Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

York Herald, 4 May 1860, p. 1

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r ., .“”»N-J- ,._..v«s-\._;4 .s v. «- ‘X‘vwfi‘ r N w. . .. ferent portions of the field. there may be so great a di’fiizrence in the sod, exposure, etc., as to materis ally affect the results. The levelat -flâ€"qâ€"iu HOMEZ THOUGHTS. BY LEANDICR S. COAN. 0 home I give me a home. with my dear ones there, .Who my sorrows can comfort, my joy: can. , share; Give me these with the warm heart’s afliscw Etta ‘ the fact of a hill is more favourable than the slope,‘a bed of-sitfidiiinders ,lving one patch would afford better drainage than would be enjoyed by another plot resting. upon clav.-â€"- Uniformity should be secured in such. cases, by sowing alternate AURORA AND RICHMOND HILL ADVOCATE AND. ADVERT SER. narrow strips, the whole length of And I'll give the broad world with its tinsel '“VV’V“”"VMW‘V'~A MW/VVWVW‘J‘W‘ VWMWWWW ‘ V\./\-'\/\./‘-/\/‘J [hepfic’di-“r 7 l. (l V and Show ; thpei imenter 8 often .try‘ to ascer~ . . . . ALEX. SCOTT Proprietor. “ Let Sound Reason weigh more with us than Popuiar Optician.” TERMS All its glare and its glitter. its granduro and ' I ’ . , . : $1 50 In AdVance. lain too many things at a time; thus : pride, -â€"-‘ -â€"-â€" ’ i » â€"â€"â€"-â€"-‘-â€"~» ~ g _ a person planted .several For tliedSiveet joys of home I will gladly lay vol‘ II. N0. 23. 4’ Whole N0. I Vitlletles Of corn, to to‘stthflu. com- parative yield, and attempted also to decide the value of different for-- tilizers by using a separate (one on. each kind planted. And when the crops ripened, it could. not be d-etcn mine-d whether the greater yield of one sort was a result of'itsiown pe- culiar habit, or the effect of'the spes cial manure Used. ._ -fl..- __ _ _....__._ _ ._...._.~.__\..,__ _.._..__....--_ ,_ ,-.~_.__..._-.._ _A_-‘. Other climes may be fair, other friends may be . kind, ‘Of course it’s up,’ repeated thcl . _ Yet never throughout the wide world will yoti young lady, ‘ until Wonder it wasn’t to a Stand sillil.â€"â€"" I. Hid-ugh]. we did find up before we reached it, This 6 not stop here, exclaimed Mary Anne Those climes where the sun with such heart comes of putting off things till the 2 .Iupp‘. . cheering rays, last 'moment. I told you all the! ‘ Lvery train has stopped here,l 1' “3"”0 bless “swm‘j°y “eight” “3'83 clocks were slow, and we should:meCCt smcc 133‘ .”"gnl.' Observed Nor meet friends who will love with that fervor be la,e____” there’s one thing I hate her brother, t bungmg doctors and arrived at Coombe Dalton, and came ed your train to stop.’ l ‘ You may be sure of that. I’d ‘ They did signal it," interruptedltranSpo-rt a reckless driver for life, a strange voice at her elbow, and’ifl could, but I would never see an largely into the formation of gori'I Margaret turned to see the station-linnoccnt man falsely accused.’ lmanners, are great preventives ol master, who was known to Ml‘~_ Having nothing to do with theme ill-temper and scolding, and contri» .Lake. The red lights were exhibit- ‘ selves, they strolled into the village, ; bute muoh to domestic comfort as ed at the station, and a switchman such as it was, the colonel withlwell as to success in lifeâ€"~I mear and truth, We loved with, were loved by the friends of our youth. 0 the joy of the heart in those bliss laden bowers ! “fill it come uotagain with life’s later hours I May it not as an echo dwell with us once more? A: a pefluent wave reach this care-beaten there I Like a strain that is lost from some ravishing song, Those memories haunt me and will not be- gone. What though it be changed ’round that loved cottage door, Though the willow has died that once shaded it o'er ; Though others have bowed before the fierce storms, And saplings hale sturdicr, statclier forms; There Hill are the rocks, and the i'illn, and the dons, And rtn.id them my memory joy’ully- dwells. I know that a dear mother’s voice is not there; Yet still can I stroll to her quiet home. where, Alone by the side of her grass-covered grave, I'll return her the blessing her dying breath gave. Yes”, I’ll murmur the prayer she tattght me to say, 12m our [father had called her pure spirit away. But the voices of living loved ones I hear, 'l’lieir warm lieart-throbbings are waiting to cheer ; They shall smile through tears when [meet them again. And our hearts have a joy that is almost a pain, No! no I it is not the old rocks and the iills. 'I'hat move the whole heart with such ecstatic thrills. "fix the thought of those lives which are bound into ours, While we passed throuin the scenes of life’s summer hours, And when the worn heait lives again in those years, “'ho would hid it withhold the warm gushing tears I Not we the cold-hearted may thus if they choose. The God-given yearning of nature abuse. But we who-o warm hearts can kindle and glow. With desires which a God who is love doth bo- stow, “fill welcome these tears which memory brings, As speaking of higher and holler brings. " May God bless the dear ones who dwell in our homes,” Is the soul thrilling heartâ€"prayer which unbid- den comes. lithium. râ€"~.~ .. - >~~ â€"-~â€"~~-â€". THE SIGNAL LIGHTS. BY THE AUTHOR or " ASHLEY.” I. It was a brilliant day in August, far too brilliant, taken in conjunction with the heat, and the twelve o’clock train was preparing toleave Ketter- ly. The platform was all in a bus- tleâ€"~11 bustle that was not frequently experienced at that quiet little sta- tionâ€"but since the previous evening, when a fearful accident had occurred » not far off, Ketterley had been on its legs. The train, the one about to proceed, had come in, and only three minutes being allowed for its stay, people who were going by it looked alive; a few had got out, great many were getting in, for idlcrs had been flocking to the scene of the accident all the night and morning, and would be flocking, un- til their curiosity was sated. A porter held open the door of a ‘first-class carriage, as a party hasth on to the platform; two gentlemen, three ladies, and a maid servant. The porter evidently knew them well. and touched his cap. ‘John- son,’ said one of the gentlemen to him, let us have it to ourselves if you can; don’t crowd as up. ‘Very well, sir,’ replied the man; ‘I dare say I sliau’t want to put any~ ’ body also in.’ ‘ But now whereabout is this car- riage 1’ called out one of the ladies, in a hasty and rather shrieking voice as she looked to the right and left, inert; than another, it’s the being obliged to rush up and catch a train at the last moment! No time to choose your carriage; no‘ titne to see or do anything; they may ptit you in the guard’s van if they please and vou never know it till you are off. .I dare say we have come with- out our tickets now; do you know, "Oliver? In reply, Oliver .Iupp held up the six bits ol cardboard fc r lns Sisters satisfaction, and the party settled themselves in their seats. Why, Elizabeth, I declare I never saw you ! exclaimed Mary Anne .Iupp to the maid seriaiit. _ ‘Ilidn’t you Missl I walked right behind you from our house.’ 'I thought it better to bring Eliza- both; interposed her mistress, Mrs. Lake. who Was looking that morn- ing ' unusually young and lovely. Mrs. Chester’s servants Will be glad of help, with so many of us to wait upmi.’ ‘ Mrs. Chester is the best manager _ in a house that I ever met with.’ ex- claimed Margaret Jupp. Fancy only two, scrvai‘its, and one of those vod may almost calla nurse, for the children require plenty of attending to. and vet things seem to go on smoothly. I can't think how she contrivcs it.’ ‘ Trust my sister for ‘ contriving’ things,’ stuck in Frederick Luke, with a half smile at his wife opposite to him. ‘I hear you had a pleasant day there yestcrduy,’ Mrs. Lake said to Oliver .Iupp. ‘ We wanted you and Lake to complete it. It was too bad, Mrs. Lake, to shuffle out, after liavmg promised to go. There was an un- common nicc girl spending the day tlcre. She’s to be there again to- IlilV, l fancy.’ l Who was that?’ inquired Mr. Luke, briskly, who had rather a pro- pensity for liking,r ‘ 1}th girls,’ ul~ though he was a married man. 'Don’t know who she was, or anything about lier,’ replied Oliver. Yriur sister called her Lydia, and i did the same.’ ‘It was a Miss Clinppcrton,’ in- terruptcd Margaret .Iupp.‘ ‘ Louisa was telling me about her this morns ing; she leok an immense fancy to her.’ ‘Oli. I know,’ cried Frederick Lake; ‘ They live in Guild, the Clap- pertons, and Penelope has got lll‘l- mate :with them. You slian’t pick out nice girls for me, Oliver. if yo call her one. I saw her once: a young Gorgon in spectacles, with prominent cycs.’ "I‘hat’s Nancy Clapperton, the near sighted onc,’ corrected . Mary Anne .Iupp, who was one of those ladies who always know everything. ‘It was her sister who was there yesterday. a delightful girl, Louy and Rose both say.’ ‘I hope she’ll be there today, then,’ laughed Mrs. Lake. ‘ She is to be thereuput don’t you and Oliver quarrel over her: he monopolised her yesterday, I hear.’ ‘ We'll go Shanks, said Frederick Lake,’ or else draw lots. When does the old Indian begum make her entry ?’ I ‘For shame, Mr. Lake! you do turn everything and everybody into ridicule,’ exclaimed Margaret. I’m sureI think she'll be a delightful acquisition; so pleasant for your sister. ‘ Well when does she come 'I No- body‘snys she won’t be an acquisition I know one once, and she was awful. She had gold teetli.’ ‘ Margaret Jupp turned to Clara.’ ‘ Why don’t you keep your husband in better ordcr'l Hols incorrigible.’ ‘ I fear he is,’ she smiled. ‘Very strange l' uttered Frederick Lake. ‘I can’t get an answer to my question: Ithink it’s somebody else that’s incorrigible. â€"theâ€"â€"-begum-â€"â€"arrive I 'hat’s plain cnough.’ Margaret laughed. I hope ‘I am not in friends of the wounded.’ A porter came up the platform, calling out in his sentorian but un- intelligible lingri. ‘Combc Dalâ€"~ton, Comhe Dalâ€"don, and a sudden thought took Mary Anne. ‘I do wish we could take a peep at the scene,’ siie exclaimed, ' the place where the accident occurred. [wonder if we should have time. waved the red signal up and down, all to no purpose. You observe that post,’ he added pointing to an iron post or pillar, close to them, for be perceived she looked as if she scarcely understood him, that is the signal post. \Vhen tlieline is clear, a green light is exhibited there, as a notice tliatthe train may pass; but when it was not clear a red light t h em. and his arm in a sling. 5 \thJV, drove the engine 'I’ At the door of the small‘inn,l punctuality and order. whose floors had been put into re- quisitionv the previous night, on the green bench running under the win- dows sat the driver of the engine, his head tied up with a white cloth, Cooper !’ uttered Ml‘.' Lake, in much surprise, ‘ was it you One season’s cultivation is insuf- ficient to test any plant or mode of culture. The weather may. be unâ€" propitious, insects may preVent $1.10.- cess, orlfailure may result from in. fluences discoverable only after years of trial. If every cultivator; would each season try some. one experiment, carefully note’all the facts of the case, and communicate Let every- thing have its proper place and. time, as systematically as can b. attained, and all will be gainers in comfort and peace, not onlv in the meantime, but through life. An orderly family will be predisposed to courtesy. [fit is said that such regalarity is almost impossible in a PUNCTUALITY AND Ocean.â€" There are two principles that enter = l u l -â€"-for those who can stand begums.l \Vhenâ€"does Does anybody know how long the train stops here 'I Elizabeth, lean out at the window, and ask the man.’ Elizabeth, who sat by herself at the window, they all being close to the other, leaned out, and caught the man just as he passed. ‘ Herc, master,’ (:iied she, ‘how long do we stop here, please 'I’ "l‘en minutes,’ replied the man. At least, Elizabeth thought that was the answer, and she drew in her head and shoulders and sat down. Ten minutes, miss,’ he says. ‘Oh, then there’s lots of time,’ returned Mary Anne, eagerly ris~ ing: and her Sister and Mrs. Lake as eagerly followed her example, for'tlie scene of a frightful accident docs bear its charms for the public eye. The two gentlemen had seen it the previous night, had spent some. hours on it, but they prepared to accompany them. They descended from the carriage, all but Elizabeth, of course, as she was not bade to do so, she remained where she was. The accident had taken place just outside the station. ltctrncing their way, a comple of minutes’ walk brought them to it, and Oliver, who was proceeding to explain details when a loud shriek was heard and off went the trainâ€"theirs. A blank look of eonstcri‘iatiitin seized upon their faces. That it. had gone, not to puff back again, Was evident by the rule of speed. The ladies Were alarmed, the gen- tlcmcn inclined to lziug'i. ‘ Well, you have gone and dour- it, by bring- ing us out here!’ cqclainied Mr. Lake, and Mary Anne .Iupp, impul- sive and hasty, flew back calling out and shouting-26 though she thoughtslie could arrest the ear- riach ‘ What made you tell us the train stripped here ten miiiutcs,’ she be- lgan, seizing hold of the porter to whom Elizabeth had spoken while ltlie rest of her party followed her up. ‘Ten n'iinutesl I never said it stopped here ten minutes,’ answered the man, taken back. ‘You did. A young woman ,leaned out of a first class carriage i and asked you.’ l ‘Oh. she,’ returned he. I told ’her two minutes. What has it got to do at this station. that itsliould stop tell I’ I Elizabeth’s car must have misâ€" ltaken the word two for ten; there ‘was no doubt of it. But wha; was to be done? ‘When Wlll another train come by, that will take us on, to Guild l inqniiwi Oliver Jupp. ‘ Ten minutes before three, sir.= And it was now a quarter past ltwelve. ‘ Well that’s pleasant,’ ad- lded Oliver. He was interrupted by a hearty laugh from Mr. lake, which seemed l to proclaim that to him it was pleas- ant, and they turned to him half in anger. ‘I am thinking of EllZd- beth’s consternation,’ cried he: ‘ we have got her ticket. Suppose she has no money in her pocket: 'they will be for taking her up at Guild.’ Of course there was plenty of time to examine now into the scene of the accident, and they were not the only spectators. On the actual spot itself there was nothing-to be seen, for the line had been cleared to allow of the progress of trainsâ€"~â€" tlieir own, with themselves had just passed over it; but drawn beyond the line on either Side, were marks enough; the battered engines the ldebris of the carriagesâ€"there had not been leisure yet to clear it away. ‘ There was a truck upon the line,’ had been in the unfortunate train, they get accustomed to see the 0th- l l l l i l I l i l )tf they don’t bring it in VVilful Mur- ,jnstiee.’ is substituted, and no train must pro- ceed when a red lightis there. Not only was the red light there last night, but the Switcliman, alarmed at the train’s coming on so quickly, seized it, and waved it to enforce at- tention; but the driver took no no- tice, and went dashing on to destruc- tion. _ ‘ was he killed 2’ inquired a by- stander. ' ‘ No. And his escape is next door to a miracle,’ was the reply. ‘ He was flung from the engine, and lay motionless, and was carried off for dead; it appears he was only stunned and is nearly well this morn ing. He’ll have to stand his trial, of course, and a good thing for him He knew the man well; a young man he was, and a native of Kat- terly, of very humble station, but most respectable in conduct, and of good natural intelligence. Not above a month dad he been promo- ted to be r'an engine driver; before that he was a stoker. ‘ Yes, .sir; it was me,’ he replied, standing up. to answer, but sinking down again from giddiness. ' ‘ And I can only say I wish it had been somebody else, if they are going to persist in accusing me of causing the accident wilfully.’ ‘ I need not have speculated on whether the driver was overcome, by strong liquor, I had known who he was,’ said Mr. Lake. . ‘He tells me he nevei drinks,’ in-- terposed Colonel West. . ‘ Never sir, said Cooper. Water, and tea, and coffee, and those sort of things, but nothing stronger. I had a brother, sir, who drank him- self to death before he was twenty, and it was a warndig for me. This gentleman and these ladies knew liim.’ Mr. Lake nodded acquisescence. So they say the red light was up, do they, Cooper, and you Would not see it ?’ ‘I hear they are saying so at the station, sir, but it’s very wrong. There was no other light up but the one-that’s generally tip, the green. _ Should I have gone steaming on, ITO IUFHCd dek IO the Slflfion as Ijsking death 10 nijCH‘and njy pus- he spoke, anda gentleman, whohad sengel-s, if the danger light had drawn near while he was speaking. l been up? No, sir, it’s not likelv.’ held out his hand to greet the Lakes o Did you look at the signal “gm? and the Jupps. It was Colonel West. inquired Mary Anne Jupp; Perhaps an HCQUHHHHUCC “4K1 reflded at you“_y0u “fight,y0ulunnvacoopcn C‘m‘lmc “aim”- ' have passed it without looking.’ Uh. COlOHUL’ “Claimed one 0f 3 I did look up, Miss, and I couldn’t the young ladies: ’ Will“ a Showing be off seeing it last night, if I had “Willem this has been-7 wanted, for it was being swung ‘ Ah it has. Seven picked up about like anything. ‘ What’s up dead, and fourmore gone this morn- now,’ Isaid to myself,’ that they ing, besides lcgsand arms and backs are swaying the lamp about like broken. It is awful to think of.’ that 'I’ and I thought whoever it . And a” from one manvs recklessfll was, dOing it, must have had a drop ncssl’ added Mr. Lake, with more ’0 muCh' , . . severity, more feeling, then he gen- Bl” do“ I you lhmk, you 97155“ etally suffered himself to display. « have suspected danger? questioned ‘As the station-master says, they Mr' Lake' won't give over, till some of them To be Continued, are convicted of wilful murder. I hope the man who drove the train last night will get his descrts.’ They were strolling away from the spot, the Colonel, Mr. and Mrs. Lake, and the Miss Jupps; Oliver had gone back with tlic-stiition-rrias- tcr. The Colonel, who was a keen, sensible man of fifty, turned and faced Mr. Lake, and stood still; the others stood still likewise. ‘ Let me disabuse you, at any rate. I hear they are putting the blame upon the driver, but he does not deserve it. and they must be do- ing it to screen themselves. I know nothing of the man, and never saw him in my life till this morning, but I shall stand between him and inâ€" derâ€"for that’s what some of these careless engineâ€"drivers will come to one day.’ He had taken something that one. scurcd his vision, probably,’ remark- ed IVII‘. Luke. ‘I think not returned the station- master; ‘ he’s a sober man. No; it is carelessness: they go driving on. ncver looking at. the signals. It is not once ill many wefks, perhaps that the danger signal is exhibited; tor, and it becomes to them so much a matter of course that it must be there, but they forget to look at it. That is my opinion; and I see no other way of accounting for it.’ To YOUNG Mamâ€"Young man, are you poor and without the means of splurging in life, as you launch upon its billows? Is your father and mother unable to give you an outfit? Be not disheartened on account of all this.â€"â€"â€" Take earnest hold of life, and never re- gard yourself in any other light than that of being destined to a high and noble purpose. Study closely the bent of your own mind for labour or a profes- sion. Whatever you resolve upon, do it early; follow it steadily and unliringly; never look backward to what; you have encountered. but always forward to what is within your grasp. The world owes every many a comfortable living, and a respectable position in society; means are abundant to every man’s success; and men haVc only to adapt will and action to them. To repine over a want of money and property to start out in .the world ivith, and over the want of the props of influential relatives, is unâ€" manly. Leta young man strive to cre- ate a fortune, rather than seek to inherit one. It is an ignoble spirit that leads a young man to borrow instead of beâ€" queathing means. Go forth into the world, young man, conscious of your God within you, and His providence over you, and fight your own way to distinction, to honour, and to comfort. Pity in your iii- most soul the young man, who without any change is unable to support himself, and is whining around, and begging the influence of others, to get him into em- ployment ! Feel, under all circumstances, that it is more noble to eat the crust you have earned, than to flourish with coppers ‘In what way? what do you " Mr Lake inquired. mean : ‘ They say that they exhibited the danger signal, red, and that he dash- ed on. regardless of it,’ continued Colonel West. ‘I went to the inn this morning where some of the wounded are lying, and there I found the driverâ€"mas they told me he was -â€"on a mattress on the floor. ‘How did this happen I’ I said to him. I don’t know how it happened, sir, he replied, ‘ but I’ll declare that there was no red signal up to stop me, as they say; the green light was up, as usual.’ That was the first] heard about the red light, continued the colonel; but I find the man’s words are true, and that the whole blame tr ; the best will be than the worst I would say to a fatherâ€"~if you have a boy at school, drive a nail in a that he use them duly; you don’t through life may hang on these three nails. In the meantime. there is a scolding saved almost every morn- ling; for otherwise young Master 'wuuld be whimperingâ€"too late for schoolâ€"and every one everything topsy-turVey looking for the missing articles. There are some persons who, one would think, most have been born too lateâ€"wln are never in time for school, never in time for eliurehâ€"uwho are always too late for the trainâ€"«too late for everythingâ€"always keeping people waitingâ€"drying chryhody’s pati-, ence-â€"marring every one’s pleasure -â€"-â€"forgetting' everything they should remember in their liurrv leaving irritation and confusion behind them â€"--carrying' with them a flustered manner and a number of false ex- cuses. Want of method and order occasions more jarring discord in a poor man’s house than poverty itself. ‘ Rousseau observes, “ the first and most impertant quality of a woman is gentleness. Made to obey a being so imperfect as man. often full of vices, and often full of faults, she ought early to learn to suffer even injustice, and to bear wrong from a husband without complaining. It is not for his sake, it is for lierown, that she ought to be gentle. The ill-temper and ob- stinacy ofa woman never do any- thing clse than augment their ills and the bad conduct of their hus- bands. They feel that it is not with these aims they ought to be over come. Heaven did not make wo- man insinuating and persuasive that she might be pcevish; it did not make her feeble that she might be imperious; it did not give her a voice so soft that she might rail ; it did 'not give her features so delicate that she might disligure them by rage. When women are angry they forget themselves. They have of- ten rcason to complain, but are al- ways wrong in scolding. Each ought to maintain the character of their respective sex. A husband too mild may render a woman im- pertinent ; but at least, ifa man be not a monster, the gentleness of W()-- man will pacify him, and triumph over him sooner or later.” â€"â€"â€".â€" a...» HOW TO CONDUCT EXPEQ RIMENTS. From the American Agriculturist. A correspondent writes that he planted a bushel of one kind of pota- toes, cutting them into pieces con- taining one or two eyes, and drop- ping two eyes in a bill, which re- turned him 56 bushels. A bushel of other kinds treated similarly, gave but one third or fourth as much, and hence he concludes the first named variety is greatly superior. This ,quite likely, is the case, btit the ex- periment does not prove it; for some varieties of potatoes contain many more eyes than others, bushel for bushel,'and would if planted in the method described, occupy a larger plot, which would be likely to yield the greatest return for the amount of seed used. As no state- ment was made of the space covered by each kind,we can draw no correct conclusion. In conducting experi- poor home, heed not the saying, make the best of it, and you Will be surprised how much better corner for his cap, one for his sat- chel, and one for his slate, and see ‘ know from much of his comfort- turning , them for the benefit of Others; the statiétics'thus obtained, would push the science _ of agriculture forward witlr rapid advances. . THE; CATTLE DISEASE IN ' MASSACHUSETTS. From the Scientific American.IL . This terrible epidemic. by its cons tinuou-s spreading, threatens to be. come one of the greatest scourges that has ever visited the country.â€" The imagination is appaled at the contemplation. of the thousands of herds from Maine to Texas being vialted by this wasting and. fatal malady. ’ The suffering and anxiety from the loss of prOperty, and from the dread of its loss among the agricultural community, and the fear of diseased meat in all our cities, may be partly conceived but cannot be fully realized. It seems that the Legislature of the State has been aroused to the importance of the matter. A law has been passed for the appointment of three comn'iissioners to investigate the subject, and authority has been given them to have slaughtered, at the expense of the State, all the cattle that are sick or that have been exposed to the contagion, to have their bodies buried and the horns in which they have been kept purifiedâ€"even burning the hay if the commissioners think it ne~ ccssary. The commissioners are Richard S. Fay, of Lynn, Muss.;’ Paoli Lathrop, of South Hadley, Mass.; and Amasa lValker,of North Brook- field, Mass. They have caused fourteen animals to be killed. that they might trace the progress and character of the disease in all its stages. It, is purely a disease of the lungs, affecting the animal in no other organ, and seems to be cer- tainly contagious. A cow that died the night before the commissioners arrived was examined, and both her lungs were a mass of frothy, cheesv corruption. One cow that was taken sick so long ago as the 1st of January, and seemed .to be recover- ing, appearing bright and healthy, was slaughtered; the left lobe of the lungs was sound, but from the right was taken a mass of pus, looking like rotten cheese, of more than a pint in measurement. She might possibly have thrown off the disease and lived, had she not been killed. Another cow in the same herd, and showing stronger signs of the disease, had a similar but greater mass of pusm the lungs, and with it a large amount of watery fluid. An ox that looked bright and well, and ate and chewed his end as if in a healthy condition, was among the slain, and one of his lungs was a mass of corruptionâ€"- Another singular case was that ofa cow that calved some ten days ago ; one lung was healthy. but in the other the disease was developing it- self in scattered, hallsor masses of pus, lookinglike liver on the outside, ltlfl'guDl’l cutting, like rotten cheese; and her calf was found to have the disease in precisely a similar stage. The presence of the disease is de- tected by the breathing of the ani- mal which makes a croupy noise or like breathing through a quill. It is to be hoped that these ener- getic measures are not too late, and it is especially to be desired that the commissioners will allow no childish weakness to prevent the thorough and efficient discharge of their mo- mentous duties. Contagion is so subtle in its nature, and is scat- tered abroad by such widely per- vading agencies, that we shall be . ., . w . . . . . _ , _ _, inherited. 'You may lift our head mcms like the above CVBI'V filo! J u H ' ' becauie’ If”. snm JUTm the m’dd’c’ the begum’s confidence) 0" Mrs- sa’d O’wcrjul’l" ”" Sh’immg some. '5 lald 1" l‘lm' NOW» 1tllaI’Pm’S’hat hroudl? to face and confront the noblest bearincr on the mattei‘ should be agreedb’" dléappmmed If any bu- Iwon’ge’m' 1’“ “eve” Pl“ "1‘" Cl t "‘ '11 H 1 Id I trucks on to the down line one of l - ' -rr- d l '01 l1 ‘ . . =- ., . man Power ls able to arrest the v .. ._ ies er s ei ier. ow men was “1 m) 22'” 9” 35‘ “'2; N Wk“ among us, when you are conscious of be- noted at the tune of its occurrence, . f h- d d] ~l self towards ei.lier end of a train know? them broke down, 30d Could “0t be the smash came,just over on the incthe architect of 0 f Spl‘deO t is ca y pestience. a y ur own ortune.â€"â€" again as long as I live.’ ‘Step in, step in, Mary Anne,’ cried the same gentleman who had prevrously spoken, ‘you are all ‘ Mrs. Chester was talking of her , 7 yesterda , interrupted Oliver .1 upp. ‘She is not sure which day she got off it before our train came up. The engine ran into it andâ€"we were done for.’ other side of the line, and I can bear the man out--that it’was the green light up, not the red.’ l l Young tnao, are you poor 'I Be honest. ,be virtuous, be industrious; hold up your ‘head‘, and say by your actions and and written down ; then nothing imâ€"' portant will be lost by forgetfulness. There is frequently a failure to place the different subjects treated, A Waiter once complemented a salmon in the following manner :â€"-‘ Faith, it's not . ' ~ 1 . » . . . ' ' . . . two hours since that fish was walkino' over “gm , clumps- the middle of the week, she - ‘ 115m liolw dreadful careless ot the Shameful !’ uttered Frederick 100’“: What the POat has 53"! 1“ word“ -"” under the same conditions. Thus, his estate widhishandsin hisnocketsanever ' , 11m s.’ . peop e at l e Slalim’i IO SlllOW vour Lake risin a ainst the in'ustice "‘ l scorn the man who boasts his birth In COl‘n at‘ititr several sorts of . ' . ' ' ' i , 9 . Make haste, [mss’a added the They were approaching, the scene i g g . .l P a dreaming what a pritty mntashun he (I Andbeasts hie titlesnnd his lands; Vlho takes his name and heritage From out a father's dying hands." engine to run into it,’ replied Mar- . Ihopc, colonel, you will stand by garet. ‘ They ought to have Signal-l grain, if large patches, say of an the man.’ ortar.-â€"-â€"‘Tho tim ’ .’ ' ' p e a up acre or two each, are sown in dif- have to jine you young gentlemen “din. of the accident, and soon, the train our I

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