard of far mers who mixed ben manure, plaster and asbos and judged from the smell that the compound must be a powerful fertilizer. Such practice is in utter violation of the principles of chemistry, and the smell on which such practitioners dote is from the ammonia set free by the action of the lime ot the plaster nnd represents only so much dead waste ol tho fertilizing material sons your rivers shrink to brooks.the brooks to rills And tho rills dry up altogether why? It is but little more than a oentury since Vermont was covered with the pri meval forest the moisture was mor. equally diffused and the little brooks instead of being raging torrents lor a time and dry gullies for tho rest of the season, flowed on continuously towards the sou Only a little more than a century and yet tho age of the pioneer nnd tho lumberman denuding the soil of its forest, hn caused this change and still the work goes on mare rapidly than ever before, yet no practical measi re has been devised as a remedy. I ask you to consider what tho conditions of ibo state will be if this work is to go on for another century, unless some effectual means are adopted for the preservation and perpetuation of our for osts. Will it not indeed, be the very picture of desolation, a waslo of barren rocks and shifting sands!1 Tue preserva tion of the forests means fewer drouths, fewer Hoods and a more uniform rainfall. Then cherish tho forests ns the very apple of the eye, ns the great conservative pow er which will preserve for you, intact, uniform and undiminished, a due supply of this great life giving element water. The tenuro of lands in this country is such that private enterprise cannot be relied upon to accomplish this work and you must look to legislative action for the remedy. I sec that tho governor has, by authority, appointed a commission on foiestry to inquire into this matter, and your pare of ihe work is to sustain and encourage them and to see and insist that suitable recommendations Irtve that attention at the hands of your legislators which the importance of tho subject deserves. Statesmanship seeks lo proserve nnd develop the resouices of a country devmgogua ij takes up a popular cry and seeks to out Herod even Hcro.l Inmsolf in its zeal for the topic of the hour. Can there be a truer statesmanship than that which seeks to restore the forests to tho hills and retain for this grand old state the character of a land of lord It fields and pleasant homes. Your legislature can go wild over the taxable age af a pup, can get enthusiastic over a measure of doubtful constitutional ity and still more dubious justice, like the Hooker law of the past session, has even the "cheek" to ask intelligent nnd able men, capable of giving us instruction and good advice in regard to our wants and needs like those who have come lo meet us to-day, to work lor the pay of a com mon laborer why then not wage it for once to riso to tho dignity ol statesman ship and give a careful consideration to this question which is of such importance that all the dog laws, hen laws und other legislation of the kind that ever was or ever will bo enacted, sink Into insignia' cance beside it. One more digression and I will close. The latest fashionable hoi. by in farming is ensilage and the silo. Some of its most enthusiastic friends make great claims for this plan: even going so far as to recom mend storing all foraire crops in this way. Ihe inhabitant ot tho tropics may lecd on bananas and rice but the hsquimos feasts on blubber and irrigates his inter nal economy with train oil; this is in accordance wiih the well known law of natural adaptation und teaches us that the food of men nnd animals as well, must be adapted to the conditions and climate in wuicb they live and the lesson we should draw from this fact is that the food tbat is perfectly adapted to the wants of our stock in tho summer does not contain enough of the carbonaceous and beat producing elements lo make il adapted to the wants of the same animals during the severity of our almost Arctic winters and that if you would feed onsilage, you must feed with it a sutlicicnt amount of neb concentrated carbonaceous food to make up for the deficiency of such elements in the ensilage. It is claimed by some that there is very much more nutritious matter in an "ensilaged plant thau in one cured in the ordinary way. A very large per centage of the weight of green plants consists of water and while there may be some loss of nutritous matter in drying, it is difficult to see how tbat percentage of loss can be a large one fn properly cured fodder. I apprehend that the silo will havo us place on the model farm of the future but I believe its place will bo an auxiliary nnd subordinate one, limited lo supplying your stock with an agreeable change of diet Keeping their digestive powers in good condition and thus contributing to tho satisfaction and profit of the farmer. And row, gentlemen, to sum up the whole question in brief the elemenls necessary to plant life are tne organic ones, carbonio acid, water and ammonia; and the inorganic ones, potash, lime, soda, phos phorio acid, etc. Given these in due proportion; given a soil rich in humus so tbat the little rootlets of your plants cn a penetrate it and draw from it their neces sary food; and with God's own sunshine, light and air there is no excuse for failure. An aim Oveh Alamo. A dispatch from an Antonio nys that tho 11 tg of Texas is firing over Fort Alamo, the property ot which it. forms a part having been annex nd to the stato of I ho Catholio bishop after purchase. Alamo is known as thu Tnor inopylra of America, from thi heroic lefence of Ihe fnt made in 183G by a small body of Texans against a lorce of Mexicans fully thirty times their number. Fort Alamo was an oblong structure of ibout an acre in extent, on tho left bank of the San Antonia ltiver, near tho town of San Antonir . The fortifications of Sau Antonio had been recently dismantled by Houston when (February 23, 1830) the Mexicans under Santa Anna heleagured the Alamo into which Travis withdrew with 130 Texans, while the Mexicans, 4.000 strong, occupied the town and bom barded tho fortress from batteries on both sides of tho river. Not ono man was hurt by the shelling, however, and the garrison picked off the Mexicans with their unerr ing rilles, or when they ventured to charge the wall repulsed litem wilb disas trous loss. Travis was reinforoed by thirty-two men, who forced their way through the Mexican lines, but the garrison was too fceblo to take the initia tive, and though it never abated its spirit, hard work and ceaseless watching so told on its feeble numbers that by the 6th the Texan cause was desperato. Without provisions and with but a scanty supply ol ammunition, the garrison yet made a gallant stand against the overwhelming force which assailed it at daybreak from every side. twice repulsed with great loss, the Mexicans at last undo good their attack but it was only when the defenders of th Alamo numbered six meu and th unloaded rilles were shattered clubs their hands. These, including Crockett surrendered to Casirdlion, upon a proiui of protect ion, but being taken before Sant; Anna tney were ordered to be hewn dow Crockett fell, mangled by u scoreofswords t he wounded bowio was dragged from b bed and butchered, though not until nan snot severtl ot nis murderers, an Evans was slain just as be attempted blow up the magazine. The bodies the Texans, horribly mutilated, were pile up in me centre 01 ino lore and burned negro, u woman and a child, alone bein spared. On the 21st of April, howeve the dead of the Alamo were bloodi avenged. It was 1 o'clock in the afternoon and the Mexicans confident in their num bers, were enjoying their siesta the field of San Jacinto, when Houston forming his little force in line under oovei ot tho forest, advanced upon their works At 200 yards tho hastily um-tered Mex Cans Bred upon the approaching lex in who received the volluy in grim silence then, with the shout, "Remember th Alamo!" hurst upon them. In an insuin taneous panic the Mexicans hied, pursued by the relentless victois. Houston los eight men killed and twenty-five wounded the Mexicans, 080 killed, 20s wounde and IM prisoners, m tne attack upon the Alamo they had already lost l.fl-JO men. Its defenders had been avongod. f tfttt0tt$. The bravest trophy ever man olitninml la lhat which o'er himself, hlmaelrhtlli n'llnml. Earl of Strrliiiy, Our ants our nnarela are, or gooif or 111, Our fatal ahailowa tint walk by us aim. flmumont, Ilowfar that littlo oamlle throwa Itt Ueami I So shines a good decil la a naughty worhl. Shaken iieare. hn. while ye trn, the lijrht aaml a tnais on . Leaving the hour-xlaaa empty, anil thy lire Ullueth away : Mn. Sigmtrnev. Tho attempt I alt the weilge lhat split Its knotty way Betwixt ihe Impossible anil possible Alire Curu. All true glory rests, All praUe, all safety, ana all happiness Upon the moral law . -WonU.m.tt,, Those llnor instincts that like aecond riiriti And hearing, creation' unctaratandm?. And see the inner lUht. .0 lit Could I And a path to roll"",'" " Ah bow glad I wore, and '';"'' e ' ... You have probably often rend the phrase "rich, nitrogenous plant foods" and to the minds of some it has, perhaps, carried as much meaning as would an issay fn the original Greek and no more and per- n aps i may not make its meaning clear to you. In all the varied works of nature, chemistry has been able to discover but sixty three different elements, and of these the farmer has to deal with hardly a doz cn, of which nitrogen is one and hydrogen another. Accessary as nitrogen ts to the farmer it can onlv be taken into the struc ture of glowing vegetation through the agency 01 a third element and that is hy drogen, with which it unites in the propor tion of ono to three losing one half its bulk bv the union ami forming ammonia. Ammonia is capable of still further con centration thus water will absorb six hundred times its bulk of it: by contact wi ll sulphuric or carbonic aoid itcrystnl i,es into the soluble salts, sulphate or c trbonato ol ammonia, well known as fer tilizers, and a free definition of the phrase "rich, nitrogenous plant food" would be ono which lurnishes a largo supply of ammonia to growing vegetation on tne growth of which it lets as a quickening spirit and in whose structure it is again resolved into its original elements. There is another question which does not oome strictly within the pale of chemistry yet is so nearly allied to it and :s of such vital imnnrtance to the farmer, that I mav be pardoned for alluding to it water lock ing a duo supply ol water ail your euorts will fail however well directed. It is the universal and only vcbiole by which all the fertilizing materialsof what ever nature, which you apply to your soil are made avalable for the processes ot plantlife; only through its agency can plants draw nourishment from tho soil. How necessary then that the supply of watet in the soil ba steady and unfailing. Vet year by year this supply is growing uk re and more uncertain at ceitain sca- When Shalt. I Stop Advertising. Ten successful business men were asked when, in their judgment, it would do to "Stop advertising." Hear their answers: "When population ceases to multiply, and the generations that crowd on after you, and never beard ot you, stop coming on." "When you have convinced everybody, whose life will touch yours, that you have better goods and lower prices than tbey can ever get anywhere outside of your store." "When you perceive it to be the rule that men who uever advertise are out stripping their neighbors in the same line of business." "'.Vhen men stop making fortunes right in your very sight, through ihe discreet use of this mighty agent." "When you can forget the words of the shrewdest and most successful business men concerning the main cause of their prosperity." "When every man lias become so thoroughly a oreature of habit tbat he will certainly buy this year where hs bought last year. "When younger and fresher and spunk ier concerns in your line cease starting up and using tho newspapers in telling the people how much better they can do for them than you can." "When you would rather have your own way and fail than tako advice and win." "When nobody elso thinks 'it pavs to advertise.' " "Judicious and persistent advertising is tho keystone to success, therefore don't stop, or others will got ahead of you." Tub On. stovb Thaub. "The season for the sale of oil stoves has just begun dealer said "and if wo may judge from la years experience weshall have an immens trade. Ihe manufacture of oil stoves distinctively an American industry: had its origin and growth here, and has been perfected hero. Practice oil stove wero tirst invented about fifteen years ago out tne trade did not amount to anythin until six or seven years ago. About tin time iuventors began to overcome lb objections to them. Tho combustion the oil was made perfect, so that the disugreoaoio smells wero obviated, the danger from gas explosions was removed and the consumption ol oil was red ncu to a minimum. TDen the t'ade began to spread out. Stove manufacturers noticed a decrease in iho summer sales of range: and cook stoves, and rightly attributed ii to the oil stoves. Seeing that nothing oould stop the oil stove trade, thev al took it up. Whero oil stoves were then made only by a few specialists, they are now made at nearly every stove factory in the country. Competition has greatly improved the article. Un the best 01 stoves rne can boil, fry, broil, bake, ii fact do anything that can be done on : range, and that without the heating of th room or the trouble of building a coal fire When the work is done, the lire is extin guished and the expense stopped. At the same time we can heat a room if we want to. We have sheet iron drums to fit any style. You would be astonished to see how quickly one drum on a two-burnor stove will neat a room. Here is a two burner stove. It costs 7. Jly wife does all the cooking for a family of four grown persons with one like it. An average for three months shows that she used one quart of oil a day. It would easily burn two quarts it not managed economically Any one who will use the lire only when it is needed can do as well. You can buy kettle heaters for a dollar. Un and solder are cheap, but the little things are not much better than tovs lhis two burner size, with an extension top, has three places for cooking. It costs $9. Thats gcod enough for anv ordinary family. A double stove at $12 will run a boarding house. The ranee style, with nine cooking holes, will do for any betel excopt the largest. Tbey costs fM. all furnished. We build to order others still larger. "We made 40 000 last year. It is safe to say that loO.OOO stoves, large and small, were made. The export lakes carloads. Tbey are shipped to every civilized coun try, and to many tbat aro not oivilized. China, Japan, the lndias, Sonth and Central America all take large invoices." Good Management. It is no easv thing to manage just right with a boy. All work and no play will make a bov hate work; while all play and no work will make a boy a worthless member of society. Parents should not feel that all Ibe boy is good for is to do chores, and be scolded, and perhaps most severely pun ished when be makes mistakes, or volun tarily does a wrong thing. Tho boy will dovclop into a man in a few years; and it will be no easy thing to make a noble man out of a badly managed boy. it oosts a good deal lo manage a boy properly, and rightly educate him, and fix on him habits of industry, nnd to teach him self denial with regard to play; but when such boys become men thev are worth all they cost. Ml. Desert Herald. A man dies very much as a bucket of water is drawn from a river. There is a little depression for a moment, then with a gurgle the waves fill it, and the stream flows on witli the sun shining upon the pot as bofore. IlAi'i'Y Iloi its. An accurate observer says: Mankind are always happier for having been happy so that if vou make them happy now, you make them happy twenty years hence troni the memory ol it. A childhood passed with a mixture of rational indulgence, under fond and wise parents, diuuses over the whole lite a feeling' of calm pleasure, nnd in extreme old age in the very last remembrance which time can erase from tho mind of man. No enjoyment, however inconsiderable, is confined to the present moment. A mn is the happior for life for having made an agreeable tour, or lived any length of time with pleasant pooplc, or lived any considerable interval of innocent pleasure, which contributes to render men so inat tentive to all scenes before thorn, and carries them back to a world that is passed and to scenes which are never to be renew ed again. Dickens. The people of Northwestern Texas are very much puzzled what to do with the prairie dogs that are eating up all the grass. We havo not given tho subject very thorough consideration, but it seemt probable lhat if such cereals as cabbage, lettuce, green peas, etc., were planted in sutlioient quantities in tho vicinity of the dog towns, the prairie dogs would cease to UU up, like Nebuchadnezzar, on grass, ana would devoto all their time to stowing away the more succulent garden truck. Texas Siftings. Temperance pats wood in the fire, meal in the barrel, flour in the tub, money in the nurse, credit in the country, oontent ment in the bouse, olothes on the back. and vigor in the body. lam tho way. Jesus J" Principles die hard . ' thiroUl. Sigh born thoughts. DeQuincn Faith is Ihe spring of action.-A' Lowell. There shot a streaming Ianm ah,., , m. sky. Drydcn. The ppidemio of our timts Dr. Edwards. is imp-.l i e. and tho whole o n' sm ike of friends'ii Life is short man's. South. Ceremonv is tho Chinese proverb. Attention is tho highest of our skiilt ni l virtues. Goethe. Wo take les pain- lo b) lumpy tl, , i , appear so La llochefouciuld. What can oeaso lo be ours, never h been ours George Macdonahl. Let him that would move the w id move first himself. Socrates. Our system of thought is ofien only '!, history of our heart. Ficlde. But you must formulate your thought m you have all stars and no sky. Enter m It was said of Plotinns, that the st.i's were significant, but noteflioient. Raleigh. I've known a great many foxes to gro v gray, but I never knew ono to grow guo 1. -Hunter. Ho that wrestles with us strengthens ur nerves, and sharpens our skill. Our intagonist is our helper. Burke Many interests havo grown up, and seeded, and twisted thoir roots in the crevices of many wrongs. Landor. Tho Christian region can be held in highest esteem, by thjso only who aro best acquainted with it. .If. Quizot. Believers are not dependent upon cir mmslances. Their joy comes not from hat they have, but from what they are ; not from what thev enjov, but from that which has been suffered for them by their Lord. It is a singular joy then, because it nften buds, blooms, and ripens in winter itne; and when the fiz tree does not hlossom, and there is no herd in tho stall, God's Habakkuks rejoice in the salvation. Spurgeon. Be ye of good cheer, everv ono that ia afflicted, for the Lord is preparing for you 'he city of God. Whatever bo your sor row, it is the token of His love; for the Man of Sorrows is our Kins?, and iho nth of sorrow is the path of His kingdom; mem is uunu oiuer tuat leadetb unto life. Your reward is sure, if you are but true to yourself. Do we believe these things? Are they realities, or are thev word.? I'hey are God's Word, which is a rnaliiv' Dr. Manning. Now what ha intidelilv dnnn fnr mm P Where aro the sorrows it has astmon,L the widows' hearts it has caused losing for joy, the death-beds it has wreathed in victory? Where, O where? Yes, and the grog shops it has shut up, tho "rings" it has crushed, the haunts of sensnalitv ii hi. closed, the dishonesties and mflmnessn. it has hissed from the land? What hna if done but sit in its dark corner, carping at the Bible, sneering at piety, and frowning upon Ihe benevolent workings of the church? Shots al Infldelili. The time is coming when men, Chris tian, consecrated men, at their own charges, will work in the vineyard of lha Lord. 1 he time is coming when our rich men will send their sons nol to Paris to ieorn tho arts of pleasure, but into our mountains among our miners and over the plains among our herdsmen to prea-h to them the glorious gospel of the blessed God. The lime is coming-, when tb cross shall no longer be a gilded ornament, oui me seal ol a personal commiss on in our hands to discipline the nations. Dr. ireoo, tri baratoqa Convention. Dried Corn. Dried corn ousrht to Im made palatable, and be frequently seen on the dinner table, but many people who like corn dislike this stuff because it la not cooked properly; it should always be put to soak in lukewarm water tbe afternoon of the day before it is to be eaten. Do not throw away tho water in which il is soaked, or then you lose much of the best there is in the corn. Then earlv. nt least two hours before dinner, put in a sauce pan over the fire, and let it cook slowly but steadily until il is tender. A little cream added to the milk, butter. neDner nd salt are desirable, and a teasnonnfnl of sugar will sometimes do wonders In giving flavor to the dish. Curious Laws. Saxony has some very carious laws concerning servant girls, lor instance, the mistress is re in red to allow the servant ono Dound of butter and one pound of coffee per month. or tbe equivalent in money. If the servant furnishes her own bedding she receives one and a half cents per night for so doing. Seventy-five cents per month is allowed tbe servant for washing, and she receives live per cent ot all purchases she makes. She must give a month's notice before leaving her place, and must keep a book tor recommendations, in which. upon leaving her plaoe. her mistress is oompelled to state the cause of the ser vant's leaving, and also what is her character. Every cook knows how lore a time it takes, when it can least be spared, to look over one or two quart! of beftns. 4a ingenious nousewile, who ia alwavi Irvine- to save time, says : "Pot the beans in a colander, and all the fine dirt will be shaken out, and tbe beans that are anerkpri can be picked out with ease, and in a very Remember Yon will not Ha anrrv for hearing before judging, for holdlne an angry tongue, for stopping the ears of a tale bearer, for disbelieving most of tbe ill reports, for being kind to the distressed, for being patient towards everybody, for doing good to all men, for asking pardon for all wrongs, for speaking evil of no one for being courteous to all.