HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1875-4-1, Page 2ENIX
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444.4 EINDS. IN1PLEISIENTS.
SEED DRILL.
This iMpleinesithag double distributing grain cup, and te admitted to be the best befoi e
tue piblie, 1 am no'. Welly eitgeged erablep them for the ming seeding, and will le pee -
lewd to oupply atm 9, 20, 11, P2 tubes ew1, with tube shifter or without, according to or.
4ter, and will eteleaeoe to keep eu 1 and either Med and size to supply tiny who may not have
*liven their order. The style, f Web, end rentelial used will be found all that *au be neared,
anti' if equalled, not eurpaeeed in Weetern Canada.
0
This requires no introduction. It hes become a necessity to the fai niers, not only as a labor.
miipg implement, but in the inereased quantiries of grain saved by raking the stnbble after
the reaper. in various ways it ean be used to advantage. The expoience of the lest two
seaeooe has decided me to use 18-32 round steel inetead of the oval for teeth, as being the best
gained for thework, not only the strongest and least liable to break, but holds in positionthe
Nest met Imply ao apt tostraddle apart and 7niss in raking, At theWestern Fair 1 took First
priseu slat. Raker, 'beside the 13, C. Taylor. I am making the Litchfield Bake. it is very
much like the lthica. In the egsterp Stetes and the Lower Pi ovincee it hes taken the lead
pt U ethers. e made ten of them last seesen as an experiment. 'I hey have given ample
eatfetaction, i will be ready in season with bath kinds, and hope to be able to supply all who
:Roy fever me with their order. Last season 1 was short fully one hundred rakes.
JOHN ELLIOTT
f
PI:roam Foundry, Corder Rntlattst and Wellington Sis., London, Ont.
SISSO=1001060.000eassomP001001001100..........mstEme..
NEW CfOODS FOR THE SPRING -
AT
RA_NTO
11**•104-4
CHEAP FOR CASH
Spier, March 18,187t.
, I B. R. R. IS COMIN
0
ISAAC CARLIATC4
pose leave to tank bis friends in Exeter and surrounding country fAr their liberal patronage
in the past, 'end hopes to merit a fair ehare of their trade hi the feture, having
ON NAND
one of the Largest and
Beat Assortecl Stook
:Usually found i„u• a General
COVSISTING OL
Dry -Goods, Groceries, Etc.,
Ready-made Clothing, wines and li-
cfuors, Hardw,a le,Crookery, Boots
and Shoes, Leather, etc.
masa give 1. C. it call es hes determined hot to• he under
001d by itty tat ahliehAt,e,titi iii this sootiozi of poll/167,
istero Odobtt 7, 187i
NW
ig Goods
A.REIViNG AT
endorson White;
SU Oe 13 ant
•\
13
NOW ooenitig our gentle ee-aterneship rolynee*
bin, direct from the13ritib merkete.
ebiptuents eouilug deity Ito hand until stoele
is (eoinplete,
The greet clew:lug sale of
713QQW$ 0110E$
is still eoutintied.
HENDERSON & WHITE,
suecessors to (1,13. Smith,
NOW .s YOUR CHANCE
T. 0 PUIMILelen
BUILDING SITES
lN
EXICTER.
AT A LOW FIGURE.
SEVEN ACRES FOR SALE
T N. kIOWAltD will offer for sale by BUB-
O • L1C AUCTION, commencing at 2 p. m.
On Thursday Xray
. ,
seven acres of Valuable lana in the Village of
Exeter, situeted one street west of the prinei-
pet besiness street, and extending to the B.R.
track, the whole being convenient to the .L.,
13. Station. The property is woll drain-
ed, one drain running through the centre of
it, and another eouveniently by, to which
amble may be added ono leading frern cellars.
Exeter is pleasantly situated on the line of
the L.,H.ce B., which will in a few months be
completed arid running. The great natural
advantages possessed by Exeter over other vil-
lages, and thegaeat bufinx of population dur-
ing the past year warrants the statement that
Exeter will, in a few years, be one of the finest
and most prosperous towns in the west. This
is really an excellent opportunity for those de-
sirous of purchasing eligible lots for building
purposes. A plan of tho lots may be seen at
the residence of the proprietor, or of the auc-
tioneer, on the day of sale.
Mr. 11. will also offe t ferule on them= day,
711E CENTRAL HOTEL,
a large, white brick building, having all the
modernimprovements, and commanding all
the coinmercial trade and a large portion of
the general traffic. '
TERMS ,—Ten per et. in hand on day of
sale, and a sum equal to one-half of the pur-
chase price to be paid within thirty days there-
after, and the balanee in one year (on the ho-
tel the balance is to be paid in annual instal-
ments of $1,000 each) with interest on offered
payments, the same to be secured by mortgage
J. N. HOWARD, J, SPA.CKMAN.
PROP. Auc.
xeter, March 4,1870% 79 -td.
111Q..tiRGAINS! BARGAINS! I BAR-
GAINS
WARE, HARDWARE, LAMPS & aft
sememio OFF
AT GREATLY
Reduced Prices
es 1 bare to remove my shop as soon as pring
opens to mak 9room for my
NEW SHO -r)
have determined to sell
uNry rt. .c.HE FIRST OF APRIL
my large stock of Stoves, Tinware, Hardware, etc.
10 PER CEET. OFF FOR CASK
en all purchases over one dollar.:
The above stock le compiete, and in 'good order
.to Bankrupt Trash.
All will positincly be sold as above.
COAL OIL REDUCED TO 80 CTS
NETT, CASH
Call early, and get yynr choice.
D. JOHNS.
E xeter,Fcbruarv 28, Ma'
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',CHU E SDAY,
SAF
APRIL lee, 1S7ti
UNSAFE;
THE MAN FROM 08L/FOIINLI,
M•^..*
ueN elearenin.
d ,eyen yeeelted it, there wee evident,
no turtra diepeeithni to treet
ith that ftwor whieln' week mid sa3J,
guine peysons expect to tied in the di
posi tam Of 0, parent, e
,t Frederick Gwiler It'ef; wfld, feyono
intestienantiterlan ro11ieiiog, ementitees
eattey end Often' thottgliil tete, 11101,10,
never winked le • the entret eeeeptetion
of thet term, lee did not altettya
.elinegteo, othere, t1itreepeetto 'itieb
they 7t,!,ra entitled, the feta did not li
in a tee' with eit be troveteen t;ts bieeitsi
'Intent, eettergefte intoner wits the agen-
cy involved, It he erred yet more Seri,
owdy, it is 051144 tut he never (lid .60
uom voittoditmitm—tintt he fiextitt
pe evil pttth Of his own will, hut mere
ly wandered momentarily and beemose
hrvrt Withelit the c' itto .mU't8 lie 0uld not quite pin, 'the ueeceettry
which lo the first ehapter Moe kept hsed to Ms: f Qt, In the hands n- d
good feitli hetweeu writer and reader, due the tuition of a coatis:lie interest,
. when epealiiine of the personitlities of aid parent, who took pride ie hito end
the two friends on hoed the Celifornite showed that he felt that pride, the boy
steamer, it would have been obvions, woela moat been emphatically a noble
frolll certain WOrds pasts:log betweee mee—the men 14 bleseieg as ',vdl fle an
them and from the oceasioutel lieeitto ornament to society, even in ltis early
times ined blutalering of one, that other da,y u Seel) hands as held him and
owes than those ef qatlie Willie um" under etude' tuition as he revolved, he
aud "John 11:itisey, Jr," wetild have mad mite bet:eine—what Heeven per -
been found on the beptientel registers 'stilled if it did not ordain, and what it
of their birth. And the suspicion is elike our duty and privilege, to wit -
would very naturallybeve erisee, either pees.
that they were erinnuels, whoa§ trans- He had, in later boyhood, what some
it front Califoreie to the Eastern const mon of basieess would have considered
needed,disguise of name OE 11, means of an unpardortablie foible and others ears -
safety, :or that they were balowiog ily cotaloned— a taste tor light reeding
some quest which could be advantage- in the inteevalaof business; e romeece
onsly pursued under assinned name* being of coerse the prineiper staple of
than with their own Plainly (Teetered that reading. As he grow -ohlen end
to the world. The letter suppostitioe, nearer man's estate, he bedente a ire -
however, would have seemed the -more quena•vieitor to the theetres,df not an
tenable, those words of "Lulie-Wiiliam" lialtitne,' and occasionally dabbled in
being reteetnbeeed: "New 'York,' or thoSeoateuleer theetrieals elide cool
somebody in it, has sold you oat on a the het . blood of the stagestruck. If
claim -and whoever it is, the personthere was any graver persuit of dissi-.
must be disoovered twit fee little ao pation, the young man not ouly Man-
couut balanced." aged to keep the indulgence secret, but
Bitch was indeed the case—the two to prevent the traces which so easily
were for the time man7hunters—seekers record themselves upon cheek and
after the perpetrators of a great wrong; brow, e.
and yet there was a geotesqee analogy When Frederick Gwiler was fitly at
with the foi mer proposition involving emu's estate, and when all who knew
criminality on their own account, for their relationship, and did not know the
one of the two was really accused if not et -toeless whiel • seemed to exist between
a cohvicted elminal, and it is sad to them, expected that the son would
say that be would.not have dared to sct either have been offered an interest in
his foot on the Atlantic shore without the house with which his father was
such disguise of natneandperson as re- connected, or aided to assist •it eotres-
moved him from the probability of re- ponding position in another- nothing
cognition. in the way of assistance was rendered
The disguise of names may be the him, in spite of tespectfal entreaty
more easily cast aside, as there will be which grew at last into indignatit ex -
no future occasion ofresuming it. The poatulaion. A cheek from the time of
baptismal appellation of tho person leaving edited at nineteen, the young
known on the passenger -lists of the man remained:a sabtried clerk and eo-
Golden Age and Illinois as "John Hal- thing more. np to the ago of twenty
-
see,. jr.," was the somewhat more easi- six, finding a home under the lonely
ly spoken cognomen of Laurence roof of his father, but derivieg no oth-
Deane ; and that of his older and mete er personal rr pecunint y banefit from
rier friend, who figured as "Luke IAD- the relatioyship, end tha gulf between
Heine was Fredetick Gwiler, very the two, never bridged by an advauee
designated by those who knew him best, of feeling on eitl•.er part, growing pe-
as "Fred," of that ink. Only so much cessarily more wide and more difficult
will be necessary in order -to fully un- of Irossing, day by day and month by
derstand their connection with the pre- nionth.
vious circumstances here -after about to A lonely roof, to his son, that of
5s briefly related. John Owner has been called. No rola-
For a rumber of years jnst anteeed- live of bis blood beneath it when the
eut to the resounding of the first half stern master was absent • no care over
of the nmeteentia century (A. D. 1850). it. except that of two or ihree servants,
there was a dry -goods house of quite one of them invested with the dignity of
extensive bnsiness located on tho upper housekeeper, without whom the details
end of 13arelay Street, within easy sight of the establishment might have been
of Broadway, and bearing over its doors found ditlicult of management. And
the ponderous gilt firth sign of "Saun- but for the housekeeper it ninst have
derson and Gwiler." The partners in been found stil . more lonely ; for bux-
this house were two in number, viz., om, homely Kitty White, at least ten
Richard Saunderson and Jelin Gwiler, years ohl er tient !thyself, had a weak-
boeh men of family aud long past miti. nees for the son of her empleyer, and
dle age, and who had been acquaiuted so fee es she could do so without at -
with each otherlong before entering in- tracting ,disegreeable attention on the
to the bnsiness connection. Mr. Satin- part of the employer himself, tried
derson, theugh the senior partner, was he us bly and faithfully to minister to
still very nearly of the same ago as his comfort. It is highly probable
his junior, but had (if common rumor that, lutd sneh etrecity in her conduct
was to be delivered) lent a hand to been suspeeted, her term' of employ-
Gwiler, years betore, through whibh ment might have been materially shoe -
generous assistance the latter had !leen tened : tte it was, Kitty, who came into
step by step until enabled to secure an her place before the young 111RD left
equal interest in the mercantile house, school, yet retained it at the time spok-
to the pros erit of' wh:ch k en of—when he was a
his
TOE align 0/11= TUAVP atierlO.W.K4 1:41%.
p yIns 0011 year pastSI
business talents had in no small degree quarter of a century. Nay, longer,
3013 tributed. much longer ; bat of that, hereafter
.. xe
A very marked personal (Wt.:ranee, There caTe, weetaterick Uwiler
io,„.„ chub ripe adulf• age, and
however, existed' between the planets, had
who seemed to work so tied.11„. tugueN‘eitie, in7 iwhichllgintrr sawyCiirA before the June morn-
the old Illinois and her
in business relations,
erc'itifenr4sillicillr°7;1'' asataidelloisise thee and more marked cense of disa-
!_e_ju_ninioln. pusengers off the jersey coast—ano-
family relations were not such as to greement between father and son, des -
draw seriously upon his income. He tined to inflame° all their after fives,
had been married, but his wife had died Thoineh John (+wilor seemed disposed
years before, leaving only one child to to allow and even i.,0 compel his son tc
evidence that she had ever 1iver1— carve his OW11 way through tho world,
Frederick Dart Gwiler whose middle without any aid from that wealth
name was so seldom used Olathe scarce- which could so etteily have smoothed it
ly knew of its existence. To this son —ho yet arrogated to himself such ft
John Gwiler had given a fair public personal and moral control over the
school education, and when a proper same son as could only have been prop -
age procured him a situationin another er under very different circumstances,
business house in a distant part of the Some busy tongue, of course moved
city, believing or pretending to believe by the most praiseworthy of motives,
that his mercantiie education would be
il poured into the ear of the merchant
more likely to progress satisfitetor
among strangers than under the partial the story that his son was . visiting,
with sech regularity end openness as
rule of one connected with him by
to indicate that ho entertained serious
blood. Perhaps John Gwiler had been
a student in Mediteval history, and intentions of marrying her, an embroid.
read how noble and knightly houses eress named Penelope (familiarly Pen-
ny) 'Worrell, an orphan girl who sup -
sent their sons to act as pueges and es-
quires to the famous in arms, of differ- ported herself by her skilful labor with
ent blood from their own, who would the needle, who rented and paid for a
m as ono eeepot tsmall apartment in ' a respectable
be likely to train the
knights,” but teach them the science hen& humble part of the city, on the
and the honor of hard riding, licavy border of what used to be Greenwich
blows, exposure and privation. per. Village, and who had even opened a
haps the father was aware of his ewu little shop for the disposal of her hand -
partial and helpless tenderness toward iwork and such other articles in a cor-
p
son, and anxious that other hands responding line as her limited means
wou
should remove from him the tempation ml.ade enablenormation of this scandalous
he( to purchase.
to "humor" and " spoil" his darling conduct on tee rart of a young person,
Time
boy I—Perhaps Rild of his son's countenancing the ir-
In sober, hitter truth, there was not, regularity --and seeming disposed to
and never had beeu, ally companion- take part in it naturally brought on an
ship between father and son—not a eelaireissrment between the half-estran-
shadow of confidence, if any love, had ged father and see, in which, no doubt,
ever marked the relation, Perhaps each played a part of nearly equal itn-
the lattet was quite flil little donbtful as propriety. The father angrily demand -
the former. Why this state of feeling ed of the son whether the story he had
should have existed was not easy of heard wae true, moderately gelding that
explanation. except that the intimates if it was, he would. "break up any such
of John (hider were right, when they arrangement or break his infernal
called him "hard," and all the other neck ;" and the son, after showing the
afdjoehcotirvaecstatit,s.uasIttywchlinao
gitsigi to that lino calmness of hie blood by informing his
o
elion would father that he was twenty-ene and
have been quite suffieient; for it was econething over, that he regarded the
u) quite Impossible filet there could have matter as entirely his own business,
been anything in common, whatever and that he did not and evotild not al -
the requirements of both, between the low any man to meddle with it, with-
"— chiaiLdv,odt:stberatny,h‘iveitiio, gzplendtg attglani:,ti lomat: out making him wish thet he had
itiloietneb joaldi,iisfrzlIcs,o Wafts r atal.11::(atl'ethOttly,. al: oi; i kept I ;
have taken nearly all Mt blood and Marry the yonno lady hetet°, he did
him Oita the story was true itt every
perticular, and that though he might
tint split() have made up his mied to
...IA finger e OUt of a piece where
they did not belong,le-also ieformed
ped eagle wou:d nave been in the beet
of the kite or hawk. It iteemed (sneh
things have been!) that the boy must,
make it tip fully then, and wmild pro'.
,PIZOTC)CittA16118
OIIAS. SENIOR having removed to
theli,titiidifittily,edeatierl14' lair, O. South,
eetti4 tenet,' lifttedottifilletely eenevated the peen),
lane and rsertingea hie etediti , dEr to come -need
One of tho POlit.LiOtto eatatla
pieiperedr exeetite Work le ileet,clese /44' yle,•-
AielittoWies" tailt totitoti#0, ,12(i _boo( eon-
, •
tliulabed Of faveleeeit_tlie .Atteetlen
beettllettettebireettiok. Of: Mince, itittf, lifteleg ell
bifida:goad lieleetteri. Of liteillthillet,, tied being
tifeinteett to Melte leadoff at fitedereste
116illabitotti.photdataff#t)k; PlieeeegfiltibeWhen
,tottelied, $epee det4taleitiettly 1$4; 'et
quite es seriously involved.
Eichard Seendereetn, venior member
of the tirm of Seundertion &
vow, as rote been eleeady indicated, the
etitipodes of John Clatiler, alike in feel,
(z )'lir fihtiti repo%
A child beginning to read 'beeomee
ddighted with a newspaper, amt.
be rends of names and thitats which mire
e
og and matiora ; SO hint Chet !minima, and he net/ Crogrees areOrd,
close observere remarked newVallr in win Year 03
the 'wonder of tite4"eYer coming toge- WP311 3 cflutrteee sehooling to eentild,
thee except upon the Prilleiele of the Eveey fathernmst consider that MI
or -
meeting Of Peateemes," The eenioe matwn a°1.1neted witfi 11041,1)4'0410A-
sZveoyetliltl,leagtlearnollsli;antd‘snie;oierlitilii,no;(2)ht iliefiehenntefialuoiclattyfroilm'io'breeioigninTeldeiwoof
(f)l'ilei:L;etrlitrotiPtea'eli)ubtntt'l'34QolitkIdeisillte:bllias tnbOlet.
substance was and had twee freely giv- fortified against the ills of fife, and is
en, throughout life, not ill acts of R•• braced with emergency. Children
tentatious foreign ehartty, bet in eid of ftlellised by reading, Or study, ere, of
those who preseutsd the claim of blood course. more considerate and easily goy
-
or associetion and the supporting de, ereed, elow many thoughtless young
weed of need. He had been !torn in a Mea have SPent their earnings in the
northern country -section ot the State of tavern or grog shop who ought to ha
Now York, and when he came to the been reading ? How many paint
great city in early life tett behind him who have not spent twenty dollars
a quite extensive family. On some of books for their fen:Pies, would ha
its members almost n.hject poverty had given a thousand to reclaim a SOH
set its fatal seal ; and on others, •once
prosperous, niiseomh,ct or misfortune
had thrown depressing n10,11011(.108.
Among other soureee Of n0180110 and
pecuniary burthen, two of his sisters
bad married poverty, ill-heelth and in-
e.fficiency. To the necessities of both
of these, with the families growing
around them, the conscientious brother
ministered. alike when called upon and
when his own eyes told him what the
shamed tongue would not reveal ; while
his outside charities were not made
smaller or less frequent from the ex-
cuee of thie pressure. Slight ns each
of those stetuly and repeated drafts mo-
on the purse of the merchant might
seem to be, they tr.ade up, in the whole,
no mean aggregate ; and it is not
strange that Richu,rd Saunderson event-
ually found the weakening influence
upon a fortune of which the whole was
really necessary for the extent of his
mercantile operations.
One of his sisters, Ms pet Charlotte,
had a son—Laurence Deane, a hand-
some, fine -spirited and nbole boy, in
whom the uncle took such interest as
to induce him to look after his personal
advancement. The boy had been fair-
ly educated in the country schools of
his native county, and at eighteen
Itichru•d Saunderson brought him to
the city, just when the health of his
mother was failing under privation and
te%0PiEhlsse
of the Te*Ea etutite be ha* ftny of the,
lkolt StorofiXzeter, and N, A, Des
worths Drug $tore.,, Luegn, 'itool4e0
with ell the general news of the day,
and eraihmed with local news. Price 6
cente per oopy
,w1ft,ireati'asithouse PrePrte‘ur,
From the Pitebergh Leader,
-A. Lender reporter visited the Chi -
nose laundry On LiitertY street, near
Sixth avenue, ,for the purpoee of inter-
viewing them to get the Celestial opin.
ion R5 to the general prospect of teed°,
Ile found them busy, wito the excel),
!jot) of one, who appeared to be the
fen entan,
fyoer side. Wah, Lee in ?" asked the report.
ts er, taking the 000 11'0111 the sign out.,
tie The foreman eaid he wasn't
or " Where is he 2" staked the report -
el,
Oh" aliewered the foreman short-
ly,:;)1.0,1eosiafnt)i'lwehleivree---14eIr)101:1'tdielelpnh'yr: New
York, Boston,
4, No; lives nowhere."
II'sesti:istlliiiissoltalsundlirtYe.?"He more in
Phirclelphy and New York. -
The foreman then stated that Wah
Lee was a rich Chinaman, He inform-
ed me thee he owned two laundries in
Philadelphia, to in New 'York, one in
ono
tnilssitbitpliLlillaitrfio:111 iawni isCc en3isgiv)°ii h a altiliteo itt
Businese was pooti he said, and Wah
Lee was happy. It kept him hu
goiug from one city to another whe
he had laundries, so he was alw
fly. He couldn't say what i'tnh
was, but hicenkgnhezsit W: in
With Lease'
America ?"
danglitor who had ignorantly, thought-
lessly, fallen into temptation.
11101c ()irate a COW..
Whon the clod< stove, de not take it
to the repair shop till you have tried
as follows 1—Take off the poieters xnxd
the face • take off the pendulum and its
wire, Remove the racket from the
" tick" wheel, and the clock will run
down with great velocity; lot it go; the
increasing speed wears away the gem
and dust from the pinions—the clock
cleans Heron have any sperm
oil, put the least bit on the axles. Put
the mechine together, and nine times
in ten it will run just ae well as if it
had been taken to the shop. In feet,
that is the way most shopnen clean
clocks. If, instead of a pendulum, the
clock has a watch escapement, the lat-
ter can be taken out in an instant,
without the works apart, and the result
is tht same. It takes about twenty
minutes to clean a bras e clock, and
saves a dollar.
0 ••t I
Currying.)Combing and IIMUSit*
ineee.
There is a great deal of abetted talk
abo nt woeld-be-norsemen about cearys
ang out what is geed for the horse in
regitter work to the animals being
raised during colthood and to idle hor-
ses and betted nearest There was never
anything more ridiculous than the
trash written about curry -combing be-
ing of more consequence than good
food ; for if young and breeding stock
e treated well, they are far better not
to be touched in the svay of grooming.
The same with cattle generally. Cows,
if properly seared for otherwise, want
no unnatural cleaning, and everybody
who knows anything about beef cattle
and stock -raising on an extensive scale
is well aware that the ripest and high-
est prieed 'animals often have manure
plastered on theithiud-quarters in such
a thick mass that it would never tall off
until the hair was shed. I do not advo-
cate dirty surroundings, hut mere-
ly deny there is any benefit in grooming
young or breeding. stock generally, and
maintain that if sheltered by night and
allowed to roam abont by day, thee
evil instead ef good arises ; for I never
knew an instance of lice hunit. g heal-
thy and well -fel young stock when suf-
fered to go out and aboat daily, where-
as, in many instances, I have seen colts
and calves which have been curried and
brnshed, that have swarmed with ver-
min, and the o wrier obliged to dress in
poison to get rid of them.
Sand aud dust rubbed into a lousy
animal's Coat 'will, by a few applications
eause.them to disappear, for the auim-
mil will shake iself, and they fly out
with the dust, the same as fleas, &c.,
are ehaken out of a hen's feathers aPer
Is.holellt.,a;cs:31.usted herself in soil or &toilet+.
aSNereer, o, jets° b0011 backs, tyr:atilidcii ttblitiet.3,1 et swil
tei
have some dust on every part of their
body, thus proving, beyond any ques-
tion that some dust is gratifying to the
feelings of tho animals. Yes! Jet any
gentleman have an3 or all of his nags,
draft. horses or males cleaned to look
their very best and turn them out of
ohialeltoolf• oilieue,td
• About six years."
He further stated the puddlers' stele
didn't effect With's business in the
least. 1.
" Washee, washee plentoe ; WaShieterr
all day washee."
He couldn't tell what "Wah's weekly
income from all hie laundi ies amounted
to, but thought it wits m the neighbor-
hood of $1,700 •
Bow to l'romote' Peace its a
anxiety—gave him a home emder his
own roof, roof, and. made Lim a clerk, it,
Spite of some oppoeition on the part of
Gwiler, in the mercantile house which
bore their naine. Here he proved him-
self valuable and capable, and reliable
as, to character, so that not even the
eatly dislike of thejunioe partner could
pr000nt his eventually rising to the po-
sition of cashier, with the general tran-
sient charge of the money received into
the establishment.
.tat the home of Ricliard Satuiderson
it must be saidethat he rose in position
quite as rapidly and worthily. The
merchant, who had not married. till
past thirty, and then a weniart a dozen
years Inc junior, had two daughters,
one verging upon womenhood—band-
some, not a little romantic, generous in
disposition. and ready for any early oc-
cupation of her girlish heart The
otli ,r was much younger ; little more
than an infant, in fact : diminutive ev-
en for her age, somewhat pinched in
lea turee, believed not to be too bright
io intellect, and apparently rether an
nnwelcome guest than otherwise to the
tnether, who sometimes showed a pain-
ful engraftment of shrewishness upon
native weakuese. But it was the elder
daughter; naturally, whose personality
became of the most consequence to
Laurence Deane. It was not strange
that svhen Laurence Deane, at twenty-
one, had become the ettehier and confi-
dential clerk of &undersea & Gwiler,
true, abiding and holy, nrilikely to be
between LiIlie
rooted up while
there had springtufrip,
Saunderson and himself an affection
mained.
ea i`on ed. )
gra/Icing ent the Water.
Captain Boyntei7, an Amelican, who
went to England a few Weeks Shine to
exhibit the efficiency of his life -pre -
Serving dress, has astonished the Lon-
doners by his. ,,,A,1.-,cateets nil the
l$erpentine and the Thames. On the
.'40th ol Jaamary, savs _amnion paper;
iie excited the woeder of thensands by
floating frinn WaRing te Viuncliall in
waterproof snit. It may be said that
never before was old Father Thames en
defied and set- at naught by InOrtni ; its
depths had .terror to the man who
fearlesslY cemmitted himself to them,
and its yellow tide no power to resist
his advance or check his progress. The
scene is deecrihed as follows :--
" Capt. Boynton started with a floon
tide from Wapping Old Strir4. All th(
begrimed lighters moored thereabents
were crowded witth workmen, jrist arri-
ved. from the yards and shops mi the
other side, and the barges and Neatens
men, young awl. old, looked on open-
mouthed at tt.e old gentlemen who, en-
casitg himself in an armor ot India
rubber walked letn. and alOng the riv-
er without touching bottom ; who could
SOUR MILK CHERSE.----Thca Utica
not sink lower than his breast, had he
tried ever so bard to do it. and who, by
the aid of a light, double -bladed canoe -
paddle, set MI on his journey, followed
by a fleet of boats, and kuclly cheered
by the amazed and delighted spectat-
ors. The Thames, however, ruffled by
a smart wind against a heavy tide, was
a much severer test 'than the stream -
less Serpentine, yet nothing could be
more complete dials the success of the
trip. Rough or smooth, It matters
nothing to the American Guardeman,
and the spectator is soon possessed of
absolute confidence in the safety of the
invention. Blowing his fog -horn, or
whistle, using his /MO, smoking bi ; ci-
gar, and waving his banner, his voyage
was quite a triumphant water progress,
and the tarbrunnir seemed to take a spe-
cial delight in threadieg his Ivey
amongst shipping and boats, tetkieg the
arches where the current was most
demgeroue. Ouce or twice he purpose-
ly allowed. himself to foul a barge Or
the buttress of a bride° in ORO ill8t111100
down and roll in the (lustiest place con-
venient, wonld ferteit my reputation
as a judge of white is good for live
stock.— Rural Nov Yorker
The Best ittrorsi or &vine.
It is not li.ettly tans question will be
settled very soon, except so, far as local-
ities and individual preferences are con-
cerned. Nevertheless, a breeder's ex-
periments and experience ere valuable.
eids to concheions. Here we give the
following from an anthentio source.
When I first considered the import-
ance of changieg my stock of hogs,
the question presented iteelf—voint
strain I should select, as breeders all
claimed their stock as the beet. So I
concluded to coramer,ce oe the Magie,
a large, coarse white ling, with a few
spots on their bodies. But after a care-
ful trial I was convinced that this was
not the hog that would suit me, so I
crossed them with the Poland China, or
Butler connty hog. This added some
goed qualities to the Mingle stock, but
did net improve in any respect the Po-
laill"lheelil.)iilgi'll.w•ere strong and grew rap-
idly, but did not fatten °vett. Sonia
that were bred in the Poland -China
blood were fitt and ready for the mark-
et at 10 or 12 months old, and the rest
of the lot bad to be kept until nearly 10
months old. So with this result I
thought it best to 'Continuo my experi-
ments. So I selected some of the best
Poland -China blood, then added to it
the improved 1301d:shire, and soon
found Ulna I had gained the point of
my eaperience. It seemed to increase
the size of the Berkshire, and still left
their superior fattening qualities. So
I bred this crosst long enetigh to satisfy
me that they are the hog for the farm-
'
er who deo not pretend to breed pure
strains. But I have come to the con-
clusien, after ca,refully investigating
the different theories of imeding, that
no et tosses breed as perfectly tend eveu-
ly one strain in its purity so I have
direeted my undivided attention to the
Berkshire. Ale, breeding stock is im-
ported, and I find my pige are strong
even Wh011 young, nod remain eo until
fattetted. So in conclusion say
the Beelathire is my hog, for I have
find from experience they aro the
most profitable of all breeds,
•
1. Remember, that our will iLlikely
to be crossed every day ; so preAkelor
it.
2. Everybody in the lionSe has an
evil nature as well as Otfrselves, and
therefore, we are not to expect too
much.
8. To learn the different temper
and dieposition of individuals.
4. To look on each member of the
family RS une for whom we should have
14 Ware.
5. When any good happens to any
one to rejoice at it.
0. When inclined to give an angry -
answer to " overcome evil with good."
7. 11 from sickliess, pain or infirm-
.
ity we feel irritable, to keep a strict
watch over ourselves.
8. To ubserve when others are suf-
fering, and drop a word of kindness
mid sympathy suited to them.
9. To watch the little opportuities
ofpleasing, au& to put little annoy -
anises out -of the way.
10. Co trke a cheerful view of every
thingneven of the weather, and en-
courage hope.
11. To speak kindly to the ser
vante—to praise them for httle things
when x6u can.
lu all little pleasnres which
mi4,--eo.ccur, to put yourself last.
18. ict'ares for " the soft answer
that turneth away wrath."
Motets this for Pedigree.
A very searching investigation was
carried on a few years ago, in the north
of Eugland, by two families who were
searching up their respective ancestry.
The strife was great between them,
each one determined to look bat k into
antiquities rattly th.e.
exie-nt ithee, wimse limits% as
Spencer, employed an artist to pain.v,
historic been° representing the building
of the ark, and the loading up ot the
414) by Noah and his sons with its
r ultifarious and various came
01 the gang -plank loading to the
deck of the ark two men were seen
rolling up a box on one side of which
was painted in large lotto s, " Relies,
insignia and papers belonging to the
S1 en icr family."
This way considered a coup d'etat
hard to beat, but the other family, de-
termined not to be out -done in the an-
tedeluvian presents of their name, pre-
pared at great cost nini research a re-
cord of their antiquity.
LI describing the exploits of one of
their azicestors, at a very early day,
who was represented as a man of some
curs :
authority, this remarkable passage ec-
" During this year Adam and Eve
were driven out of Paradise."
shooting like an arrow 1111(101. the St6111.•
,
and between ewe boob; towing behind.
li'asy it Wag to see that, cled in one of
these suits, it nian may venture where
it btiat could never go, end perform ger-
vices of the highest e dvantage to inn
inithity. The wonder expeeesed iti the
tacee of the eailors,'eta, itee over the
disposition from the , mother ; end it ceeit to rnarey lier when, where, and lindwatk8 04 th° nmwded 8141)ing in
seemed that- probably the father Might 1 the Pool, or On board the river One ni.
tibeiliaiiwieanTssoftotihieimeseeeltf, tiasricdomteevib.)telietitt bow
tiftene stehde.' stTrehriegit',e114eniintnogf' otlitiyi8viirit: I e rs aititii.01 bi °earl! tesoi01;.111 fitei,tiiig ma; des itttivtiteireel,sttivIalgs
insult
perprtlially ofki,ed by, Ilis child, nal aversion, of the most lamentable "6
feature of the jonimey, and tho otili,i4
During all his schooldays lie kept IP ic7ellinIrZwe'tec(it ;iftillii alirinrae(tieeroi6fk 16)iewilfeart1°)enri"Ys bns and °abtnen Pnli''d ttP on °+'erY
t°,1I:catebr'staoold'hhly`aas°01:ehitchieltime:nyde!):f01tspi,ye lieli;it''', thereeftee, by sufferance on tile Lri(1.,° .141'01 tile" h°114 4tivtth'or was
whoss,saasation was iorrnoci ow) g6i 9, One band rind endtrance on the other, Iins'"'1•"" '
ratiOn earlier
oat thO tt,,080116 ; , .0 ,,,,,Sudh w4 flie„,state of affairs existIng Mr. Morel of Blythe,' svN.1 lottt hie
.,
wilan, tile aol itrprotohia Ito nen areitile 411e/tiler find yot more pain, atin Iva eiretilar ktiew, is not Cep -toted
Oct Ali cohiPlicationt ih Which both beeame to reeoverv
, , . • ,,,
A man nameo. Ilolloway, a resident
ef this cottney, who limited in tho littv
Ainericen war, and also fit the 00111,-
libriwn,robelliori, received fatal illiUttl°8 It
fOW days ago by falling from a hay
ii.TrtitotpocLoehtta.',siis,et.ttit.tattesgtoodoriokstat-
Herald has received re sample- of sour
skimmed and butterinille „cheese, of
which after examination it reports as
follows: -4' The Pie -le of cheese received
is of mild smell„and flavor, gond :color
and soft, suttieth texture. "Itepartie
with its owd moidture very readily,
andds dispoeed to creek deeply.* Be-
tween the fiagers and thumb it yields
smoothly and easily at first, but be-
comes rathee dry with a tendency to-
wards ertealitiess. It has not the pe-
culiar aroma, ,of fine cheese, not its
body. It lacks oil or tidiness, but
these, as we understand it, the Makers
do not claim. The cheese would be pro-
nounced a good average article, and is/
certainly a Very interesting specimen,
its view of the` material frora which
it is made. Under the iniscroscepe tho
the appearance is quite diffeeent from
pure thetas°, nod the marks of
foreign nutteritil are evident. There
seethe to be the reinttins of disintegrat-
ed cells, which have some of the 011111.
acterestics of one variety of starch
eells, but we doubt tvlu ther complete
identification could be reached, as tho
acid of the milk seems to haye destroy.
ea the structure end left only vestiges.
A more complete teicreecopie examines
Hon, which we innylritike 1Lt a leisete
time, may diseloee the composition of
the sample !note d(fitately, The
• •
tpecnnen, the product giving one round
.
of solid butter and cheese from eight
and half `pun.. s of milk, i ttht1y nf
interest,
Mrs, Otilnitintili, Who Was injured by
by being, tripred in a broken Oink in
Itt 081tftwtotidewitlk. in it ititit ogitinitt
ho villoge obtained a rdiet for $000.
Vito wetildtet