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oi 01"w 00140"'11, ----- - *I-I Tnt REE1 DOLIAUs'AY4 ,&--u-- - 0RT114 DISiEAW4 0 - USEFUL INTELLMGEIC [TNARIBL N ADVOL 1VOLV WEDNESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 17, 1869 For thoerald. [all theso? No. T it RA v,f - 9 No. b~ Thvmn.-h t_ 111-,(I I - F WiM Mr v, % 'EVERY WEDNESDAY AtORNING, At N046irry 0. ., B? THOB. F. &.R. H. GRENSKU, Edl torq and Propriotors. TElMS, 8 jiat &NIUM, IN CU,ttENcY - OR PROVISIONS. Payment re4itred invariably in advanoV. :Aarriage NdticeA, Funaral Invitdtlons, Obit.% u6resi aud Cbinuntoations subservig privAto luStere8a,aieoharged as Advertsements. FFERTILIZERS. Etiwan No. 1, Etiwan No. 2. Soluble Manures are put up . at the Sulphuric Acid 41 Stiper-Phosphate Com Works, near Charles Phonix C; uano, (in its nat W'lcox, Gibbs & Co's. MWnipulated Guaano, (Phce" t. - aft Pernvian). Always on hand and for sale by G. T. SCOTT, Local Agent. Sep. 27 L2 3mos. ~R 3 .'I U1vRNI"IUR E. m 'n still receiving FURNI TURE of every descriptioln imio. t 'ito n fro tho iuanutefetutlr's I North,; , and Nill sell as LOW as 1 H idy lonso in the South, (adding t1lo freight..) I k0op constantly on1 lanel * IUREAUS, WARD-ROBMS, WASHl-STAND8,i BEI)-ST.R'ADS) CRIBS and CRADEil,S. 0H1AIRS, differont qualitios. :ROOKING-CHIAlS in great Va- i ioty. Folding, Saloon, Toilet and Centro T .A BL E s. t BOOK-CASES & SECRETARIES, 8 C FURNITURE SUITS, L (from the finest solid wnnut, down to the Com111nonlest.) I also keep, and anunnufacturm, ~ATTRESSES, fr picture frames, 6VOOtNG-G1 PLATES, and cut to fit old framns. C fino asHortment of WALL PA'ER and BORDERING, ,i-1APER AND OlSIIARE91S, f with FXL'URES, (something new.) t I feel grateful to a genCroA puie1 fotr the - liberal1 patiroungo alrently beCsIowed upon me - Iti my first efforts in buslncs.i, and shaali use everyv effort to merit, a continuance of their favors. ', t ROB'T Y. LEAVELL. e Oct. 13. 40-3mos, The Best are the.checapest! I C q71 M'.17 I We tiow have on liand the 'following pop soar styles of Ladies and Misses hoop skirts. The Do Drop, TipTo, * opalr, F 1avorito, DaiQae' Greclan La Pario. T aplex Elliptic, is agroat favorito t with the ladies and is universally recom-. mended bythe Fashion magazines as the stan- 3 gif 3 cIrof the fos$ionaple~ world. i, -T6 fdtho followift ineittmhbloadvani . nrt4ges, vi Superior 4ulity, perfect Aftapo Anih, flezibilty, 'durability, comfort and CONTINENTAL HOTEL, , h; ii estab)ishmoni, ha beeni oonipldtoiy farnishaed, and is now open for the accom~ modation of perman'ent aind transient board. iea Zahle. )vell supplied. ,Rooms com-; fortasb1. Tiorm matouderato.t - *AiU.. 4 80 it, wV LUQ X-eOPe Or tOw berry. No. 2. IaAl neither Radical, nor Demo crat, nor Federal. I care nothing for party names, or -measures, .or Oios. I care not who hold the of flees if they Are docent and honest men. I think it is far better for hoiest men to be in office and faithfully perform the duties there of than for my party to be triuni phant and carry everything before it, if my party is rotten and cor rtupt. Corruption in high places or low I despise. I want Reform. bot that be the cry for the future. We have had enough of Recon trtioton. Now lot us have [e. rorim. Who can 4oily that we icod it? Who, looking at South Darolina, as sho lies prostrate, a )roy to the spoiler, with loathe tomo vermin crawliig all over her, a deny that Reform is needed ld that a cleansing process must 300gone through to rostoro her to ior true position of queen-like dig ity and honor? It is for the peo )lC to take this matter in hand. l'hoy are .tho,ropositarics of all )ower. And I tell you it is im )ossible for a state of oppression mid corruption to continue for any Proat length of time unless the )oople themselves are utterly cor Upt Mnd lost. Are they so now ? ave wo not enough honest men n the Stato:to save thb Stae? I hink we have. I do not think he day of raceo is past. It is true vo have grent difficulties to con end with. It is true that the 9ored people; ,who are now vo- 1 crs, have been to som extent ar ayed by the Radical demagogues gainst the white. Btut the case not hopeless. The intoiosts of he white and black are identical I nd they must be frionds. They I iast be friends and they can be I nd they will be spite of the wiley I rts of unprincipled domagogues y rhoso sole desir0 is to use the hlicks to accomplish their own elishM cods. I write to the C1 red people of Newberry. I want n hem LO understand who it is that 'ays the enormous taxes that now " ain the Stato and County. Who inkes the money? Who creates lie woulthl ? The laborer, the morkitig man, whether lie be white r black. I toll you, you colored P Int, whon'you are toiling in the old, dreaming fondly of your for- p y acros and a mule, your Radical 0 Iat,ave Iaughing in thoir loove r t your folly and growving fat off a heotaxes that y/ou pay. Do you , hink that because you have no il roperty you pay no tax ? The l ieo, loafing vagabond who Jivesr y stealing, wvho lives by pilfering. v thers, whether- he be an office a older oi' not, pays no tax. Buta C you work, whether in the field t r tihe sh1op, or if you pursue any onest calling, you pay tax. It is t 7y your toil that tihe great army f offioos t.hat now overrun the a tate grow rich. Great God I Is here no remedy ? Are the pee. lo sunkc so low as to be utterly cyond the reach of any feeling of E onior ? Is;the whole body politic ut one loathesome mass of stink- 3 ig r'ottenness and corruption ? 1 .1 o-not believo it. It is bad enough j ult not hopoloss5. We muist re- 1 am. Wo must elect muon to "of.- 3 O wvho will feel themselves to be hie servants of the peole, and J rho will dlischargo the trusts con ded to them, not that they may row rich but that tihe peoplo at u'ge may prosperd We must ro noethe number of ofloors. Look i tthe sarm of locnsts whlo live I poni the labor of the lhonest wvork, GEPoi .' owbry. Look att 1i6 h'dWt of 640hd' 1dotectiver' e :olngt madfitin the land liko' " h&ah.Tehiod spoken .orgah S3pIp. 'I uro socking Whdi they mray do. Ei our. In thero any nest fr p theown out. Tho nutiber of offi cors intiat be reduced, . and the money that nor goes to food those cormorants must bo diverted to its proper 6hannel, that is to the improvement of the soil, to the reoction of housOS, to the educa tion of your sons and. daughters and to the diffusion goeorally of intelligenco and virtuoe, 6o that the land now desolate may be made to blossom as the rose. I4 can - be dono. Lot the peoplo tako the matter in hand and I tell you a frw years will witness the redemp. tion of the State and a slaout of Lriumph will go up to.heove,n. JUNIUS. "Nothing In the Paper." The Richiond Enquirer and Examiner has a spicy *chipter on ;he subject of newspapers, elicited )y the stereotyped romark of in.. lifferont readors, after scanning ,he "miniaturo world" of a daily asteo of news, ,hat "thore's noth ng in the paper." It says: "And men are alwaysgrumbling tbout their papers, and insinuating iow -much better they could do it. 'hoy talk as flippantly about tifie irticles' on every imaginable sub Oct, as if they could offect such a hango. Lot some of those over unning philosophers try it for 150 lays in succession. "And then they think it is noth - ng to 'soloct,' for a nevspaper ,ou have merely to run tho scis ors through a half dozei ex hangcs, and you have got matter nough. Now this is the most in Portant, and the most difficult do iartment to fill on a nowspaper. rory few men have the slightest dcen how to do the work. It, re [uiros a thorough newspaper man Vho knows the public appotite veil-who knows what is going mn in the world-and who knows low to ro-writo and pack a colunin nto a dozen lines. "Mon who skim a newspaper id toss it asido, little Iefloct how iuch brains and toil have been C xpwnded in serving up that meal. usy heads and busy hands have ecn toiling all day to gathor and 1repare thoso viands, and some 'ast building has been lit from ccl mr to garret all night to got that apor ready for the newsboy by t raC of dawn. t "'Nothing in the paper !' Noth. I ig in your head I that's what's the C iattcr." 1 .. t The Laurens Railroad Squabblo . IIAT TiE CITIZMNS OF hAUIMENS HAVI TO C SAY ABOUT IT. IMAiim's DIIoT, Sept. 80. 1 -To THR EDITOR OF THE Npws:-W e,t lie undersigned, citizens of Laurens, of t so immediate vicinity of Martin's De- c ot, desiring that falsohood should not c ass for truth; and having road and t card of the lato scandalous and falso I ublication made, through the culuins a f a Radical press, by one doe, Crews, gainst nur neighbor, Dr. Benjamna S. ames, Iesseo of the La'irens Railroad, nd knowing Dr. James to be a high. ned gentlemnan, anid that he would 01 condescend to notice anything comn- t ig from tho dirty source fromi which t 'uo article above referred to purports to s ame, Cool it duo to truth and to~ the ~ading puble outside of 'onr district, heo the charaeter of Dr.. James, for trling Integrity, moral worth, and for ll that is jUst, true, generouH, honest nd noble, may not be known, to state I st the article written against him over t oe signature of tihe said Joe Crows Is as c misc, scandalous nnd infahious as he,r me said Joe Crews, Is worthless, -and nworthy of belier or or any confidence. 'lie whole publication of Crews Is a tis ue of falsehoods. t Signed : Win. F. Metts, IH. K. T.' E ~onds, J. Y. Ilunter, J. S. -Johnson, t I'm. Smith, J. E. A brams, J. P. Jolin. t an, Jared S Je,lmon, F. Johnson, B3. a .Jones, D. Hf. A. Mason, IL. (, Young, ~. C. Suber, J. W. Oxner, J. A. Dice, '. L. Grimes, Samuel Furguson, John 1111er, Robert S. Vance, Honry Subor, I amos Heornandez, S. F. Vance, W. M. c ntrikln, J. T. Finnoy, J. D. Capeland; I aines HI. Bloyd, Samuel Copoland, J. 0.O intrikin, J. S. MeUrary, .*. A. Milleur, c [. Meadows, WV. WV. Neil, 0. T. Speako, hli D. East, L. F. Duckett, S.W. Vance, I. Pitts, J. C. Miller, Ewoll IK. Tribble. . S. Harsten, George W. Sadior, S. B: I [onroo, Thlomas Neil, Wmn. East, Rt. J. 'E opeland, L. A. East, J. L. Young, John C s.Smith, J. D. Watson, J. L. Crawford, F V..HI. Farrar, R. Blalock, Moses Potter., s 'hiomas Weir, Jr., Win. Rook, M4. D., t nim. J. 1hook, P. M4. Meadows, Rev. T. , I. 9po, Dr. T. P.. Roks <. W. Riser, amnrons ldetts, C. D. IdasI. CAMDord, S. 0. Oconi 2't.LTbe elc on for 1-opresehtittito to fill the 'acandf nbapdby the do,kth of Jonaa Nash, re-. sIted ini the electibb otb. William Adam- a n,. ..(olor.ed,) the ~lad.cl cespdidate, rF here wvaA no. qpposliton andi but little terest was e igen ini dio Affair. Very w votes wore polled, and odthing ssed off qnuie... A Florenco newspaper, L'Italie, extracts from the Annales de la Medecine et 4e la kitrrgie Etran gere, the following extraordinary history. The .Italian papr, for roasons easily to be gathorod, does not give implioit credenco to the statoment, nor lend it the od itorial exeoution : On the 18th of April, 1868, in the prison of Villarica (Province of Minas-Geraos), In brazil, two men namod A'oli,o and Carines were Oxeouted.4,tthe same timo. In Brazil executions take place with closed doors, in the interior of the prison. Dr. Lorenzo y "armo, of Rio Janeiro, well known by savants for his remarkable works on lectribity applied to I)hysiology, his surgical skill, and lis success in 4tutoplastib opera tions, obtained pQrinission to ptofit by this event, in ordor to 3XPerimOt On the .power of clec ricity, and to illustato its anal )gy With some of(the phenomena f life. The numerous cx)ori monts hitherto attempted have oen made on theI head and trunk iparatoly. Dr. L-oronzo y Car no's design was, if possible, to mito the head to the neck after lecapitation. The heads of the :wo Crimin'Alis fIell within a few ninutes of each 'other, into the ime basket-first that of Cari ics, then that of Av6iro. Immo liately after this second exocu .ion, a compression was effected )y a pupil of Dr. Lorenzo on the he carotid arteries of-ono of the nads so as to stop the honior -hage. Tihe body was then placed m a bed already prepare(, and )r. Lorenzo stuck the head as mxactly as possible on the section, Lad kept it in that position. The 'ells of' a pOwer-full electric pi[O voro applied to the -base of the lek and. on the breast. Under this influence, as in for. nor expor,imonts, the respii:atory lovolonts wore at 011CO pI-cop ible. As the blood which 1)0110 rated in abundance through the urfIace of the scat throatened to to) the passage of air, Dr. .otr nzo had recourse toteucheotomy. tespiration theti onsned rogillar y. The head was fastoned to he body by stitches and by a spo. ,ial apparatus. The physiologist vished to ascortain for how long time this appearanco of life ould thus be artificially main. ained. His astonishmnent was -reat when he saw that at the nd of two hours not only (lid espiration still continue under he influence of the electric cur ot, but that circulation had vonl resumled a certain regularity. 'he pulso boat foobly but sonsi ly. The experiment was con innod without intermission. At he end of sixty-two houre it was vidont, to the astonishment of very one, that a process of cica risation had commenced on the ps of the section. A little lator ins of life manifbsted them elves spontaneously in the head I nl imbs5, till then dupmrived of' oction. At this moment time Director of' lhe Prison arriving for the fliest ime in the experiment room, ob erved that by a singular. mistaket tie to the haste of' the operationi ho head of' Carines had booni ta en for' that of Aveiro, and had een applied to the body of the atter. The experiment was con inued notwithstanding. Three ays later the respliraLtory move tents reproduced themselves and lectricity was surpresced. D.t Jorenzo y Carmno aind his assis naLs were stutpetiedl, frighltenced L a result so unexpected, and ati he powver of an agent wvhich int heir heads, htad restored life to body whose right to exist the I *w had forfoited. The learned surgeoon, who had ,nly had in view a simple physi logical experiment., employed all is skill to continue tils work, r'hichi science, aided against all x poetation by nature, had so sin ularly commenced. Ho .assisted ho progress of cicatrisation, which r'ogressedl under the most 'favor-. blo conditions. IBy means of' ant sophagian, pr'obo liquid .noumrish-r ent was intr'oduced into thet tomach. At the end of about bree months the eicatrication as crmp le.te, andl motLion, though till ~(diffelf,l, became mioi' nd oro extended. At lengtsh, at the nd of soven .nmon ths and a hialf, t veiro-Carines was able to rise I nd walk, feeling only a slight t t:iffy,ess in the neck, and a feeble ess In1 te limbs. Tbe last rose of' sdmier -Get. t ing out of bed the nastofA umus . An Incident. To all men, . there is hore And thore a swoot oasis-voicod with iolody and fragrant with flow ers-i tho desert of human lifo. Many a charmin little imcident, like a crystal lountain gurgling up ait our foot, rises nlow au thon to mem0111ory, breath ing a delightful charm over the soul, like the cadence of the far off luto. Through the gloom, that is spreading its dark mantle over thc patst, ftancy spreads its wings of snow, and darts back to the .happy 80 8 Of 1former d'ays, and m droams of fancy fbasts upon plensures, that return no more. Perhaps a fow incidents, that havo proved to 4he writer a ploltsg uro and a joy, may prove to the reador a profit and dol ght. it was in thle early spring of 1859, when the forest put oil its robes of groen, and when the sui beans kissed the opening flowers that Mattie, Sallio, and another friend, together with the writer and our little friend Agnes (a pro. cios bud of ten summers, but in telligent beyond her years,) on tered the beautiful cemetery of an oastern town. There in droamless silenco reposed tho sleeping dust of the poor an(d the rich, the wise and the groat, the statesman and the divine. Every variety of monument, that tasto could sug gost or affection deviso, mot the eye. Epitaph in )ootio goins woro chiseled upon pi lars of stone. Little comments and criticisms, such as innoconce could mako in such a place, wore freely indulged, both upon the monuments them selves and the inscriptions there Of). At length we stood in silence [1rouind ani unprotending grave. A plain stono stoo(l over the gralve to mark the last resting place of' the sainted sloper. It was not the tombofotof the worl(1'8 great law givers : nor of' the conquering hero, whoso triumphant bannor loatoed high in air over a lndrod battle-fiolds; nor of the states 1nan, whoso brilliant talonts an(d Ioblo doodt have inscribed his ame upon a natioi's heart ; but fa pious woman unkntown to Pame. At last the silonoo was brokenl by Mittic, who adhrosse(l lic, little niece in the following tonder strain-'A ges, this is your mnothor's grave. She (lied when -ott were an iifiit. You never aw. her face nor heard her voico. A fter she was buried here, you were taken home with us, 111(1 [ have brought you back to visit y'otr* rehitioms and o se 01 you1r nother's grave. She was a goo(l voman, a (evoted christian ; and hie died in peaco, and rests in . arms of her Savior.' Agnes istoned till her aunt had closed, tnd then with a trembling voice, ior eyes glistening through gath) wing tears replicd, 'I'll be a rint.inn, too ; I'll lovo my moth r's SaVior, and thou whlen I (lie 'll see my mother's face and ear my mother's voice in heav mn.' A few words of encourarge nont wyore givon t.o thme orphan girl, and we p)assRed away from he city of t he doad1(. Years have ~omand 11( gone since then, anid he bud of promise has bloomed nto womanhood ; but she had tot forgotten the vow she mado, he first time she stood by the lust ofa saiintedh mother. She is ow a beautiful, hecomlished1, >ious young lady, a uasefnl teacher n a fmnalo Seminary, shedding ,he radiance of' chr'istianmity over ,bo minds and heart s of the young aidios committed to her enre. This is no fancy sketch, woven nto a wreath of' flowecrs, to plense ho mind, butt ai simlo statornmnt >f' facts ; only fic titious names have >oon substituted to avoid offond. ng the delicacy of the fair' on0 to v homi altiusioni is maude, should this ~ommunication meet her eye. From thme dust of' that pious nother, sprung a beautiful flower, wooter than the violet or' the rose, vhich has sent its fragrance alonig thme t,rauck of time, and which nay continuo to reogale genera. ions yet unbor'n. upon thatf ombi was kiandlod a light, wvhich nay gutido the pilgrim on his way, ill Tume's Iast setting sun. Gentle reader, live so that your nomry may be swoeotly emba med n the hearts of' the living. QUFdtY.-Whiat has become of he Ander'son Far'mor's Associa ioh. -An early answeor is solli ed, bitt don't all speak at ono * (Intelligencer. A cohered null agent in MIlssissippI distributedl" the ail so libgrally along ho route that he hadn't enodgh- to go rannrd. Beautiful and True. 'iho Ilorticultural department of the Reconstructed Farmer is under the special editoirial coltrol of b. J. B. Cheshire, from whose saluta tory in the first number, we'minke the following beautiful extra't : If, then we wish to see our Southern country arise out of her present depressed condition Alnd put on the beautiful garments of plenty and prosp6rity, we must begin with a strong arm and a resolute heart to cultivate mother carth and make her bring 'forth all her hidden treasures. I[ere i8 the starting point for all true material advancement ; this is the founda tion upon which all improvements must rest. Every farmer must con sider it his special vocation, not just to make cotton and corn, but to bring around himt all the pro ducts and improvements winch will give variety as well as profit to his employment, and educato himself in the highest branches of his noble profession. le must not only have his broad acres devoted to the main crop, but he must have his special acres for his orchard and his vineyard, and the ground about his dwelling made beautiful with orna muntal trees, and shrubs and low ers. lie must study the art and practice the skil!, to make himself familar with these things ; and they will repay him by opening to him a thousands sources of en joyment which lhe never knew be fore. Teio beautiful has its uses in life, as well as the more material and profitable, There is a silent and mysterious education of the soul, which goes on through the senses. The beautiful and the or namental have a constant influence upon those who move among such scenes, to elevate and purify the mind ; to make us less material, and more open to the sway of those mvisible rowers that He beyond the veil. They lead us "through nature up to nature's God," and thus they are beneficial to society at large, as well as the individual cultivator. IIe who improves and beautifies his grounds, is improving anld elevating the whole tone of society ; he om bellishes his own estate, with the additional satisfaction. of knowing that le is giving a new charm to the life of his fellow-ImnC. The borti culturist who adds new graces to the scenery and new fruits to the food of men, is, in IL measure, im proviig the chInaracter, andIl health, and happiness an long life of his neighbors ; and thus, inl some (e gree, is proving that he loves him as himself, and fulfils. thus, "the royal law." The latest Inode of announcing a birth is to call it "cutting of' a coupon from the marriage bond." It requires one hudred ounces ofquinine a week to combat the shakes in Frankfort, Indiana. Queen, V'Ictor'ia enjoys a high reputation for' her acts of' though t ful kindness and1( attention to. wvar'd the persons with whom she is br'ought in contact. A recent illust,ration of' thi pr Iaisoworthly char'acterist ic of' the Qurcon is gi v ca.i in her' efforts to p)reserv(, the picturIesqulo sCOnery along the river D)ec, 40 as8 not to dosMtr'oy the attr'ac'tions which form the indlueements to stranugei' to visit, that region, and1( thuis by tb mon. ey annuaiilliy spent thoro' Io conl tr'ibhuto to thme sulppor't of the in. habi tan ts. Thus, the Ballochubio forest having been ofhfm'ed for sale 'oir the purpose of' being cut dlownm the Qneen purcm'hasedl thme woods, on the sole condiitioni that the (recs should bo allowed to stand. A piceo of ani old steep, military r'oad, which had not been consid. Cr'ed by the Government as of' suflicimnt implortaneo to wvarrantI any out Llay for' its maintenance, was h)lt ini complte r'epair lit the Queien's expenso. Thl i' oad is of' great impor'tance to the neigh borhood, as it commands - a mag nifloont v'lowv of' Ialmoral Castle rond grounds, with the i'ivor'D)eo memrging from the dark pine for ests of Balloch buio, and winding through a countr'y of great By! van beauty until lost in the (his Lance., From the same spot a ! ietro of hills can be seen, tower-1 ing one above the otbor, toward 1 the southward and avost,ward. Wreat gratificat,ion, it ,is tei, has been e; pressed at the liberalt-a by of tihe Queon in caring.for tihe somf'ort of' travellor's 'ind tottidits inl that district., Agricultural. 8oD, ITs TuRATMENT AfND -T-p BENEPIT.--PIlow down sod; yoi .cannot turn down too inuch qrjt. Apply ashcs spoeially and largly plastor, and most of all manurpi .l'hs jast makes soil, espoeciall'y ' compost. If a cotipact, fino 0ut is ldded, the roots will work T p into It. Thus' o ill"thick'it yotV 13od. 0rc?,drd gr-as; ' -and clovee are allong the principal sod-iakos, the 6no enrichig . below, the otlib' itbove. A 1bw years will form a 8od-two years f.or the clover-, and a fbw for thd orchard grass, which is sown With tie clover, and roSbWn when thd clover disappears; the gi'otid harrowed after sowing, whitlt will bonofit, the grass present ;Is the tough roots cannot well brokeni up. iOIO Such a sod will groduco t.i1y. thing-such a soil rfatlot, It-cop talins all the constituonts of' "PlWnt food in the decayod plant robtaidBd stubble. It is simply reproduclAi the same every time with lin dition from the atmosphoro. It is this sod that makes oure farins. It makos thoin holthy and m1ellow ; giVes them lightness wh0re thoro is ch1y-particularly calculated for this, but will bno fit any soil. It is a coi'ictokLt this decidedly. And sod Is cheap, easily mtdo and with benefit during the tiPo as great a bonfit Its any othi' sourco of husbandry. Wo know large farms of6 fiolds wholly in sod. It dos yot good to go over those farms. Thi' grass is established I the sod is old, most of it. Plaster 1s liftd largely, so are ashej so is 'nanure. but no other stimulating SpPlicaz tions, niero is one. thing, how:. Over, Which so0ms, hext to ma nure, the most, CfOIcacious, that is the fall growth loft on the ground; This keeps your sod, and fhakes heavy crops, protecting and ep-, riching. These fhrms, spoken of beforo1 ahlvas yield largo and most heav ily. Pho nutriment is thbro td thrive. The Boil has lain 'rested i "o as to correct the evil effooti of' bad cnturil--wet plowin. It comes up1) rich, loose, and will bd I,oroug lly mellow When rotton This is the bod to give yom . seed to (of' any kind,) and to stook down ; little trouble about fhilul-e i the catch is certain, and thd growis after tho samo.-Dict'a Erper men tal Farm Journal. Ti C ILRENs ETitURTT?..n-A Al ways sny, Yes, sir No, - 1r Yes, pipi. Thanit you. Nd, thank you. Good-night. Good: minh114g. Use no slang terms. Clean flcos, clean clothos; .cleat shoes, and clean finger n1ails, inl dieito good breading. Nov(i leavo your clotheli 1 about the room. Have a place f'oP eve1y thiig. and everything in its place. Rup beforo entering a rmoom aund never leave it with your* back to the compi~any, Always olfru your teat to aliidy or old gent lemn Never put your foot on ouRh,loting ebnirs, or tables, Noveir overlookc any one when reading or wvrit.ing, nor talk br roadl( aloud while others are hend ing. Never talk or whisp'r at moot ing or public places, and espIeially in a privat,e room, where any '660 is singmi g or playing the p)ianlos Be careful to inijuro no O:tga foolings biy unkind remairks; Never tell tales, make facos1 call names, ridhiclo the lame, thlinti to Li ufortunate, nor1 lie cruel to inusoets, birds, or animals. JA Uu n'r ON TuA-r I--n JOlly A (AI N.--A geor tleman posjidl somne miles f'romn the city', says an exchango, has been in the habit fr'equon tly of sending his waitirig boy with the buggy back home, with the following message: "Tell ny wife I'm caugfat on that d-d ury again." .Iis wif'e to bo sure I tlo suspected that the jusi'fvrr sot of boon companions bent on u high old1 imo,' and the doer nlination not to 'go home. till norning.' A few days 'since' he ment, said waitor boy to t%yn after ermo necessary articles, .i >Oy fell in .with .his friends, gob lovated ," - to p heavy, .and itclhed dait of 'thle buggy, Tpo iorso.and bgy arrive ~tonipall glht het the b~oy did ii& e is appearance until .next day.m With stern cottntonaboio ot nan called tho boy; 'sp a a*n lod why he did snot comne li att he ptope&r 'time. afassa I was coce n h ury !