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Wellsboro Agitator

   Wellsboro Agitator, The (Newspaper) - March 18, 1873, Wellsboro, Pennsylvania                               R R AD AY'S Tim tj i from Ono to DWATT M U READY f i f 5 u M ov i oy in- TUB t wii nil T U iW Only Uy FKl cora at oiler niosi TO or Uw Inarm RAILWAY TIKE TABLES ft B It Table No 4 3d t I i p.m S M 15 00 lir 8 00 IX 5 00 ISO BM L tille 840 8 Itl 4 23 8 ti U a 46 B i UM 1143 U IS iris 907 IX 1009 438 10 08 9 43 001 10 25 in 00 1099 11 114.5 A H Top Summit A R R Time Table No Hominy Juno 3d OR RESOLVENT 8 ID Nc 7 M p in J 30 p in 7 go p m 4 1000 p in J 20 p in fl M p ui vary RV an In ind is Scon and fHS CHEAT BLOOD PURIFIER s b I f N Of r 7 iU a m Ko 8 11401 m i B GORTON a i 0 B K L 8 E B Business Cards Railroad uf Call and tL dep Qi LlOp m at A m Dapot at Hoare at 9.05 for Boston at with for C H Seymour New York 3r and deru NBW York Roch AT from Agi -n t block William A Stone LAW H A JUui JL P Taylor rt Block tn from 6 15 a from DR PERFECT PURGATIVE 6 ra j froi for T from for ATOD to ind Way a 20 p m from Horn Block bx lut 1 J C DISTRICT IT to 0 m P from Port from lar WIT It i r 11 j il Drugs and Medicines -t j vr i tf M lit t 1 l Northern at Trov Jane 4 OT p m toy raw 3 Ifl p m 9 1 m V> 16 y m U A H Wm B Smith Cyras D Foreign Domestic B C Wheeler Cm of In Agent for Old Barnes Koy of Job Printing d Uia Block 74 I W D HOUSKI Co Pa D Bitcon M D A M M D THE NEW SEWING MACHINE y Coats Co THE HAS NO SPIRAL SPRINGS Blind Factory D H Bed Ln St Petroleum Pi cr both ud good w Satting and THE VICTOR Mary E Lamb WILL put oa E Agent Ma Twist Cotton and all Unda i On I N B of John R Anderson oULD to tbs eba a but FRESH OF nair the foot of Millinery and Fancy Wm kr tb KMT v TIOGA CO FLOO Buckwheat Bran WELLSBORO COAL YARD on DOORS SASH Cement Brick Ou this 1 per Too at or SLOO pwr Ton lu village for the 1 la past a Of tha I remain frierid oi tho public j Wellsboro Jan 08 3 Parties intending to plaiter tho coming do well new 49 tho to ba New Boot Shoe Leather AND FINDING STOSE m THE FIELD New Shop Stock and elaas Work to Ladies Kid dnd doth morals and Gaiters Ditto Children's and Gents Clothe Morocco and Calf Gaiters Oxford and Prince Albert Ties A and FINE i BOOTS In from to and CUSTOM BOOTS After Defeat made up of various by hit in nod u n of Lord The waa mummed up of tbe men tha toeA the tind tn To til these blunt and la the ho baa molted their by wHich hia and hia He would not reunit ft ladle niuch ItMi A single opinion the by mob which by or wbiaky with and vrca- jet be would not moral the tua he bud offended In bat his in mot and explicit rfe WM u tn fan told tho crowd wan below USB of Uio most mob In tp the electors he I ayo be to think that I once enjoyed your but penult mti to any I ahall not less how I and how I lost It iu the following em written at thai not published until wr moat the Ths day of waa o'er Worn oat toll and and scorn Bad I and tn clumber saw onco more i A La an old lung That room from tha through the curtain thi Full on a cradle where In linen white firat an lay ou the dying Oune waa In that ball Bave when by on tbe low came The of tha dUtuit And lo I the fairy who rule otu birth Draw nigh to apeak tha doom v> lib noiseless left no trace on From gloom they and Into gloom Not deigning cm boy a to Swept by the al Gain scornful Queen of With mincing gait and aneer ol cold disdain of Power tossed high her jewelled And o'er her threw s wrathful The of on tho shod one stray from her crown Still Fay in Ions followed Fay And the little couch But when had paused away Came Ona the the and the Oh glorious lady with the of light round thy lofty brow WLo by the aide watch that night Warbling a sweet who waat Yes darling let them ran the Yea let them go power And all the busy elves to whose domain Belongs the sphers fleeting hour one one scheme The nether the Beeting hoar Mine Is the world of bought the world uf dream Mine all the and aU the future Fortune that lays In aport the low Age that to penance turns the of youth Shall laevo untouched the gifts wbich I The sense of tue truth Of the fair who my grace I from thy natal day pronounce And If for some I keep it nobler place I keep for cone B for thee There who while to vulgar eyes they seem Of aU my largely to partake Of me ae of seme And for power's tahe To such their lore though wide Shall my great be all Bat through good and Will not lore for 1873 else it may yet go home aad spent toe week tote waste I do not think enjoyed my respite and to be out at any time of the day almost like seeing a new to a person who having been the sunshine for al p suddenly the freedom to nee or loiter subject to no hours My father and toother left to myself during hat week bare since been told that my t beat anxiously for fear I was be- path My judicious led her fears his time a wife let to the end of his rope 1 think he then I total deserted the family pew on unheard of before and looked ill at Ike differing faiths but no was made Until the appointed time I hail actually taken no serious thought of Punctually but with a I presented to Lee My also there Mr Loe as I what do yoa call your last was looking straight into the face ot the older Sue Jost her eyes fie anj then that of our religion Surely there is some com- fort sense of in the hope Tor the i i I promptly replied Does he asked The of returning to my fo then and 1 Wt and am Wr hoping you K me j SB looked pleased and gratified So did IrS presently office work If another three to aad Vorth the firy time Leather aba Fir dings u the it In c the time on the stool ol penitence drawing tie ci for the good of soles believes rather Ln hammering then blowing he Till only re to hta old customers and as new ocas choose give a oaU that be now ahoy floor to B T Van Horn's with boat and c YF April 24 1874 WISHARTS PINE TREE NATURE'S REMEDY Throat Il Is to us to bat Dr L Q Lung baa aa reputation from tis to ths from to of tha ant not throat the proas but bj pacsons States actually mid at While publishes leae so say our ho is to tbe demand It aad Not by stopping but by aad to off tha collected about asd bronchial tubes It removes cansa of irritation of membrane tubes the to let and throw off tha the Third It ia and b and are allay only ind tho It a effect on acta on Lbe and and and to aver part of aad In ita and it baa gained a reputation it hold all In tbo For Sale ar R j orsi ASD LOT Also for sale smsi The Pine Tree Tar Cordial Great American Pills WORM DROPS Badge under mj not IOM tapir by the of aid HENRY R Free of Dr L Q C axe open eu all and from 0 a m lor by Cr T with him tiri of TU K not of hj m the AR letters must to No 232 N Second street lej then Mil me loW Si 111 smiling the tender may remove though the may betray For aye mine emblem was and aye shall plant whose bough I weal and then when tree That In the light ot Time la bare In the dark honr of I deigned to stud the frowning nen st Bacon's On a ftir shore X smoothed with tender baud Through of pain the sleepless bed of I brought the wise and of ancient the pined ti lUl blaze tha And even so my child It la my pleasure That thon not feel me nigh when In domestic bliss and leisure weeks uncounted come uncounted fly Not then Then myriads thy car the ahout of triumph Nor u hut in thy breast the aouad of praise whon on night daims morrow When soul and wasting bod j ani I Bull In flanger Borrow In conflict obloquy want 1 Thine where on mountain waves the Where more than winter barbs the Where through lowering clouds Lights the drear of Antarctic seas Thine when thy track aU day white shall reflect the blinding glare Time forests breathing death Ail night shall by many a tiger's Thine moat when friends turn pale whan traitors fly When hard buet thy apli It Justly proud For truth mercy dares daly A and a crowd Amidst the din of all things fell and vile and hies and me and with an unforced See flatterers pass away they will past away nor deem It etrange They oome and go and the BSB And let them come and thon through an chance Flat thy gaae on virtue and on me Caiman ft Co C I am Louis Colman half of the firm long and well known in the country as Col- mau Co I want to tell you how I ed my way to this position At the age of fifteen with my free consent my father signed articles which bound me to give to R Lee cabinetmaker the of three years In lieu of board clothing etc tbe equivalent given I was to receive ODO dollar per week and at the ex- of the three years fifty dollars in money My home in the mean time was with my father who and clothed me A backward look over those three years seems pleasant to me I suppose many times during my apprenticeship I longed for more liberty more leisure and more money or something different from what I had 1 should have been an average boy if I had not but in tlie main I waa contented So eighteen came The heir of en lish estate on the happy day when he was to take possession hardly I think have felt happier mac L Cpon ing of the day when my indentures Were to cease Lee came to tue aad I suppose I shall have to tell you that I hate no further upon your time after to-night I felt a certain amount of independence as 1 I know It and drew a sigh of re- Come to the office after he said and turned away In tbe office at night I met my father who with me saw the writings canceled I then received dollars shook hands with Mr Lee and turned to leave the office One said Mr Lea Have you any for the No I said promptly IB my eighteenth birthday and 1 want to spend it without a thought of He smiled a little gravely and then Well take a week to think of nothing and then cope back to me Outside I found my workmen ing to give me a cheer for it among us on such occasions to have eral Come Colman can we not have said several voices This was also customary and I a but something said to me be- gin DUW as you expect to go Three times the sura boye in anything else you like but let us have no drinks said one of the remember poor Stearns Stearns was a man whoa Mr Leo had em- ployed again and again A week rince he had been turned away because he came to his work intoxicated and we knew he had had no work since remark gave me B thought and I turned quickly and If crowd will treats or what it may be we'll agree tp send the money to wife and family My plan took well and was seconded not only words bnt with deeds and we deputized Little as he called I will give you per year and at the end of that time an additional flOO miking it for the Ibm years work think then jOuls the declension is your own but it fair If you to take it your board at home is just to pay mother for care Bty per week and you do well I will cover Mr Lee's one hundred dollars with another hundred the day you ora twenty-one Can you do I knew I could not I so So again I back ta the familiar p ace with three years me but they proved ful tare u the tint linku w ilch connected me with tbe firm of Colman Co duty assigned me in my new sition was the opening of letters and tha letter I opened tho head Co My dwn Just so day I should send out large bills with just such a So I railed an air castle But this letter contained besides the order some reference to a superior anc a slip from a paper making public that the decease of Colman of tie firm of Col- man Co would not alter the rangements of the firm It would still be carried on al the old stand with the siime name Coltoan Co perC I handed the letter to Mr Lee who See to your order immediately make note of the reference to casket and file the letter on hook C He rose took down a package of and Mid to at these curious signatures Col- man signed like that with a long coll Tne son has I suppose inherited or acquired curious coll to bis ture I answer to the letter and when finished a sudden fancy possessed me to make of nly per C the same coil After a few endeavors I succeeded in i doing and signed Wm R Lee per making of my an excellent tation jof the C appended to For tae Three succeeding years nut u elapsed that we did not receive an order of some kind large or small tha same A Co per and then tbe long coil which I na invariably answered with Lee per aad a flourish of the lame my C I my majority la what I thought then and think now an enviable Mate I had at twenty-one a fair address good health good habits a good trade an average education moderate ambitions and a willingness to work and three hundred dollars a year in ready money When my time expired with Mr Lee he again asked me my plans for the future Though this lime I had many arid many a were very indefinite and nona of them practical Mr Lee aa before gave advice and He sent me upon business of his own through different parts of the State saying Look out for yourself fts you go and if you find the right business point let me know I liked this change I was making a acquaintance with business meu and the country and for a year longer found nothing which made me desire a change One night I took a branch road and a pew route to certain point ing with a most unusual thing for me a racking headache which the jar and rattle of the cars that by ten o'clock I determined to ask for a lay-over ticket at next station I stopped not to ask where threw myself into an omnibus and ar- riving at the hotel into a room and bed as quickly as possible Next morning I with my head clear but with a feeling of exhaustion that decided me to remain where I was that day Alter breakfast I sauntered out going up the principal street gazing idly at the signs dreamily settling with a home a business and a name and my sign would started there it Yes I read it aright it Culman Co I said to aman who was He looked hard at me bat civilly enough It is air I crossed the road quickly curious to confront the bona fide personages who hud so many times appeared to me under the jagged nature of Column Co and tho perC 1 entered the open door and strolled thro the rooms Nothing but a nice lot of net with the haps in better taste than is usual in such A quiet light-haired young man about my own nge came Behold per 1 said to He waited till I had made a survey of the outer asked if he could be of service I said I would like to sec Mr Col- man A slight hesitation ho said Step this way Beyond the salesroom a door opened into a room about twelve feet square neatly carpeted and furnished with desk chairs and sofa two young women One at tbe desk did not raise her head at my The other arose and bowed with an air of a ness woman and the grace of a cultured lady For myself I could only strive to conceal the awkwardness I felt Who contd bly expect to meet ladies In a lady's parlor In a counting 1 aged to bow and say Shall I beg 1 came in expecting to see of the of Colman Oo I represent the the lady quietly then added Please be Now if Colman had been a man any man I should have had no difficulty in step- ping up to him shaking hands and ducing myself and firm and becoming in a moment This however was a new and I became mote Involved by my next remark which was that tbe person I wished particularly to see was perC Involuntarily I mado a circling motion with my thumb The girl's head at the desk bent low the leaves of the ledger Tbe woman sitting opposite me with a smile in her eyes and on hit lips Indicated with her eyes the di- rection of the ledger and said That is per C Was there ever a position I 1 glanced toward the desk The eyes of the girl were raised from the book and I met my j yielded to Henceforth betel my heart and destiny were at the mercy of per CI There was a pause and growing I determined to explain matters ing I i Will you pant nit grace for five t J nave I suppose ters to Caiman cf The first I ever wrote was in reply tb an order fora superior casket stint on the decease of Colman ifc Co I signed it per and copied as nearly peculiar signature of the order sent It had been a notion naver to put Eton i any other letter [I wished then I could see per I have come to town quite by accident The sign attracted my attention I came iu to see Colman I wanted to per C Please don't me I did riot expect to find affairs conducted by a woman The lady I addressed as soon as I had finished speaking Mr bowed as she nou need my I entire credence to what yoa have told me whett you commenced business life we too commenced ours My father was Colman of Colman Co Ho died denly The Co is Mr He is and has been for many years helpless in body bnt his mind is perfectly clear He always advised bat the business was over- looked entirely by my father Through my father's and F took temporary of correspondence and when called for a settlement with the of Mr we retained the name the business Mr we follow and have been so far Of course in our town we are known that people may naturally have come to tbe that a son has succeeded the lather iu I am Col- man of to the outside world in I am Miss Eugenie Col- man As said she with a smile as such I introduce to you I arose bowed and turned to receive an to the younger sister as Miss Caddie Colman I felt that this was ed as a dismissal Taking my hat in hand I May I sea yon again Defore I She acquiescent After leaving Miss I indulged in a long walk for the purpose of settling a plan which had suddenly presented itself to me aud upon which I resolved to In short I had suddenly determined to settle in As soon as I had matured a plan I called on Mr I proposed to buy out his interest In the business He thought he did not care to sell I then went to Miss Col- man She snid that Mr Hicksey had been exceedingly kind to them and she felt under obligations to him and he wished soon to Barley his SOD to his interest in the business and retire My jealousy took immediate alarm and I sought Harler the young man whom I had seen first in the I waa rather surprised to find that he with me until he gave me as his reason that another hand would keep Caddie out of the place jand that would suit him Caddie I coolly I shall try to sec that Miss Caddie has interest elsewhere if I lake an interest hero He looked at me I it then we understood each other I stayed in three days longer daring which time I cu Miss die's acquaintance as much as I dared I also told Miss that I desired to tle In that I loved her sister and wasted aad win her for jny wife I then returned to Maconville for a I waa somewhat uneasy nt leaving Harley Hicksey the field for I thought if he loved the girl as well as I did that he we eld not give her up without au In eight days I was Harley had offered himself lo Miss Caddie and been refused ilr Hicksey knowing lo conclude 8 for sale and Miss Col- ro wue tna as with Mr A All this seemed so entirely to my that I began to feat I might tie one thing to which all these were made Caddie Colman But as I hsd always use my opportunities so I was not Bemiss in this respect and in one year from the time of my settlement at Ab- I ft married man We Colman Co are prospering n our Mrs Colman la a dignified matronly little lady but her Torn ly she likes and I think will never lose the sobriquet of per C There moral to my story Every boy worth sees it I will writa it When a good don't stand idle and wait for a better The Great Wall in Chiaa Mr Seward speaking of great wall jof China which he his trip to the East Tbe Chinese have for at or three tho jsand years It would York or Paris lo build the walls of the city of Pekin The great wall of China ia the wall of the it is forty feet high The lower thirty feet is of hewn limestone granite Two modern may pass each other on the It has a parapet throughout its whole with convenient staircases son houses every quarter of a i mil and it runs not by cutting down hills and raising valleys but Over the uneven crests of the mountains and gorges of a thousand miles Almiral Rogers and I calculated that it would cost more to build the great wall of China thro its extent of one thousand miles it has cost to build the fifty-five thousand of railroad in the States What a com- mentary it is upon the ephemera range of the human intellect to see this en- so necessary and effective two thousand years ago now not merely useless but an and an obstruction On the Tendency of Modem Thought Mr in a speech lately ered at Liverpool College bearing on tbe value of education said in the course of his But the com- bat of life I beg you to take this also into your the spirit of denial -15 and his challenged all religion but especially religion we profess to a com- bat of life ana 1 venture to oSer you a few suggestions in the hope that they may not be without their use You will hear in your much of the duty and of following free thought and in man who does not value his thoughts deserves to be de- scribed as describes the is but half a man St Paul I suppose was a teacher when be bade his converts to prore all things but It Beenis he went lerril ly astray wher he proceeded to bid fast is for lie assumed that there was something by could holdfast and su he Uada Timothy keep hat which was commuted to his charge and another Apostle has instructed us to contend estly for tbe which WRS once for all delivered u the Saints But the tree thought of which we now hear much too often to mean roving and vagrant more than free like on the seas of a route a or a you will hear incessantly of of the present age and of the of those wjo had gone before it And it has been a wonderful age but let us not exaggerate It has been and H is an of immense mental as well as activity It is by no means an age ia minds of tie first order who great immortal teachers of kind It has lapped as it were and imide disposable for man vast natural forces but the mental power employed is not to be measured by the mere of the results To that marvel of traffic the has perhaps not the Df more mental strength and cation and devotion than to perfect that marvel of the violin In rial sphere the achievements of the age are plentiful and unmixed In the social sphere they are great and noble but seem ever to be a succession of new lems which defy solution In tbe sphere of intellect I doubt whether posterity will irate us -as highly as we rate But I meet wish to observe la this that it ia ttu arrogance men of any age to assume what 1 may call airs of unmeasured superiority over farmer ages God who carea for us oared for them also In the goods of the world we may advance by strides but U is by stops only and not prides and by and not always steps that all desirable im- man In the higher ut his The First The story of the first American per brief us was its life is full of curious interest Severity years after the lane ing of the Pilgrims on Plymouth Rock and two and lifty years after the invention of printing rt newspaper was issued ia ton It lived one day and only dne copy is to have been preserved Tha copy waa discovered by the historian uf Rev J B the Colonial State paper office iu Loadon while engaged in re- searches relating to tire history ot own city This of American journalism was published by Benjamin Harris at the London house Koston and was ed for him by Pierce on the 20th of September 1690 two centuries after tbe discovery of iht New World by Columbus The paper was ed on three pages of a sheet one page blunk with culumns to a page aud each page about eleven inches by seven in size Harris proposed to issue his paper once a month or oftener if there should be a glut of occurrences ilia first and aa it turned out his only number contained several columns of home and for- gossip without a word of editorial meat Unfortunately for the his undertaking printed one or uvo items of local and which set the official in a of in tlon The determined that tbe earns obt law acd it tions of A very n afire I'D prevent Mr Harris from issuing a second number they forbade anything iu print cense first obtained those authorised by tho to grant the sarce lu this way the American newspaper came to grief and but fur the accidental vation of a single copy in its very name would have passed into Harpers i i Of a Cup cf Coffee i It been that u these davs and in i the most by tho tion there of persons bora into live long lives and then into without ever having There are man y fcr this aad the principal occ ttf must Raow bow to make And yet there have been pes and directions published how to make good bv it by not belling i by confining the and aroma by making it in an open steeping it by not it bv clearing it by no bv it fine by t coarse and by many other to each to -all these we do not try to anybody how to make good coffee vre just wish to say a word about tiie of the coffee after it is made And oc this treatment depends its excellence It HS you The rule ia decent itf else do about it It to the table in tbe vessel in it was made A urn or pot is the grave of good Of if it is moro the pot look veil to the taste have nothing ken r But when hot is vessel into another the receives that vapor which should have found Its way im the cups on the breakfast table Wlren tbe enters them it should flad the milk or the cream already there By observing ordinary mads in almost any way often very palatable indeed Ata recent 1116 speakere were practical most of them engaged tn malting them spoke earnestly favor of soiling tbt His was formed after grazing for J pastures cd by ploughing mewing ku as and M- seeding and then by the forage feeding il out in tbe barn F e had no doMt but the latter course cheaper and in the long run easier that it would produce more uilk than of tie two former modes By proper care in feeding md UH stock opportunity for at times the health of the could bet served just as ia when run in pastures Fed and tended in I barn they will get clean rater K and intervals That will be a yeat many pastures where Is taken stagnant an in other tity can get no water good or At the gathering of fanners at last September Mr H Sed wick of wail Ct referring to the feed of tbe fall of 1871 Oar farmers all hey will back to the old way of Teed ng stock Yt cut up our straw and Many of us bave adopted liu plan of itig the food for our cattle i nd we are from the experiments ve have Dude that we save third of out provender by steaming it As a sampl of what thu manner of feeding stock I will re- late an instance of a f man who a year ago this last spring bi ught a farm oi eighty acres of land ftir then sept eleven cows four cr five and a horse or two The man took hold of that farm and immediately pnt rin fourteen acres of corn He increased the slock to twenty-five and kept them on twelve acres fee ing them the sowed corn and also for food Ills receipts year over hemas on that same cowa he told me the his sevca cows would Overage kim eact from tbe profit on A E farmer Starting A of he says To bave few early I hate found the o answer I my potato in say about five or sii in diameter Ite soil I nse 111 pure maiden loam ani charred a soof Being in pots they be whenever s a Ettle heat they are coming qn in be pots leiTet and a little manure are put ip in a round heap to ferment af Ler the Bed is in a fit of hwt the surface is covered inches with half rotten the np the may be this and thi plants in the ne pots tfU the young tubers are the size C large peas or small can be by them out of the pots I consider tUe from this system is as ed in the pott sup ply afforded which apses the tuber much sooner than be case Whenever potatoes are as large as I stated I Im- mediately take o3 the top were LC If I Bud the hit is deficient I a little new to the bed and Inm it had good and charred or burnt a tiii iie oT soot Ore al rto the of W fifteen the pots and plantain in roora ia new toil after it has tie of tte bed 1 I sever use a is put on after the giua and weD aired at every ity a good crop of fine potatoes will be obtained Kecord In the town of Montour there lived till recently a man named Theodorus Catlin about eighty who has lived il the State of New York in the counties of vuga Seneca Tioga Chemung and ler and has lived m the towns of Catharine and and always lived and died in the house in which he waa bora Curing the greater part of his life he was a wealthy man but in the latter of his life be- came poor nnd ft miserably ture When in prosperity he to too many men's paper had to pay and hence hiH last end He was rt kind hearted ir the of home and perhaps ne'er 20 miles away huroe in his Hfe except when in Leei ace ers they west tc thu uf to hunt in Oio cf Lee hare deers Journal po not bow to the rules of fashion but remember what will one may look ridiculous on another Form complexion and style of person should be consulted before selecting your costume All who desire to make cress art mast pay some attention to the of colors There are shades tdat destroy one's to the person's i The outlines of be over- looked and to this feature of the artistic the slightest defect j Kever forget individuality uot permit your to quite different from what ycu really N allow your to go be- your income j Neatness in dress is far more attractive than a toilet made of soiled gewgaws Oom Adv friends jcu will hear much effect the divisions render it Impossible to aay wia tianrtj ia destroy the of religion But If the divisions amom remarkable no eo is their tne greatest doctrines that they hold Well nigh fifteen hundred yeara a mole sustained activity than tbe world hari ever before passed away since the great controversies ing the Deity the person of the er were after As before ia a manner less de- fined but adequate for their day so ever since that time amid and change many 1 hundred Christians have with one Trill the Deity and incarnation ol A Woman in Oil I heard a man complaining because lui wife was taken with the oil fever She had a piece of land of her own Virginia where oil been and would but sbc must a company and to boring him to go for a long time he vouW cot so she went i I told the man fan IH in suing for a divorce On what be il Right on i plea I J lea your bed and Contributor j in fte About the end of or beginning of March in tils latitude WB of tea r ret m few very warm days when tpe citizen freih to tbe country feels sure the iacome is very the acceptable time should pass away and have Ida and plants Sid pnt in before it is loo late The old hie a veteran i i will no firm us hat this is afl RT new comflza and garden year that we are sure our words cf will not tw thrown away should on any beset out in spring until the ground tsa become ao dry that it will crush heel trodden on Besides Ibis ai danger of a return of frosty weather be over before much in the of planting attempted Eren though the rid tolerably and warm and in general condition when tbe seeds or plants arT pat out are not always tie first to tar over often sown Inter A chill stops growth for somS time while one from tie first has nothing to with It right on to fruition interruption as well as elsewhere tj a last shall be first and first last j f uny of tt these in popular is fan as trained as a dwarf weeping tree or as or for the purpose ul covering work end Japan present j a very when upon short posts to weeping bashes vith nnd are alao Tor covering verandas tice frame work The with ita yellow marbled is i desirable low Tbe coral yellow and TJ suckles can also be amda t or if desired can be as common They can be bcp in flower tot several months by removing fading blooms so is tc prevent the of The scented bardy jessamine can be made a or trained fO a climber It for mouths The sweet is of ful fragrance and can be rained to grow as a bush or climber desired It blooms for two There art various kinds of the blooming clematis with blooms of several colors and them I Having elender they unlv Be- as World r o from in order character may d brief de- Here h another proof that dogs power A sagacious canine at i H lately pursued a which foiled him by running -i When he had played that trick or three times the dog gave him a rest in the drain t and trotted over to a neighbor's a id brought another dog frequent sharer iu his ful sports Stationing his at one end of the drain he entered other and stirred up Mr who started again toy daylight only to bo grabbed by the faithful sentinel If thai itn't reason BETTER rs SE many years butter ieas heed sent from of in ically tin augh the ineas was ally as an ex- periment it has tfi such that daring the last two it has pied several of the largest tauter dealers of Tha object M packing the butter IE is the action cf air and and this U so completely attained has sens from Copenhagen to and back without the slightest qualities The principal demand are China Brazil Spain countries generally ur Liverpool houses la up to 28 pounds althi ngh those of 4 pounds are generally are lined inside with wood saturated salt pickle and art up This treatment to very important influence inche of the butter A good drain on a fi anything   

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