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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Sentinel, 1877-07-20, Page 2The Dethroned Sultan.. Prisoner of State in a Gloomy Palace -7: • • His Devoted *other. • - • CoNwreirrii1OPL.; June 1.—Whatever the -English May thing of Midhat Pasha, he doek f not here raWvery high • for *ScruPttlousriese ' of purpose. - The mysterious death of Abdul:. Aziz has Olouded his reputation, and nolaPe • of timeWill restore its lustre. .• The-Siiltan•• is. kindlydisposed towards his dethrOned- brother. -Murad, and Would willingly give - ...,14M 14s liberty;; but he leers that. a party might be formed to replace NM:it-the head, . of:power again. He never 'as. as ineapable as he was said to be, He had still 'brains • -• enough left, and with a little _repose could.have • resumed - the, reins of . government. • This was net tpermitted, .for he 0W -himself surrounded by his uncle's ,assassins. The -• spectre of his: tragical death Was ever present - to his imagination, andhe recbiled with hor- ror from contact with .men who might betray. him as they had done "...Abdul Aziz. Pea Miirad 1- He now lies really:aprison- er of state in the gloomy palace of _ Top -Ka - Pon; On . the Seraglio" '.Point,„ a residence hafinted: with blood , and -crime - throughout • the )3yianfine and Ottoman annals. He lives-, but he knoWs-not at What incipient his chamber May . be entered And hemay be at -tangled, or, what he would. regard aa equally bad,. be draggedforth t� • be again- • placed On the throne to Serve the purposes. ,of .cOnsPirators,. who, - whenever it suited'. them, would turn their. swords against , His mother is constantly by his tide.. She tastes his food before it tenches his lips, and she alloWs no one to approach him. until She 'knows the object of his -visit. . His bee-tit/full daughter, Blanche, Circassian, whom he hadf reared up.to.an: European education :in the faMily, Of hiaprivite physician, is with hirn.F- alai: As soon as he was Calledto the throne he.had a part- of the'hatem.iitted up for her _ exClusive use in A style Of the Most luxurious splendor and expense,: Her aPattinent, whose rembelliihmenta cost nearly -400,000 francs,- was justfinished when Mtirad Was " forced to_abdicate„ With her refined and - Cultivated mind she must keenly'feelthe: _ solitude to which she is now condemned, im-- less--.She*:,finds consolation in :sympathizing • witkthesorrows of her father. • " • - Worshipping Under 4 Bottle of Ru , LFrom the nartfora Tunes .1 • All along North Main street, 'people- Were , , 166104, this morning, :at:Fome - sight- aleft. •-Fateup In the air, on the spire of the Fourth. Congregational Church, at a heightofnearly WO feetfrom the pavement, two men were • Seenatthe very top of the. spire, and. one •of them • on the ladder -above the top. • They were takingdown the weather,Vane,- preparatory IC Tainting the spire* and. ' church, which- .needs • it; not having been - z -painted for eighteen years. One of .:the •- -Men, a painter ham' ed Bullock, is said to be nearly or quite sixty years Old, and. isalso -ame. : _ , -The:Fourth' Church Was -erected in 1848,. :And and was not :finished before the 616ee of'the litter year: _,When the spire approached its :completion; and the (dna- _ mental finials. Or hollow • balls below. the :Weather vane were in process Of construCtion, • certain residents of North Main Street con- tilbnteda quart bottle of fine old rain,: and., a pack Of playing cards, _Which Were placed,„. - unknown !to the Church: cOnimittee; M • the• • • -hollow swell beneath the vane:. The bottle lienor was duly -Marked with the - date, •'18.49, but probably.. without the _names- _of the contributors; and under these -ungodly. • devices the religious Services have been car- ried on for nearly thirty- years,: -With.ont the knowledge or allepielen of the, odd situation • 4 things aloft, UP in the steeple:• . - • . • , • _ The •Acqnisition • Of MnoWleite. Itis•-,- a fine- thing to .know, thatwhichis .. ,, ,, _ • .. . • -. unknown to others; it is still more dignified. - to remember that we halie gained. it by our• , energies. - The struggle •• after knowledge, - -t0Q,`: IS , full: Of delight. •; The intellectual chase; not lea than the material'one;%rings fresh vigor. to our pulses, :and infinite ; palpi- tions of strange and sweet suspense. The -idea that is . gained with. effort affords fir greater satisfaction _than: that which. isac- ., quire& with dangerous 'facility. We dwell • _with More fondness- an the perfume"- of the - flowerthat we have ourselves tended '-than • on the odor which We cull with _ carelessness - and cast -away Without remorse. The strength- - and sweetness of our knoWleclge-clepend upon • the impression which if makes upon our own minds. It is the liveliness of the ideas that ." it affords which renders esearch' se fascin- i• _ . • , . • . ting ; so that:.a trifling fact or dedu.ctio.n, . ,.. when discovered or wor_. ed.out by our own •"brain affords us infinitely more ple_alure than a more important truth: btained by the ex- ertions of another. • • • - ' ' . -`,` .P4.ii4141 .ii: New PrOjedile.• , t - Mr. W. H. Lewis, a Welsh. gentleman, of I Hafok near 'Swansea, . his invented a new engine of warfare, which *ill be likely to at-, - tract considerable attention. It consists of , i'canncin, so arranged as to discharge a sharp , Sword -blade crosswise in the .direction of the enemy, the knife -or cutter being . se poised- • in its career through the air as to , cover the - whole space in a longittidinai. direction de- • . scribed by the bladeit'self... An 8 -inch ball Would carry .a sword- 14 'feet in length' 600 . . . . . Yards, literally mowing down every . human • obstacle in its path.- •• ' 1 . - - • - . .1 • , 0 • MI;laii7G.• C'QW.O. —If Milk- and butter are _ 'expected, now that :pastures . are - getting • . - short.and dry, sothe extraieed must be given. At least two quarts of the mixture above mentioned, should/. be given to each cow, . - along with some cut- hay or green, fodder. Green „fodder . alone is -.Mit- - worth". much - infoiw.r- -butter,---althoUgh---itTmaY-inere!,e-itl;te. . • , , .._ Tim- Turks have Bemired all the •.ironclads. :Two frigates and a gunboat, - of _little value, are theonlyfighting vessels in Egyptian navy. - -- • ' '.. • THE Duchess of. Wellington is -‘considered , - -- one of the handsomest ladies in Europe, and :has always been a great-favorite:With Queen -Victoria. As a lady in Waiting,: she attends :her Majesty on all. state occasions.-- • - --.... . . • - ------ MISSMANNAH Romsciii63, the only child. --. of almost the Wealthiest of - the clan, Baron Mayer,- is about to be married to the Earl of _ of Roseberry. The young lady issaidto have a dowry of seven or eightmillionsSterling. • • • Manners of.Early Australian Settlers. i. t . . ' • - 1 - - - .- - ' ' ' . - : Many curious, anecdotea, illustrative of the , manners of the early settlers in Australia, I are told of the strange progress through the - 1 bush *Sae by the late Mrs. -Chisholm. .. One of tliese deseribes the ealninesi-• Of her atti- tude when, to the terror of the:party:of girls she was leoliducting;' a- strong bushman sud- denly •Sgang,treni;the thickeovert and. laid hold of the rein* of her :horse: The driver -. took iiP a WicIdY he hid in the - van . to strike - him ,oyer the head, -'. taking him for a bush._ ranger,!; !wheif:-Mra Ciiiihelm - arrested. • I his - hand. 'The- Min flaked; "Are you Mrs. Chisholmll r', ‘11 am." "YOU are thwiery- .,, . , .. ' ... ,. • - . person wanted to see." - This again made the dri er:ver.y uneasy, .and: he again look wistfully at the waddy- • • ." Do you see t .,-• - farm t; - ii --- , - the i nice -lo king. ..on :t e side of hill t - of a W `man ' never crossed my. threshold; - otf) " I-do.11 , "Well, then j the face and sidle now, for God's Sake Mrs. Chisholm, if You - . have got a nice 'Tipperary :giii:- With "your -leave Me one." . And pilling out a large -number of bank notes_ he ..add-oci ::;--":Thls IA the, thing that : will do it with the clergyman. - I wish you would - see What I have in the. • cottage—several, fliches 'Ofbacon, i a : -chest . of tea A bag ef anger, and plenty of everything: ' Besides,; II have a bullock dray, horses, coWs, and calves, with lots of fowls And pigs too." Mrs. Chisholm said to this modest bushman, "1 hayseveral -nice Tipperary - girls with Me in the drays, but at present I am going through.: the ,district, and I- never - niale • matches on road.? ,• "Oh,- I _wouldfeast your . whole party, for a Vreek-if _you :Would. only Coneidermi,cas: e, and 'may .00:1 NOSS yon_V ,Mrs.- 01,1ishohn did settle on a farm not faroff a . nice -.Tipperary 'girl that slfe thought would snit- this well4to-do biahman,- , and had no fear that he would not soon* finld. . her out, and some:Months' afterward:a Mr. - Chisholm had the -- pleasure'. Of hearing ' Of their marriage.: .. . '•- • ' 1 ' ' -I i• • • ' • 1. 1 orPedo Experiments. - . , : .1-: - ,:-•---: .. • , - . . Captain Arthur " and the officers of the NAVA' Torpedo 'School at Porisnionth -•cel . _. / ,. . . . . . -brated.t4e termination of the -senior - cour of instill:0cm on 'board the Vernon by'a grail/ exhibition of the art'.of torpedo warfare in . Portchester Creek.. The outrigger tOrped,O - was. expleded. with striking results. From - whit' oCeurred; • .at •Portsmouth, : _ it 2.seenifF *- questionable whether, -f!rOiriding the -teipedo -VeSSellEetgliffiCientlY agile Under steam; en ironcladj'e' ould.. escape 09in these little wasps i _ . . , . ,. • , ,n any circuinstances„ , The outrigger launches ;Are -mere specks in the Water and as they inecessarily attack- iend on, th chances of hitting _them, and ,SO Preirentin 1 their , approach, -i are very _ Sinai : indeed. . They are I fitted ,I in: :thei bow with a Steel . rifle-proofIshieldfroni under Which the ' en,--- , battery, •-• and ste'ering gear are eon -f- - trolled. No one is visible; .and, their _pibied- tion is !invulnerable.: to] the: • The outrigger _lanfith which • Was . the.. other ' day ,expeinnented With:,tcarried a couple of charges, ICOinpOsed.: eachi. of 100 it of gun- powder, which: were :booMed out some 17 ft. foni :When: the time for -• liring arriii.,Ted the spar containing -the canis. • tor: was:, dropped., in thei water, the charge being stink about 10 -ft.,:below - the 'surface orwhat in -actual Warfar wouldbe mimed • ately Under : the bilge of: an ironclad. Th i.,charge was then:exploded by means ofhe • electriefal eel:M*11*a** onbeard whereup- on Icolumn of seething Water about 20, f in clianiO'Per 01'0'i:into:the air,J011.6wed bYr-a;.' ,loWer fountain of mud: The first thought- FWAS'-ai to the. safety :of the launakitielt..see- that the ifettlg at a distance of nearly 200 yards, quivered with the force of the vibra- tion.". The little craft,however, though 'ap- heaVed by the concussion . and ,deluged • with water,- nobly withstood the explosion: and - as she subsequently steamed to fire other charge, it. was clear that the 'shock had not , injured her -maehineryin the slightestijdegreek NO, 'Ship- could •.-:•haite • survivedl, the blow, whatever the depth.: her bott�m double might be. But the moat ;interesting seriesl'of'expermienta Were those which were inte4ded to illustrate the method zof-.enter44:.an • "enemy's _harbor „where- tor- pedoes are known to. be deposited. - • This . can now be -effected by What are known As: -:ed to take AdVantage. of the tide, the: r- 964nterrainei =IPIO-Inetbld:generally'adOpti„: :rent Of the Wind and to drift the count3r; - -:inine into .‘ the required • position Where the . charge is tOolieayy to float in. consequence • of its -own bitoYanCy . Tire casks were ‘Al, -lowed to float _.1.43 the h rbor,_•and When* Safe distance had been attained, a • small -Charge. of cotton was ,fired between the,-. casks which - severed .the A -Spender; the ;Connierinine dropped - to the 'bottom, Where it was -stilisequentlyexplqded with terrifiei • violence. .T.1144gb the purpose of. cOunter-", • pines. is to prepare i a • Channel for the safe approach of a fleet, : evident that they -could be imade equally .effeetiVe . against'an 'eneniy's ships is against an enemy's was irnpossible to witnes;sthe experiments_ Without -being deeply impreesed with the iin- ortant part Which torpedoes Are destined to -bear in naval warfare.--- [ 4114.4.11, lionssS need to be kept j -clean and Well curried; washing the lege -it advisable, . and •.the Otables should be freq ii4tlY cleansed,' to - keeP•dokvil the troub;esomepies. When at : *irk in the fields, !. it . will 0ethein much .from- thiapast t� sponge the lege and flanks -with Water mixed with One thousandth part of carbolic acid.. Gf0saloneWill,not support a working horse. FQUr. quarts of oats, corn, and wheat -bran, 'igrOund. together; with a • bushei oftnt hay, will he only - Moderately good feedingalong With good pasture at -,n;ght. •. - - SiTramEit=VALL00.4.--A few ariners adhere to the old sYStein. 1 of s With our plentiful ehpicc of cultivated crops, beans, fodder cern, potatoes and roote- - different' kinds, and of artificiaefertiliiers; there is no excuse for keeping the ,-ground 1.i41efer one season. lIn our climate weeds* are eaSily, killed, . ancI we seem to haveno 'need to continue the Practice' of summer. fallowing. If . is thide; however, thek 'Present month This a tinie 7ithea it sjouid. be thoroughly and deeply Worked, .or kepi . entirely free from Weeds by -harrowing. 1 Faiingit CseP,s, Suchas corn, millet, or Hungarian grass may be sown theearlypar of this month: There is a light hay crop -in- Many places, and one or another . of these fodder crops will be very useful. It will-nott pay to -gm* a Crop for fod r;•_miless theft& I - is made. rich.- - • '' .„. an Who. saya-lie 'Doesn't Sleep. rointhe eincliniati Balletln„) BURG.—The inaiewho'. !cl , s not sle iinderS, now resides l dear this place. Some•*ime in. 1861- or 1862 Saunders enlisted in t e.Fourth. West .Virglitia. Volunteers. Foi ii., eial Years he had-notrslept - at all, so he mays. .:_.--But it beeominiknoWn directly in 'eallithat .iliii:_niade such pretensions, it . • I aroused- the Curiosity-: of it maof , the then fficers', and they .set a watch Upon him. ,a -Itold by.:„.a-...colmiel,,, that ihe. and many - othe 4ost a -great many nights' sleep in en- deavoring to entrap Saunders, but during the whOleitithe that he remained -a Member. Of the Fourth hewasnever °wig& asleep; - He 1'istood.:guard, night '*after :melt; and week afte -Week, -paid ,hyri:sleepy;headed.sOldiers - to taketheirturns,biif never was caught napin:g. He hauled coal -several Weeks in. -ince I don,only stopping long , 'enough- to eat - ,4 , - , :and Lange horses,. and _plonglied in the field .with Irp or.* Stalwart Men untili he wore thei4 out .cc•iiipletely; but never seemed to tire7., During the year 1863, lithink it.,was,-. lies te Philadelphia and was-_exaniMed. t - ,by e leading physicians. Of the country. The at up with him in., relays. of five, night. andday,ana-kePt lip an:g14kost con- stanti stream of conversation with hint; and at th termination of twenty-nine days dis- charged himwitha Certificate, but could give nole filanation of this . freak •�f ; . nature: ' i .- Man stories of the untiring energy. and ac- tiViti of this Man -are tpld,rand'all agree who ihno 4 him that this antipode -of-Rip:Wan Win 4, is the Most sleepless man they ever. met. I- • ., 'A Sainiders is new abont, fifty-six' years Of .ag hid: says that he has not known what t ‘ sleep • ifor eighteen years.", Helliniself Can net A 10int for it, as he says the, change in his piysica1 eign.nization occurred --within three Q,ys, and that' -he _ never was - sick -in- his fif, and took medicine, but once,- and that s when'hejaad a-cAtir+ about three • ea; Ake.: He is -a hile, -hearty *an, and ide f - to live maiay.years_yet.s. He ia:con- scie t iisly-oppoied to making a display of .. himse or would, nodoubt, have long • ago been: ore the public as one o - th human euriosi ies of the wed& . , • - - 1ost-01 the WoOcis.••, O., for a Boy in a Wilderness During . earfulStorm-TheDii,c-overy. . . • _ • ...• • . 4 p4,E, Pa.—Royal.A.4a.ms . his wife, ! 1 .. ncl• a five-year-old : son are visiting Mr: order: of Pentaylvania. - Clit Tuesd4 the dam father at Lordville N. Y on the , •, 'ttlei,. y wandered . off. There is a' dense oreet.", n the outskirts of the town. . A.. eight., had seen the child: going in that redti . :t.A.Fearch'wes -made for -him by , is fa' i r, but he could iipt be found,Thc• , ntire i11age then joinecl in the. search, - It as ket up all day • and all night. , During he iii t a .jviolent storni of wind, -rain'.-thun- er an1•ig tning _passed over ithe _`icinity". - ti - reels• ere hiown down and- struck . y hght. ing(i un . the - Searching .,pa,rty in th• Co s, There were several; natrrow'aescape torn. th, but there was no; -cessation i he hua1 No trace ,of the boy being- found nd :A atainount having [been seenin th idinityllinly- a day. or so before, and bears ,. - eing own to be plenty, it tiviusthe belief loan fthat the 'child had been devoured. Sii Se yeeterday,. however, the i father, - he: wa ' bout to give up, theliearokin.des-,- air, di cOyered'hisboy-in.-6 hollow' stump, -2 1 till -in he ineuntain, two ..miles- from Lord- - . 0 . - ° being --called, he sprang Om- the t nd clung to his father's -neck, al, II *P,1 Ater He h e said. uesda rept everal ig dog t r• spea as a ilothing eslin , y t re nd on om se es otLsli lt.P4 zed with joy. gone IO:the woods to hunt flOwers,- He had wandered -about all day • a1lingfor hispapa. At night he ing into the stmnp. He called Ones for his papa, when,.he says, a awe nit° the stump and growled ring him so he was afraid to move egain. s What he thought was a d�g ear beyond . a doubt. • The boy's: was almost torn from him; and his . badly lacerated. Near where he large trees had: been blpwn ;down, was struck-- by lightning. «Aside ness-andAtiffness and a little'ner no serious consequences b4ve re- eboy. 18 o s em ,dg t ed, -th t wa d, ing fro ee Horse Thieves :Ranged, -1 1 avi 4-1the-i-lak -1:4tOri 'a ailiinOon -c.i4iids; ▪ M. . '.•LFro-uil : the Omaha Herald.] . ri etryi! D. T.-71)Thenl:lwe - came to vili yesterdoy afternoon, 'everything I. - i '.: .1- - - met •.and peaceful,: : but upon the a Ile West- of toirn,, near a large -pine , the bodies fof three,. young Men - whea 1 Y. blackened faces turned upward, . 'clear !blue isky, the. ropes clan,- , the limbs -- of -,„the pine tree, arid e d ep iit in !their necks Showing but top ainlY Icevi-tli.ey'diedi, . During the _day two 3. three en went out northwest from town -get: soke.,19g0;.land-were surprised, when miles out; - by -people whom thev. a on fon Pp sed o be Indians; judging'by.the Tay - ey rodetheir horses. -Being, With: -4n .ex • t am en left it and -ran -f0 the woods, d 1 y taiking a circuitous route came into ,arq nearly scared to death. ‘! A. party of fi tee w -armed Men_ immediatelystarted o t, andl:found, -- seven or _eight miles • Out, t ree whie men asleep, with four horses- cke ed 4ar then.. They surrounded them, 6 verecl't em With their rifles, and • awoke t eto. ,rfheywere taken to town, and .when e am lied' cOn.fesSeft that the horses were were s le at. ook:They Mere placed in a leg: c bin forf the. night but -about 3 o'clock th morning a 'hand; Of -twenty vigilants t k he lout, and When the people, of the n rosc there they were •hanging :dead, i' pia ht of town: _They Were -buried . - - t g:. . The following -is to be their e ita h.:. • ir Alien, Louis Curry, -Jas. hall,- years. Age 29 -years, Agel.9'years. • "- ROI:WC T4LisviGS BEWARE.! e Y s the 1ody-of Curry, mien, and Hol; -- Ike 0 her thieves, they had their rise; !decline; - , d! f 1; - . • yon pine tree theyhung till dead, d here they found a lonely bed.- • , - en'be a A); r every; h your c 're borin PIAP F swing_ ttle oatiti.nus _holy you- kobble horses rse you pick up- here- adds sorrow to stot. this IiiisitieSS, Or hang you l to - emp and hands enou town to he : whole„ had 7,clan. - -, . .. , . - I r d seen that th _above „designa is n it naively afilPica le to the particn , , . .•el env/ho hay. elbo e it in More , de _i -,--in ,..1_3ther .wo • si, that the -4s able of individuals lio,-- -in , agek_g by; L constituted th unieriF of ret -equMies lied, ,. li'rua-.. ie..pa-toriize-d - the • . of modern E rope . and sne 0. _Gre We itre .,assu_ - indeed,, h -clevAter in one of thLondon .qUar 'lies number we fo gay:that,. 111: coui ancient G-reec_ even,: a -dads :vele nil: gcaPprtronisewlYa tr6i to'LI 13 1 ':4found;61. ti i - fro .., act (notorious ' it .vionld---.-S.Ce, that 1. ens ,abounded in straw. shoe" the. ri de is pretty -.p. in --that tonven. Witr“were by no mdaiis ;scarce a the, -out .vated- citizens - of., A eti. . Ther . would seem' to intiroate, A that in Westininstj Hall; former en of Straw' Iwalked opeihy _a stilt* In On of t:heir shoes, is gn ey. -wanted ein leynients. as .- • imago- the probability -would seem ',.; I_ . .„... .;.p'. ti' : ,....; - ,1 ' i be t hile in. the .Geek courts do ,.g., ry was '„......an..esny co4,....V,.. at: the : -so, :in -. Christianized Englan mans ago, *en co d' esSily. be • fou- . to gi- evidence - lino': , path' that Mt be.T ---and, hence 4iginatekthe sa. . ._,Iminoegwn-, .iaisi Manby tgi ii ioer!. a j il vl. - - rtti irti 1401i. i Ly z . . - ;11theThe11, ;Q: a0:tia Sretto: Quarter i Re* MeS anintereS i had 'alnio saidnation) not , eas r.tio be:resisted- -We s concluding remarks, verbatini leavi the reader t to . Wee • how flail 6 .nove Citing matter he.: -Qiciplerly .oOf respo commune tion must be. : have arcl of -a race of -Men"-- -(s• t _writeiudes-big-Alia ), i_ who used, form , to ply :aboiitur own Courts law; ho.„-frem.their anner .ofmakin knosp ,occupation, * re recognized. b the nI straw4ilideS, ' An : advocate or lawy .- wanted a .0o ..vetileiit • witiies, knewbse. signs where tO. ifild one; and the c1 between the ,- ar.ties Was brie ' Don erneniberl a 1 the adirocate--- -(the iooked at the ef, ...s.,,a gayit,i, sign ie-fee.iner4se and the.pofrel of rnefjicreased-with t) ----`.To be suro I do.ten -"mile into ourt and sweat it!'- aniw , shoes . weiit into court and swor4n1y we rnighti be supposed' to be de4 that mean w:e bn,-.flattery, W codld* the nairies.of sme Cities nearer home A ' traw;'she'eS-,-co ld. be found ..a, 4„, well ):1.en- .,„, - • •"I Gr.4 ge-anct1 Window. 'Plants; - . _ . HINTS. POR W( ThE WHEAT sTuneus.—fienerally --.tb,e , *heat and rye stubbles are seeded to grass i •or -cloTr•a4p Afdiiettsr tuar,edirty4otwprinnlgo the bare localities, the new seeding is. thin and poor. It Iii,s, bad practice to turn Stock upon -this . light grass, ground.; yet Many " penny-wise and pound.' : foolish" farmers will -.do this very -thing. Ayoid_ it by all means. --Onth give a light dressing of some active fertilizer, rg- .ciwe,_:1 such as Peruvian 4ilana, - or Bekcontrary,isor pes.1, fertilizer, prepared expressly for s aobiover-this would greatly advance 1- e -crop, -and -probably give A. ieed bite r in the fall, instead Pfja 100r one now onx.W until a' horse can no longer: pasithrough the I - :-1-,e keep. -AP cuItivator- going ,, _rows, 'an4 We question if it would not , be greatly better to use one of the many -useful 1. ,. • , - hand -cul4vators until the-- : ._ is glazed , I - rather thanlay by the 00ra -._ hen it is two whencultivatingtorn? Many raise What %Di three feet high.' Always:- .,'11, zzle the ho./..se 4 are known as - ;., ,;--,- _ .;CATCH•CROrS ; these are turnips, peas, or buckwheat, Sown between the rows of eon 1_ -Iftluzgast .cvltivating. .-Soinetilnes this may e -done With profit. If the ground is rich -4-iia: weeds would gr.° wilhere may as well be 4 --something -.Useful grown in place of thein, ,_and we have had 500 or. 600 bushels of :White - , --tilihipS per acre, grown in this -limner, Which were -worth nearly_ as Irlitldb AS =the corn. if If such a crop is grown, it :should be' put in as well AS possible. To • sow turnips . . broadcast, is net 80wellas to sow in a row ' - , vith-4-Seed '4411 or by hand. An Albany . seed -sower, or a garden Feed -drill, _inaSt be run in the centre of the row- after the last Working. ',Then, _being shaded, and the ground moist, the plants „grow rapidly; and ' -.need- not 'be -trodden out *hen the corn is: ,Cut. If peal or buckwheat .are sown, twoS,clrills may be made for-ea*torn rOw. _ Po'r..T.Os,__-_-_Early potatoes should -still be; protected against the beetle. Lke potatoes must necessarily be closely looked to, lest .-ifieflate_broods destrOy.-them. L The present . seasonhasproved the advantage of stirnulat- -•ingAe growth by fertilizers and cultivation; and also the uSefullneio of band -picking the beetles when they first appear. A trial of niany--"pest-poisons,''has-tonvinced. US :Of the -superiority of -Paris green Mixed With flour or:Water. All these- are poisonous, and. if ' Wie,MUSt USOS1101-a,male.ria4 the most effec--. - .:. -t-p-fenay-aS well be chosen. : ao a --GROPs —Thinning fib.e -CrOp fabenld be., rigorously performed. - Xvery surplus- plant-. should -be treated as a weed, which in reality it is. _ Ituta;bagas, -may still be Sown, if siiin'Active fertilizer is used to Start a quick, . vigorous growth, ' The ground for white 1 turnips should be prepared for planting at the,..aTtif this month; or early in 'August .Thet•White Globe and the ..“-;Cow's :Horn!' - . :turnip, are the best for general use. Of ruta-j bagas, the 'Purple- Top Swede is one*-pf the best, -- if not the best. - .. jr_A-Y-'---_Cloiver that has not yet been tnt. 8„-fostninch-.of its value. NO crop, suffers more by late .cutting than this. - Early -ent grassis also better than that to ripen its seed; Haying should be pushed as last as ,-. , . . Possible; when the crop iaaready; we do • net 414Y on -account of the weather. Standing grass Will suffer from heavy rains or st more thin that vvhich - is cut. -•: , . • -TJI;A.,13=H0PEE USE OF MACHINfEHt is a veryMportant matter. On many farms it would haeylilheeetteesroatroyhmireacthihenewi.or,k,wttenretointuohioya: s ,,, annot be hired, then they must bepracured ono Other way; but no farmer -can now afford * o Work without them. It is A very general '. atilt -iii tutting hay, to leave A -Very short tiibble ; this isobjectionable, ..as it :greatly njures the.after growth. - -W:74-4.- ?' BAY.IS' Cul' it is beet. ti:-; -cure it -at; aitas7pOssible. If the -weather is n/IfWet, ble,-*he crop should be put into Tole- vOtka 8 -8f:)0-11 as it is cured, and if protepticii. with - ay -car, .iiaay stand , several - days without njury. When there are plenty of caps at and, we Would -tut and, cure the whole - efore hauling any, unless for _voci_ vewatsi hen the weather is damp, to sent lIV: the fternO0n, 'en.re the next day, and eoCk the ay 'before evening, - will be found a good ractibe. '.. Then thecocksmay be opened . layPIlbeex pt un it oiri V'. I. 1 g:in'!.ndar3-ra-wfteearthelirttittstilinintillt hge (Smug, turn over At noon, -cock before night . al haul: the next 44. - Bay may be 'easily . jei.O74-ar:Xd..-0::-: —tong, Wid...477 and - OW .loads, tbe,piteller'e work is easier, A boy „of e better than short, narrow; high owes, • ey Are more easily _loaded .and hauled cl lye will -aye time; A leader 78/1011id give his Attention.to making his load, and - as on As the 'last forkfulispitehed, the wagon ould move onte the next .cock, not losing - .- onient. In harvesting time is of the ateit*alne. - . = Plan apt .to,. duce g ...place wide a layer o and -tli each p them - Prevent injury_ ly Upon m.uch- plants f otherwi the hot placed. that are - visit th is requ turned. a Much. :winde s out .of t hest pia .where t they w" the. wee -ut of deers for the tinninerAr ora-nealebt •- -• It Would cono" 6 th*. holt to. .prepare. 0 - a mere -frani of beards :_s., ght :of the pot 1, put down4 R hes On *Melt' 's4 the plants; ng put: in th •_ pots. 'to allow ots. by :the in falling,. directi 4 dent re in, fill, in between .aehes,. . Iiis will not ''.-onVr. out -s-9- . api ly, but. -Avoid! 0 s --an -unsus ected- cause of N . . Thik plan -. '11, prevent the gthrO4n ove by the Winds, otheY:mean-s must be devised. ' use planta Ced ..Shades in - Of the day, aidshould 'beso tire this ... everal insects 4 wn in_Lt the greenhouse, May ti hen Set out; and _-_vigilance f Fuchsias . s uld- never be the open gr ncl; :Unless in arden 64 "laWn, - i nli:acne. .b.II:. f: the.-othay i t'irote. ao 1:7bse, below, ledt, , oy their be ty ,;-L if taken at all, the V IWICIA, is the more _,o, ective., - :Keep ' rowing in t e floWer, -pots. . . . . - The w may be e a:great IT have bee need -her OIL the la it ? thcse Larly at s in a hot; no ,growt may suffe cut . ..S have the flower. gladioluee stakes, w As little -Masses, serve a WI the effect -distinot„ ting.. and one of on.roses, b for which killing. I and easily -Propagate, thias, and the just ha frame. will: be fined to What eeping,"bu it -coniprisei operations; ost of; which:4 out in.6form. r months and ief reminde . The grass _p be triOW11. hen- it 'needs e it •a .rule omows.regu, ervals,. -ma • A mistake ; when the Ass is -making .st let -a-tone, .else -the roots lugs must kept neatly - perennial : lents should utaway ag-* OR 'as Out of - are want : . . Dahlias, nd. other p_ _nts will need d be So Pia d as to show e..g , plants.' in ng anal co ting ; rib on planting - unless thel es are kept Eibriecta.d:U:obt: .vvp,rieliparaticonytL, test trOubl S,- not Only - lants, f is he rose -bug, help but aching and ruing -the are inactive, into a dish of water...7.. Ch .0 Wei Forssr--. ly _rooted' hings, from w Wodcl der a -shaded MIS LAWYERS ierial,on w - •WHN od —When th WHAT t Irishmen? EXTRACT promise cas THE ladle in the " sw PEOLE- ' Brunswick, a letter wi can't even- top•of a lett EVEN if want to be a keep the pre the pantry. A FAAME - obtained a • bloom of t granulated- i or. • ep _well: ! It isimtria-*: ey lid, rs to have fru'i'tiar-tsea:?..: . .. e Currents .. _ . flOSt com! • r 11:11 n 1:t fairly°1 r-Te:Ie:fgi: nest 19wit?' biess eln !j buy." .-• . in :St ohn New people. They begin ript ; at least :they me of the city at the.: utting R. after it. - ways .W is just, s well:, to - s on. the op shelf of 1 Sterlin of aug popier e and-Sn- . •,:jhafi from the roe.. It is . in COL. _ ..saT-,—When-the grain is s� hard that, lug -4,-.1)-etween the 'finger nails; it breaks to iloiii- and shows no Signs of dough, it is condition for cutting. 'When there ip A vy harvest, it is better -to begin cutting a eibefere this, rather than leave it - later. 0 grain to be kept for seed -should be cut • "last.- ". The Stubble shOilldhe put AS 1ONV • - possible. the best straw is near the root. ;self --binding harvester is a valuable piece 4machinery, andcanhe-appreciated. by a 'itier who has been annoyed by. itinerant • t AIME,..--=This crop needs careful harvest- 5orers who cleman.d excessi my in the rry Of:harv t _ - _ AS it ifii-easily-4thaged. And lessened in u.e by bad Weather., When the weather fair, the barley . may be .cut with the per and left on the ground untilthe next - ir,- When; after having been twice -turned, ree-.from weeds; it .may be carried to - barn. To cut and bind this =crop is - rthan t6 tut in swaths, and lead: with ley s1,-7e-PrkOl'te 'n -i- 4.--.; :lie 'P-1.- cut while the tete of straw is oemeWhat'green... Else it should . ont 'early in, -the morning, left on VI. und all ,day, and raked and beund late in -afterndon. - This avoids shelling. The aves should be ototiked as fast as bound, . stooks should be . well . capped, as this p needs to be well „cured. • before it is sea. oP-DAF.sern-MEA,Dows with fine Manure oon-48_possible.afterthehayhasbeeitout:- 1 be very effective in producing --A 408e, . ek bottom .growth, which1'.-will -,Shade _the' - Und and prevent diyng.. -