Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 16, 1878, Page 5

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THE CHICAGO Nim the moral worla has now acauired n mo- mentum which it would seem must follow It forever. Into aur clvilization now Hlend the ele. nients of & new con hen new hopes, new fears, o new thooeht, new meditations, At times Athelata @il come, and to alt one hearts doubts will come, but the momeatum hound up (0 the samily of man, and {=suing forth from the vos being whom we eall Christ, will press hack the formal and in- formal unbellef, and wiil carry ue all onward. Itin not to be wondersd nt that Christ eame and otfered o this mortal world FHia liand aml IHn heart, for it was 0o wouderful world, anl was moving oIl toward & great destiny, When we remember how ol Joved this world, and when wa ook into It and see what clements are Wending tovether to form fte puwerfal lfe, let us feel that I will sweep onward and ean, {1 we o will permit 1t s to da, hanisl from our souls sil chilling doubt aud 011 us with Its own impeckshiablo power amd hope, IL wiil (1 our bowms with its_own perpetuity, st mk feul that the death of man Is only bis removal to a place whence he can look down tipun uatfons and ages, and see them In thelr grandeur, na now wo mieasure a little apace with onr eye, afid X ult in_the morning and evening of & theaum[ day. 1lere we sce the lours nid dava pass, and B0 few are they that we enn cotnt Lhein, and aoun they are all gune, The apiritual world 18 A0 immense, and ita Creator so good and sub- Hine, that death may not be an extingitishinent of the sonly but n calliing away te whero the heart enters ubon a new reckoning of time and marks the great centuries pass by on earth with all theie atruyiles and triunphs. THE SKEPTICAL TRA, SERMON BY TIE RRY, L P MERCRR, The subject of the Rev, 1. I Mercer, pastor RIBUNE: MONDAY., SEPTEMDER 16, 1878 i L) o efernal ath, he must feel tiat there was aome- thing in tae theory of finmnrtatity, 9o stand- e there that nine and tinaklog of the RELIGIOUS. and to thunder forth In sloquence or to grow muslcal tn fong, LIt 13 first sten toward Athelem to pletare the Ureator as havine onee heen here to sow tho tlelda with grass and to form an Adam awd au Kva from a handful of dust. Sach a relation of thul to the world 1s so delicate that It sceme casy for natural sclunco Lo break 1t off attogetli- er.” To have been on carth six days is not nuch Iike the visita elarwhiere of our (jod. It may be that such 8 theory fnsites seinnce to lnquirs «v)u:lhcr“ernmwIllIYmr atall. David, and Iaatalt, and Panl patnt lietter tha Dty when they plice all the passing years fn his hand_awd niake the future cone bigseoming ont of His purpoa-. In Lhin greas composition before us, sfter a mighty Innurungs was tianed, then catne cduca- tlon and Iiberty. The education which began to turn mind awny from sensuality and toward such {ntellectusl siches as taw, uhilosoph art, poetry, and ethica, must bia do cla the mizhty works of "“Creation sod Providence.” When an anclent once said, ** [ est that I may live,” he betrayed the advent of a new civiliza- Wom, The Acab and the Negro, indeed tho higher types of early man, had reached no such & thought, and, aithourh the world 1s yet too much # slave to common appetites, it has, under the tntelicetunl prozress which set In huoidreds of yeara ngo, reached u dreain, and a reality alav, of intelfectual llfa, Each genera- tion can_now polut to it mibifons who have found withs Ilamilton that the gfeat In mao fs nis_soul. If you will attenpt to connt the multitide of great minds that bhave coma sud gone alnea Moses and Homor, you will soon Teel Impressed with the thought that educatton 1s one of (Tud's grand days of creation, and that {ta mornlug and evenlug are greater than the mornlng and evening which made the anlmals and the plants, When by degrees the growth of liherty eama. Invittng the common peuplo up to higher rcatn, men know realls how many acres they have fn any sratn crop, ar can tel] “with any rensonable cartainty the prduct of thelr farma, either in dollata, bushels, or ponnis, e fal to sen any Alin §n the stotistica alter they have i @athe It doubtlers furnishes employ- ot fur A fow extra tlerks, costa the tax- payora more for assesxment, but adda nothing to tha ratue af thefe prdductions, let the next Legialuture ahotlsh al) this nonaenae, and requira atmply & retarn of the number of bushels and n;:unln, feaving acres entirely out of cousider- atinn. 1 varlons modes, ona of thy artiel carbotle actd, naed efther as snmalleged to have baen assamed by me at | cording 1o cirenmetances, and, if Jocal swveilingsy #18,365. Thesa are the plaln facts In thia case: | Make thelr appearance, a8 3 subentaneons i Pravions to the tranafer of the Chicago Post. | Jection, may ba tricd. VETRRISARIAS. Office to my custody, there were theftaby s e person or by petsons in the immediate charzeof | FITZJOUN PORTER TRIAL. the money-order funda of said office to the ag- grogate amount of 8$14,555.01, In onler that | What Onl. Mashy Saye of the Datils ot thoen thefts, Lior;monce‘f more than four sears 3 Ang. 29. previously, might romain undiscovered, cfedit | Warnixatow, D. C.. Ropt. 13.~] ng o B Lk 0n (16 Jant day of the ilal Lerin f | (o Praiotis peries iy, Cone Aty ot Jolin MeArthur for_money-orders, represented | (1 P29 75 Cale NONIY. FIR8 In the weekly statement of money-order ac. | Shaltien. Pone is right in bis elatement that » rounts a MJ by hiin (bt ot a dolfsr of which | battle took plare on the 20th. In reply to, the had been patid), for sn smount equal to the def- | statement that & duzen or ore witiesses Have fcit In money-order fants, In osher words, | Aworn that there was nobattle, Col. Moshy sakd feaadulent vouchers aufliclent to cover the | * I know they hiave, and ihey havo ail made a * atnonot of shortagn In the mouey-order division | mistake, These witnessea have been discussing were, balore my occupancy of the oflice, sent Lo | #hat has accurred on e (the Confederate) the 1oat-ONice Departiment, and credited ] rleht, and Lhere was no battle tacreon that dav. to John McArthus, I_am fu fio man- | The encagement was on ourtfeft. 1 know it ner, . personally or ofldally, respontible | wes a heavy oue, for I wasin It ou the extreime for this defalention thus perputrated. I have §Ieit Jackson, A, P I, and Stoart fou at nn time said that Tanis have written no laiter | there, and 11’4 corps was a large one, number. to the Department holding myecll * personsily | iz, peraps, J0.000 men, Jongstreet was on responsible for the loss'; have had no thought the right. aod had just ot his mew up, and of -mlnvueh Aletters but, on the coutraty, | there was no fAighting on that part of the fhe. have hal knowledge of the fact that there ara | Thero witnesses are honeet amd really bel on filg in the Pust-Ofce Departtent reports | Lhey reported the situntton correctly, but the made by tw0 of the ulost experienced and mast | dii nol know what was guing on on the extremo tensted Speciat Agonts of the Dopartment. after | eft. ‘Yo assure myselt that 1 could nnt he mis- searching Investizations, sbsolviug me frum all | taken, I recentls examined U reborts of tiens, responsibliity in tho case, Jackson and [l awl their subondinate olficers, “Fhu statements in the 7imes on the 13th were | and these reports confirmed my recoliection ot made without authority of anv kind from any- | the date. ‘They reported 8 heavy engngament Bordy having a rlght to apeak for me, and with- | on ourleft that day, Pupg was right” abunt out even @ decent pretonse of probability, The | that. 1 wascaptured in Pope's campiign, murd repetitions of the statcmenta in \be sama paper | by that Incident have & oretty clear recallection an the 14th wero nile alter I had personally | of the events which occurred aboul that thue. asaured two of the edisorial attaches of tho | Ihave n speclal friendship for Gua. Pope, but T that the original paragraph, herowith | that s the teuth.” zermon by Prof. Swing on the Creation of the Moral World. k of thevonz that hal just teen mung, * Pl haif tiag pot been told," thare came to it imany more Lhonghts on this great sahject Perlians the nlessanteat thotzht fi this connee tion waa, that In the futare 1ife there would be not o much paln and sorrost, nol a0 mach un- requited tafl, ot so much suatiee and wicked- nese not o mich of the bordidness of thig earth, 1 by aneaker allinded to 8 younz laly whom e knew,—a tereon of fraglle fotin snd great mind, wits had bean foaded with reapansibilitics alinost hevomd hee endurance, Eha had sabd oh gne acraaton that ghe, ad lttle antlook beyond the wrave, but' vet ahe Jooked Torward eladly to death sfmnly A3 v the burdens of this world, He ioped b was motn than a rebicf. {ls lad an fded tust In the future statn evervthing that the good and the pure fooked for woulil bo realized, The soul that lotwged far tove would roach it th woul that longed for flowers scetiery would rewh thein there! the soul Tavked foe bright alles would find them ther thie suul that hoped for qulet and repuso would find It there, For the warld [teetf, he did not belleve tho predivtions of aome astromoimers that it way reaching ifs latter dave, fle felt that belary the world coutd pass away it must and twould brcome puriied earer perfection, Ghre e world n mition of years longer, aud sue what it would dot ———— BLSEWIER. HOMAN CATAROLIC. & Fpectat Inwpateh to The Tribune, Tho Haterial Only the Great Shadow ot the Moral Beauty of tho World. MULGIING STRAWNERRY-VINEA, Tt many localities (¢ In exceedingly difficuit to obtain sottigh-hay, which is tha only g, safe atuivle to use s # eover for atrasherry-plants. I atraw of any kind in used, more ar jeas of the svatiered aead will grow and make troubln next #brlmnz. We hava seen v-r{ fine and effective nuleh made with corn-atalks or from refuee sorehutn alter §t hua been presaed; but the Ibar of handling 18 A sertoits obsection. We huve alao xeent vats, gowed along cach alda at the rows, utiawer & very good purpose. Thay be eith ked or ioed fn, and should be (L qulte th 1L somne fall amung the plants, they will do no harm. They make s wornl mulel, and will mako no teouble next apring, Where stouithi-zrass is obtainable, it is preferabls to any other substance for mulehing, Strawberey-plants should ve covered alter the tlral severe Irocre, or when Lhe soll 18 frozen hand enough to bear up o londed wagon, SMART FARMEIS, The following picture of & smart farmer (s true to Tife. The cluss 10 which Whe man des seribed belongs arc all fn Tavor of fiat wmoney, Ti factia ure mortgagtd for alf they ara The Reve L. P. Mercer Disconrses on the Skeptical Era in o Man's Life. gomo Thoughts by Dr, Thomas on the Better Oonntry, That Is, the Hoavenly, THW MORAL WORLI, EERMON BY TROP. DAVID SWINO. Prof. Baing preached yesterday morning in the Central Chureh tn o large nttendauce. Fol- Jowing fa the fermon: (o 20 Taved the world that Tle gave Mls Son \ ool ik, 10, v the word worhil the naturnlfat tneans that physleal sphera we call earth, When we thiuk of the dinmetor and clrcuinference of this ball wotth, nud they apend s much time In lualing and talkithz oyer the financial situation, and in Legounchine Jonn shermng, that they have no Brausariety, 1y, Bept. 1—iha corner- | e to aticnd to their vrhps, Of conree they W, ”, 1At CReLY - ———tO—— ot thr diametar and ciresnferencn of 18 T | Uit oo, ho Greator pulsted ansthes eleuent | of the Union Swedcnborglan Church, flerehey | stone of the new bilfalug for St Johns os- | deault du the parment, of thole Intoreat, ind e e et bartmacior. NORTHEAST MiSSOURI and the light and shadow which mark its day, | tute ::'.','. &vre;,;;g‘;;;;'-él::-l "-lrr-mlum_};I JSasuman | M Hall, yesterday moratug, was *Tho | pital, condiicted in this city by ticrmun Bisters | thelr laud wilt be sold, ‘Lhe description s trom 3k i ) To the Lidilor of The Tribune. Moxnoe Cirr, Mo, Sept, 13.—~Thy season o} ar I8 hzaln recurring for thuse who are thinkiug ol getting new hoies on the cheap Tands ol the West o be naking their selections, About a year nzo 1 wrote A <hort article for the eolutnns of your paper which fnduced anveral famjlies who were contemplating going to Kan- 8a8 10 alub i Missird, ant 1 write agatn, §f yon think it wartl publication, to nsk thuse who contempiate chinticing thele location, with tha ' Tlew of buving more and cheaper lands, to come to Northeast Missou We have lumls lere we chran an Kansas or ‘Texas Jands. and fitst as ool or betjer, while wo are several hundeed miles usarer Chienzu, the great murkel ol the Wert und Nurttiwest, with schools, churchies, and imllronds, Leb me 8a¥ ta your ronders thut 1 they want to buy Junls to cume and Juok at our country betore deddingg; wa have improven #m) untmproved prafrie and timbe din wany Tustunces faring can be hought for Jess imoney than the fiuprovements cost. Cutnu nmt sce. It B. Brtstow, S ——— . DRUNKENNLSS CURE! Dr. Iy Udiger tdiscuverer of the einchapa remedy, pomtively cures every cave ul atitaal dranken nuss, Vee, $15: guarantee or mutey teluruer ; sumple bottle; §5, Nafe, sure, avd epvedy. e ———— when we Tollow tho Humboldis and Linnzuses, snd Audubons and Mitlers who have passed over many of [ts detalls of wonder and beauty, onr miida confess the Treatness of the world physteal. 1t his been discovered of late years that there are birda which build & public hall and 8 park for public nsscmblage, and thal there are birda which blant the secds of fheir favorite gralns and - eultl vate the little fielda. While our phyafenl realm 1s Msclostng these wonders of aulmal instiset, It 1a also hetraving more of Rs mysteries of sounc, and light, and motlon. {t s safe to presume that enrth's matertal greatness, Hke the old splendor of Solumon, hins not been yet one-alf told to us,—vislting ones from jabrord. Paralicl with this muterlal marvel, but in n bigher plane, lles that moral world of which wo all so often ) ,—the great orb of uman life, Made up of chidhood, youth, old age, of nien and women, of homes, and towns, and cltics, and States; made up of learning and morals, joy wud grtef, Hfe and death, splendor and poverty,—IitIs far moro theiliing in interest han 1ho physieal ereation, Gud so foved this moral world that He made {t the cradlo and grave of Christ and the scene of the drama be- tiweens It will perhaps bo some day found truo that our ol literalzing of the first chaptors ol liene gliremoved e from the Creator rather than Urunglit us nearer o 1o for the old reading of that paze tuened us toward God an o -maker of land, and trees, and animals, and ns to One who gavo man a start in existence, tmt One who then futind g seventh day and entered upon a reat, n cessation of work, QOur Creator had wade and had set Tunaing a waterial machine, Taat Ueniesls 18 better read as s poctle figure, Taving for ta cardinal Kica that in a personal Father we Jive, and_mnve, and have our belng, Uut of Him all our daysare issutng-and the now animaly, and new fouits, and new gealns, and 1w arts and lnventlons are still wsulng, out of the mornings and cevenings of the countless years, So much has been added to carth sluce he msplred pentman wrots Genesls that wemny well open aganln those closed up dava and fosert ueh vast Ideas ag the Roman mi Greek world, ated the vastly greater ern ot Chrlat, 1t is often usked by skeptics.and wondered at by Clhirtstlana, why the All-Wize Oue sent.[iis Meseenzer s lato m tine,—adter 4,000 yonys had passed; but the real trath is the woral svorld is find o 1ty morning hour, and wos_only i its early davoreak at the tine of the advent of Jo- gues it was then in the morning and eventog of fts arst day. The lghts had just been nide; the mists had just bewgun to rice from tho cha- otie waste, It vour have vour miud Hilied with the thought that God mmle creation in a weok, ilen Christ came late: but If you feel that the an oddress delivered before the New York Farmers' Club by Vrof. Bistichard : They are woncerfully wise in thelr own catima. Yon. Thiey kiiow ail abot fasming, They aliaye ake the best hotter, amd wibl caree he huyer i ho calls (L viberwise, - Such afarmer can't soead tima to read ur study. He ls fall of knowleuge Aiready, Yuu woult ot know he biad wife wiie Tena il nefehbore told you, Jle nevor takvs her out or mentiona tier name in Company, 1 met suct & apecinien nut lung einco. T ealled athin Logss on husiners, and was told be had tone to the villave, My sttention was aitracted to the swili-pail on the frout steps, ur, 1 should ray, vome louns “boards used for " atepai broken leds, old wazons, ola keltlea, totten .hay-rakes, old tumble-down noap-barrels and lecches, with aid Loars aud ratls tuat had 1ain solone the weeds ha grown through them, scattered un all sides of awe, Thie eattie, sheep, bhozs. atul geese ran ned on ail sides of the house, that haid 1 WaILiDK & ecure OF years for s coal of paint, Not (o particalarize, everyihing scemed to match, J hind never scen or hieard of the inun, bt thoaght Twould try to_gness what kind of & man I was to theet, 1 min not much of & guesser, but 1 Wt i this time exactly. TH® CROPS, TRORPECTS, ETC. The great staple of the West, corn, Is proaching matusity. One-thini the cron is al- ready eafe out of the way of harm {from frost, ol great deal of (4 is airendy i shock, Two weeks more will ripen the bulk of the erop; tn Iuct, 3t irust staysoll thatlon, there will be vers. Httlo corn that will not be sipe, Late putatucs promise to yield well, but the acreage planted Is not so large as that of the early varietics. Ap- ples are quito plenty and chieap, as they always are at this sensan, The supply for winter; how- ever, [ tot large, and e may expect to Day ITrom T5cents to 81 & bushel for good keepers. A large acreags of winter-wheat has been sown, and we uotice that more than usual care hins been taken to put it fn well, Tile-drafuing §8 now ocetpying conshderable attention, aud the demand for tile Is constantly increasing. ‘Thers are at this date aix tle-fac- tortes in thia county, all dofoz & good business; where three years ago there was not one. Business 18 reviving, and thereis every ap- peamnce ol Dhetter thnes. Mooey is more plenty, and, with the palea of hogs and cattle, a arge amount of currgncy must be brought nto the country. Runat Ji. ————— WISCONSIN STATE FAIR. The Twenty-fifth Annual Exhibition at Madison=Large Attendanco and n_ Sue- crasful Show=DPresflent 1fayes anid ty Viait the Grounds=Noteworthy Artictes Viewed by o *¢Tribune’ Lepresentative, Spectal Correspondence of The Tribune. Mapisoy, Wis.,, Seot. 13.—The twenty-fiith annual exhibition of the Wisconsin State Agriculturat Soclety, closed to-day, was one of the most succeasful shows {n the history of the State. The arraugements and mccommoda- Skeptical Eradn 8 Man's Life.” [lis text was: 1f any man will da 1lia will, he ahall know of the doctrino whotner 1t a of God.—John, ., 17, By the word skepticlsm, liv this connectlon, was not meant conftrined denlnl of any fuu- damental truth of revelation, but a state of In- decisfon and Inquiry, doubt, uncestainty, There camo a crisls tn the life of every youth when ha begrun to think for himself, anil resolved with new determivation to be his own master. 1t was the dawn of manbiood, and might, and in- deod would surely, lead him Into many wild conceits and Into great follica; hot It was n step in the uvrogross of his llle.—~n crists, whether met with scriousness or irivolity, beset with daneors of the gravest kind and of fearful magnitude, ‘The world itsclf wonld seem 1o ba in ita skeptical ors, and the difficulty of thy young man's Investigations were auginented by tho uncertainty of mankind. as thore no word of revelation breaking throuch the uni- versal confuslon, teaching us how to guard and protect, liow to counsel and qulae young men and women through the critical dawn of reason, through doubt and luvestigation futo certuinty and assured faithl Tue New Church satd: »Our human needs are prophesies of glirs.! 'Tho oced was of itsell tho warrant of Divine provision, and accordingly they bolieved, I the doctrines of thelr faith, tho conditions nid lasucs of skepticlsm mizht bo learned and doderstont, He would sueak of 1t in one of its_phases—the acnge of doabt and uncertainty, and us o normal step in the devetopiment of rational futth, e then consldered its Lime, ennbatting the currept fajlucy that childrens slonld he lott in freedom, sud bo stimulatid (o rewson, The ex- perlment fasued sadly onough In a freedom which wes merely lleenso, and A reason which waa unly arrogance of concelt. Freedour was not the supreine need of nehild, but restraint from evil wags, to the vad that he might sube sequently be tree under sell-restralnt. Nor wis reasontng bis suprome. mental nced, but scutdanee In rational trains of thought, Lo the cnd that ho might be pafely fefe to gufde hbm- self when the time should have come, That this was tru in all practical business aitalrs no one doubted, and that it was truo lu matters of religlon must be admitted, unless It were as- sumed that rellgion was a thoroughly Dbad thing. Ina normally developed life, skepti clsim came sfter the mind was stored withdivine truttis, tratned (n rational thiuking ander s tery, and tho heart cuttured In the love of flind- oz and dotng what was right and true, and that only, [beaine, theretore, after 8 wetlsettiod raditional falth und well-disciphued relig- fous palits, and not belore, In youth the restruint must be gradunlly trans- ferred from parents and teachers to the streogthentng will, bub not rellnguished; and tho renson trained, not by eastiug it upon its oWwn resources, but by leadlng it in and throuzh rational trafns of thuught under ghelr guldance und oxplanations, Waon this order of develop- went wos fultiled, onc camu to manhoud of the Onler of 81, Francls, was Jala to-day with Impressive ceremonfes In the presence of an Immense throng, after a parmie by o hand and the Homan Catholle socletien, The exer- clzes touk plare at the grand ataud, the Rev. Father Brudy, pastor of the Chiurch of the fm- maculate Conception, presiding, assisted by other Catholic clerggy. Bpeeches - were made by (iov, Callom. ex-(iot. Palmer, Maror Vin-eat, Dr.. 11, Woblgemth, of th Hospital medleal corpa, the Rev, Futher Brudy, and the Rev, Mahn, a Redemptorist Father from Chi- cago. In the corner-stote wad blaved a list contalning the names of tho Pontill, Leo Xi11., HBishov Butes, the resident Catholic clergy, Iiiatory of the Order of St. Frascis, the Na- tlonaly Stale, nod vity officers, coples of the dully and weekly local” papers, colos of the day, et The new hospital s to be a substantial, three-story rick Luitding. THE FARM AND GARDEN. tious,and encrgotic, and hopeful, It threw apen the gates of property, of offive, of profes. slon, of every form of distinetion, and filled with cuthusiaam races which had once been alaves, In the middern great natlons, men of il furms of tatent, vhilosophie, mechanical, mathematieal, poetle, moral, phiianthrople, or nventive, are fuvited amd urged nloug thelr favorite path by the sense of perfect freedon. Ouno long _ dreadiul uYuch varsecuted Jows or burnt Catholfes or Protestants, but now each class moves freely amid Its Idens, and the once-despised [lebrew becomes the muslcian of Ucrmany, ur the banker of Europe, or the stateswan ol England. Whep Disroell was young he perceived tio resalt of ltberty among the Jews, for he enumerates in Conings- by the great ones who are leading Europe in thought, in fluance, in statesmanship, and in soug. He says: 1 spesk nut of Lha}mfl though were [ to enter fnto the history of the forus of melody your would ind L the annals of Iebrew pgenius. But at this moment musical Europo isours, » . . Tho catulogue ia too vart Lo enumerate, too fllustrious to dwell fora moment on sccondary simmes, Enough for us thut the three frnnl crentive minds to whoso cx:lulnuu inveutions all nativns at this moment vielt nre of tne Hobrew race~Iiussing Meyers beer, and Meudelasohn, 1ho extract Hlustrates what a step In the crea tion of thy moral world It was when the Maater Workmansaid, ¥ Now ict us,mnake Hberty. Let us moko man a litle more (nour own fmnge.” In the classic lands the portuls of jodividual equality stood o‘mn fora few generatfous, and wonderful was the growth and variety of human greatneas in that weriod. Our world to-day s full of the overflow of thelr letters and art, but alony came the despotie empires and the harba- riun Clintreh to close the wate it liad found ajars but, at Jast, Hborty has been created and has been mineled with himay possessions to remnaln au Inseparable attrivnte of soclety. We hava now murked the process by which one moral world Is being formed. Borrowlng our fizure from the Bible, we seo tlie suceessive days opening aod cloing, and fie each evening the ereation Jarger and hotter than fn the morninwe bour. From the few large clements we may pass to n goneral law and conclude that the mi- nor events i history are all component parta {n the vast Wfe of to-day, Long aiter wo liave be- como unable to trace the result of o fuct or lino of fucts, it will remnin truo that the fuctor line of fact is l:lemllnfilmo the great whole, forming numan natare, Our oyes are madd to sce the lorwze, and then reason comes in to infer the suall, Ourscnsos do nol incasure the world, they only set going an fnduction, Wo perceive that the Jarge andinals eat, aug breathe, and rest, und die, and hence swhen animal orgunisms become too sinali for our sight, we cover them all aver by our induction, and by reason ave vhem eat, awd Lreathe, aud rest, and dle. When the heavy quadruped raus over the Western plalns the ground trembless ond when nan walks his step fs often heard afar, in the stiil THE FIELD AND STABLE. Swine-Plague, Pig-Typhold, or So-Calied Chol Binck-Leg In Calves, Fram Our Own Corresponient. RErT. 13.—Although the investization of the swine-plague ar pletyphobt (e, Badd), com- monly knowa ns hog-cholera, has not yet been combicted, but has only been begun,—new fncts are coming to llcht esery dave—a few preliminary remarks concerning that discasy may be ol some {nterest to the swine-breeders and pork-producers of the Northweat. These remarks, howerer, for yeaguns atated, must ot be consldered ns conclugive or exinustive. The symptoms showe during life, sud the morbid features presented after deatly, differ - very widely in different anlmals, even of the same herd. In more than thirty post-tportem ex- amipations no two cases have heen found ex- actly allke. Bull, s few morbid changes seem to be constant,~at fcast, have been met with, 20 far, in every case. The same are: First, mora or less hepatization of the lungs (converstop of the lungs futo o substance tesembling the liver. by a deposit of exudation in the pulmoual tissur); 2, swolling and degeneraticn of the Iympliatic and mesenteric mlands: and, 3, & catarrhal inflanmation of the resptratory mu- cous membranes, Ae verv frequent morbld changes, found absent so far only in four cases, must b mentionerd pecullar morhid excres- cences on the mucous membrane of the cacum, or blind gut. and of the colon. These excres- cences are freguently found in o state of deceay, or ulcerons, nod occur also, heeasionally at feast, fu the small intestines, eapectally in the fllum, in the stomach, on the conjunciiva, on the gums, and In other parts. " Similae morbid changes have been found also tn the skin, aud in the tlssue ol the longs,~rvsembliing n the latter a tuberculous degencration. infatnmn- tion In the serous membranes,—the pericandium, the extenu) Hauiug of the heart, the pulmonal and costal pleura, and the peritoneuin,—and 3 consenuent aceumtiiation of erroom (usuully straw-coiored apd Hiinpht, nbd_ rich in altmmin ouy substances) in the perieardium almost fnvs riably, in the chost, and: fn the abdom. fual cavity, and slbesion hetween a part of tha lJumzs aud the costal pleura, the pericandium, and e diapbiracim, or between somme of the orzans in the alxjominal cavity, ss the e may be, constitute also very frequent murbid festures. In some cases entozon have een fuuwd fu the bronchinl tubes, §n the stom- achi, 1n the liver, the heputie ducts, und gall- bladder. in tie duodenum, In the colow, and in the caxum; but their presence must be loaked npon as accidentat, aud has nothing o do with the discass in question. Aw- b Selecting Seed.Corn~Frittored Away—finve You Done It2-5hueing Horsguetive-Keep- ers’ Asvocintlon~dgricattnral Statiatica— Mulohtug Strawberry-Vinos-Smart Farm- era=The Crope, Ete. From (ur Own Corrarpandent, Cranpator, DL, Septs 14—Next May, when we flnd too [ate that our sewd-cort has fatled to erow, we shall wish that we had been wise at the proper thne, and taken unusiual paina to save our own aced. In Ceutral 1linols, aud we presuwme anywliere that corit 1a A Lomimun crop, the usnal mcthod Is to sclect the best ears from the criba at plasting-tine. A much beiter courae, we think, 1s to go fnto the fiuld now and pick out the larzest sud earliest-ripeaed eare. By dotng tils we alnost Insure good m,u. wilh utendency to carly nioenlug, An Iowa” corre- apoudent of the Country Gentleman detalls his manner of saving seod-vorn as follows A sure way 1o have rood seed-cornds tu ga lato the cornefeld betora frost, And befvro the corn In all ripe, and select the ripest and fairest cars, By pitrsuing tifs courss year after yoar, hinprovement i quality nnd time of ripening wilt follow, 1 it 1n athorod bofore tiae cob ia dey, 1t should not be piisd b in 8 hean to heat und spoll, Sceds uf any ind thoroughly hented will pot perininate. 1 have plcked serd-corn froam [ate corn Just fic for bol g, otd tied 16an by the buake th & loft, and alan spread Lont Loinly on 4 scaduld, and never trouio unout Ha nol growluz. It will up sumowlrst, but that does not luiet it 1¢ curn {8 picked ocfore 1t In thoronehiy ape, it will come ap ateonser than I boit anol it s dead-ripe, aud when planite will rul wooner, sud birds aut_cnt-worine whil ot trouble the field o loug. It Lakes 8 litthe more Hute to welect”the roed-gars befure husking-time, but It will pay, Mery, in Contral owa, 1 geasrally gather seed- corn trom thu I2th to the 2inn of Septeiuber. Ur high or Jow, or rich or poor, Nane would foni teeth of breath enduce, 1€ they out knew liaw are and et Wax Sozodont, that pricelens zft, X In eiving beauty, lite, aaa tane To every charm (he inouth can own, e Tlia_friend of temparauce &ad sobriety, Sag fords Jamaics Glngers % curicuka. uticura THE GREAT SKIN CURE, . Anpallibly Cures Salt Riieom or Bezema, Ringworm, Tetter, Scald Head, Dandraf, Dry and Falling Hair, Pimplss, Blotches, and Seref tlous Dlcers aud Saras, : tlons of the grounas were ample. and conven- | other morbit feature, wiich, howeved moral world fs stitt lylng befors the Omnipo- | nieht, When the car fails, induction becomes PRIFTBRED AvAY, e Mess E| POTTER. Wholesala Drugaists. . i core, 2 ceds further Jnvestigation, bresenta Raelf, it | of 3 LAy gt sty le:f _‘“-:l':‘v"m i all tho pussing ages, | the soul's ear, and it tclls us that when firr“‘.l,':le?xnx‘:.n' T(Mrr:u;}bl&: ':‘x-lsx’l‘}ns.ruwn';l.fill m Speaking of the muney approprated by Con. | 19" tne sttendanco aui roccipts wers lare, | needs Investicitim b . B A T e publle aat early fnto the great scene, [lo came s aoon as tie mind coitd hegin to grasp 1lis spiritual trutis ond to wake somu applica- slon of them to its current elvilization, Letus note to-day what seems the divine method of creating our morul sphere; Jot us pute what, elements God i uingling in tho great cup, "1n the pbysical earth, the wdvancing of the Crentor are seen, “INo rocks the hucied teees, the whole ufluvial depostt, tho { coal uud o uswhat titmults, : At separations of Jand from water, what successfons of life, what successions of graluy and fullage entered Into the vomposition of that whicn now call the carth. As our colured butterfly was once u vlleworm, Lut a worin wiose ropulsiveness furned fnto delleate beauty, so our earth wis ouce s Jupd ol reptiles, o lwinu of ¥ile forms of life, and then slowiy It bucet old shells aud be- gan to sprewd pated wings aud reven) o deli- ate beauty, In the universe, so far as known, oie i a followed, The universu 1s tull of* purallclisms. Everywhero bs gravitation, re are the prinary clements which acems, 1ovariably, - Hod-Lacteria appeasivg to be G015 to 0.0002 tuches {n lengih, snd about. 000002 £o 0.0003 fucties fu thivkness, and mor- the butterlly's oot touctes n ° lower-leafl the alr vibrates with tho sudden contact, One of the great discoverers of the day hns ot lnst cume to relnforce this induction, and has made perfectly audible the fotstens of the common house-fy, ~ Nature, so loud In fts storm and 8o visiols in mountain and feld, possesses a kingdom where mun canpot enter by his eye, or var, or by utu{:. but ouly by the deductlous of ila Inteileet, We smeil the rose and see Its colors, but wo cannot find the chem- tstry which formed tho pertume or mixed the hues. ‘Tho workman in old Ureece who inade an dyory cliarlot so small that the wing of a iy wade @ canopy over it tha engruver who traced the Lord’s Prayer on tho smnllest coln, must confess thelr powerlessuess Lo palnt the spots an u beotle’s wing, muny of which spots could be Jucated on a needle’s point. We inust eoter the moral world with thia plan of the universe in our mind, and. must confers that vur civiliza- thon ts made up of subtile forces, joining and blending {n it }ike the many vibrutions which foru u tune lu muafe, We must follow the Hight of fuduction until wa do not see the human racoto the display of live stock and the departments of manufactures, horticultnre, aud agriculture wero extensive sud varied, anid the attractions | fur mare o leas lively to gnd fru, are fouad in and amuscments were new, novel, and enjoy- | the Dlood. fu the vurions esudations, and, in avte. immense numbers, In the dmwm:: ur Wicerons C! 1 ble for the | excresteuces vu the mucous toeinhraues. mflfl'.m?f&' lul ffifl"‘:he ‘:\Yu‘::l‘h,er coutinued | Felation ol these bacteria to the imorbid process ol und the Tecent rains had nicely laf] the | has yet Lo be nvestizated, - The bood iiaell 1 et 00 Taesdar larce deleeations 0f veople | weually thins it is dark-colored if death msuited irathered here, no doubt setescred tn part by | from worhid chances iu the respiratory orguns, the occasion of and light-colored i the Jutter have beea com. TIE PRESIDENT'S VISIT. paratively little affected; fi enniates uniform- Tho Preaident and Mra. Hayes, with their [ 1Y to 8 louse and spougy clot fs_rich In_Hhrin- three sous and a party of forty 'fllgungnmw ogen, nndvn\mun destitute of white blomlcon peaple, arrived un Tucsday and visited the Fair- puscles, the red blood-corpuscles are tsuslly Groungs, where speechies wers_ miade by Prest. | Surupk, very anmilar, - .vmn:\:.l]lu jrom dent Hayes, Attornev-Gieneral Uevens, Oid foor to izt pofnts | hLu morbid process, Peababiiiies® Meyer, Col Yaucy, und athers, | nouwithxtanding the great diverslty of = tha belng Introduced by N» D.” Fratt, President of | symptoums ubservisd during life, aid of the the Soclety. Five or six thousand peanle morbid featurea prescoted alter death, or now wzattered avound the crand stad on she race- withstandiog that the principal seat af the dis- course, where the Presidential party was sta- | €350 18 soracthnes i one orzan vt yart of the et and tho ‘spocches wera jndiclously ap. | body, and sometimos in auothur entirly diffee- wiauded, Durlog the {ntervals many hundred { €il, appeark o he evervwhure ensentinlly the inveatization aud comparison, with n heart honest aud true, luving wisdom, serlous in pursuit of it, and {mmeasurably above tri- tling, Al this siivutd huva been reallzed before the comiug of the mind's skeptical era, 1t nee- Tu:ted, the coming state of sxepticlsm was - plicated; 16 coutd nat fu the least have been uyerted. In point of faet, skenticlsim eame with tho sense of Independence and self-rellancs in couduct and reason, sud too often found the wind undisclplined and unprepared forits trials, which wero usuully severe and erltleal enough whon preparation had been mada o kuowledgy, Jjudgznent, and louesty, In order that faith inlzht ba genulne snd vot assumed, deep nud wot superticial, vital sud not mere credullt[).. each must for himselt struggle through doubt into clearness, und turougd questioning futa certatnty. Hpeaking of the usés of tho skentlcal era, he sakl thers was doubt which precaded belel, and doubt which procoded denfal, ‘The ono was nat- ural una necessary, the other abuormal, and graw out of the evil state of the beart. Waers the Skin and Scalp, that they have succee Alter #icht yearsof atiidy and experinient. 1n obtalnlng by distiliation from Vegeiadle Producta never, they be. Neve, before uwed o mediciae. & purely Mence of Jetly. wilch the ure fur every kiod of 8kin Isesse. fro: enmion [imiile to the worst vase of Salt Itheain, Scald Head, or Dandrf, CUTICURA is earnestly Grlieved to be the only post- v Seche oAy o e cre at B e Eczema, flingworm, Tetter, Puat i, tiround Ttet, Rarberd’ Tten. ai e Al Rintces. Hiack Iheata, Gri ATl ndlicm 4! | cress to fnvestimats the *mflug-Cholers,” the New York 7ribune vayss Tae §10,000 appropriated by the last Congress forinve: bing the cuntagious’ disenses ot awing i the Unyyed Statos le, it vaouis, 1o bo dlsteibuted (0y the Comialesioner of AgricultireY) amoug ©lzht men, of whom our currespondent, Prof, dumes Law, s chlel, Zhe Notwaat Lics-Stock Jugrnal thinka ft 2afo to a<aumo in sdvance that thing valdable will reaalt from L' We agre Witk our dlscrinlnating contenivorury, that * “Facro s been quite euvugh akiu.ulnyg of the warfage of thta ujoct already, | apd that 1t wold bave been wise o hiave placed the vntira sum at thy disposal of 1wo ur theoe skilled vetorinanuns. In that case womethlng approximatinz an_{nvostigativs might have boen nyade: ua 1 14, e palter enchith whici each of the Commisslouers will calve 1o eudlicient to justify n‘: ane of them in neglecting hin own privato proludsional b nveds 4o, in onler to waks b valuw Lo Lhe DHblic In this nvestizatlon, We variinlly agroo with the Tribune in its re- marks, capeclally s0 far ns rolutes to such a minute divislon ot the fund. We understond i 2 it Vesicular, Neaf ot [rritations of the KK, Nead, Danra, Drv, Tule, sud Falling ifatr, Prema- et {aldisea ¥ad alt BTy Erabtinie itz sad Lo indous of tha Cote. Wounis, " irutses, sealds, P'iies. Pain and lutisianiationt werle Crou snd - Hoareneu. L cera, anit Glanduter Swelllagy aut uaes, wad munt vt e are nuine. n: it I Ao ot ® i ! ho bad committed himaelf | that $200 per month ond expenses havs been o " 1 1o shake the hand of th Raniie, and seems 1o comsist in A proliferativn culs, overgwhicrs heat, evorywhiero | ho stiped byouly suchgroat thines os language, | SYSE EUEFO WAs ol W al pe cxpenses liave been | people pressed forward to shaky the Land of the 4 sroast] itheliutne evarsatmiere color amd the araiag. s | nd eacasion, ond Moeriy, but aleo my. what, | 10 tho Jove ot solfy Lo tho, lova ol imbition, 10 | ixed upon as the compeusatiun uf onch wewbar | Preshlent und Mre, Hatossand on yauue ludy, eupul sud partil), fnemmay of epiipEiiunceclie : slotient! i | 3 - 5 o | Miss Hannuh Rawduil, ol mrose, Wik, more 1 . g Al Erpy Ry fomenth such s tho addreasss | yre, thera was ono who eduld not wou God pr [ of the Commlsafon, ~ We are personully ac- | F b AR 000 o ogented i autograply | tasuie-corpuscles I I other tissues, fullowed bolfeye ilis Lruth, becauso be wonld not. iis qualnted with but oue of its nicmbers, Dr. Dit- unbellef was the unvollef of rebellion against Presideut. i1l Excelleney took In | Fery soou, or before the vew-furmel cells tuve siors, ik wo can teathlully stato that b fs B0t | e L e e oot & i Hus ploty Sol R=GEN, tis- Enlitda,/of o e situntionat onee, and, whipping out s pencll, | had thme 1o develon and to ature. by f process the materiul untverse, and hence by such o law | o'Kempis is wholly Impossible for you and oo, alu ely of & granwlar detritus, or decayed % % . cattse tiuse morbid excremences on | sek, B ombt o Tt T o | e, et tha saning of & Crusade ora | Burity and diine oouucss, and Just tu PrOpor- fouling ia sime away ~ For sevaral wevks past | wrote, + With the copliments of K. 11 Havea e e ot i idiae, partarcoty | W anrania hk spisitunl. But it 18 only i outling that we can | Na sonic of the blagy B tion as It cultivated pulite socieeyund bonoruble 1 10700 "heen n this vieintty, daily visicinge | Mrs, dlayes atso recorded bier name with 8 siite. the wucous membranes amd v othies o i . et & L trat oic 1 Nanl Do Mar 08 f the plague In London or | (SR C0HGRC GO fustify tteelt benind ash. | he b daily vinittue | Mo I e e aceatn attended tha | 814ty as sevn under the wic - | Co.: Chiea: in Memphils; wecannot go to the cemeteries where 8 half million American soldiers slocp amd Jearn toe whole justitication of their dust: but where scuss and resson both fall, we can whisper to our heart that God s creatiog a moral world, and theso are the morniugs aud uvenfugs Io its successive unys. As tho physical unlverse I full of blonding light and shadow, and as fadeed It creates beauty by mingling and thus mokes a morning or evening sky sweeter than tag deckled noon, so our woral world comes to s as a continuanes of the same tlending, and in soma strange man- ner the songs of Homer, and Dante, and M- ton, und the barp of David, snd Bappho, and Becthaven combing with the eloquence of Lutber and Bossuet, and the awords of Orange and Washington Iin weaving the one fabric of & tinal humauity. Could we examine wodern thought and senthinent microscopically, with the inslzht of & divine mimi, doubticss wu aliontd sea inour nineteenth-century soul atoms which came from the Psaims of David, and from tho taste of tha ciassle, und from the heroism of the martyes, 0s {n & French patriot’s heart we might Sud the tnfluence of tho somys of Heranger, 8o vust Is the fact and futuro of the moral world that {t {4 safu tosay that the materlsl world 18 onty & great shadow of tnis moral beau- ty. ‘The natucallsts reveras tho thouglit, They sometines find the explanation of We untverse tolte in material forms, und that man 14 onl oue of lta many forms of dust. Man & rock and stgeam are all one, But [ should pro- fer to ussuie the moral world wi the explanae tion of all belug, and to declare that thy phve- fcul world 1s only the mirror in which the spirit, turnfuie around constantly, perceives teell. In the springtims 1 percelve my youth, in the ovesn | feel my soul's pulsations, fu tho night- thna wy dependeuce, fu the autumn-leaf my sorrow, What Chateaubriand says of flowers we may all well say of the exterual scenes, Ho says: **With Howors the snclents crowned the cupa st the bungquet and the whilte bair of the sages; the early Chriations wresthed with them thelrmartyrs and the sltarof theircatacombs, 1n armera who have sick bogs, studying the sure- roundings, getting samples of blosd and tlssue from sivk wnd well hogs, sud canducting ex- periments, In ths work be (s by Dr, F, W, Prentice, tho able i veon of the Industrial Universt Wiiether Dr. Ditmers stiatl (wiy determine the origin of the disuase or not, valuable lessons will have teen Jearned, which will o far toward render- ng the prelininary work of » second Commls. S1uR UNDeCEssATy. ,u)urluz the year 1877 thera died (rom dlisease 1 this county about 23,000 hoze of various de- wrees of waturity, [L 4 wale to way chat the urorags value of cach autinal wu.‘}.!fl.—nukmf i total fuas to the furmers of thie conuty $57,000, Une would think thnd saeh Dyurcs would Induce the State Leglslulurs to take saine action regarding the disvase. ‘The pay- ment of a roward for the dseovery ol & cure i ouly sn {ucentive to guacky, bocause selentitle men well kuow that, biture a vura can b found, the orlgln and oredisposiiyy causes 18UsL bo known, In such a sedrch quacks stand no show; henee a competent wan savuld b eu- vozed to dlscover the cauws, Which, when found, witl themsclvea suigest o rawedy, HAVE YOU DONR 1T} Harvesting and haymg being done, in what conditiou have you left your machineryf. Is your mower standmg in the fencu-corner, ex- prowed to thy sun aud rain; or have yuu talicu it 10 pieces, scruped the accumulation ol oily dirt, and griss-sced off, und staud 1t o mdry placet about the reaping-machino! Cau it by seen standiny 1o the middle of the lust fleid cuty almost nldden by s Browth of weidst 1f 1t 18 there, cconomy, and the desiru tu set & goul examule for your neighburs, sbould u- uee you 1o house it at once, Uuv of the most exuensive leaks su Western Agriculiure te this ony of allowlug expensive mschincry to rust and rot o the deld, or deaving 16 1 tue baru yard g4 roosia for fuwls. AUOBING UQNSRS. The possibility of uslug Lorses ou the road without shoeing 18 now belng duscissed by the avieuliural press. Probably ialt the taruers’ fonable excuses, The nortnl doubt wus that tho uge of which would enable mau to contdrin inthe lght of reason thu truth whiel he had learned, and 1o’ scarch for that which was re- vealed, that t might bo contirined to Liunsell a8 are uukuown, We know anuch about gold, Where found, how heavy, how valuuble; but what forces of nature formed gobl, sud what other forces made the diamond, und what niade siiver, aud what lead, are particulars beyond the reach of our ehemlstry, 8o b thy structure of e moral worhl we must reat in outltbes of truth, und not hope for a perfeet fiual unalysls, Ju the great ontlines of this moral world there nre beauty, and hope, aud pesce; in it minute llnlu]l(ul. bewilderinent and sorrow, 1 thot larre composition called the moral World what iucas, s tho painters would say, lie here and therol Standing before the Jamlseaps of a great artist you fiad a large asscmblage of thought, There {8 the exponse of blys sky, there i8 n band of white cloud, thern s the charm of great distance In the mountata, there 15 the chiarin of Reartess i the foreground; the backeround reminds of ciernlty, the fore- eround of time, the mountatn awakes the sense of the sublime, tho grass and vivlets in the foreground awoken the beautiful, the crumbling house or church appeats to our natura} sadness, the vines on the' wall recall us 10 hope; the imiucisencas of the ' scany pro- cidims God, the hunter o tlsherman Just visible . proclaims mau, Thus the pleture bursts upen us with its many truths ail woven into ono effect on the soul. ‘Thus our maral world s composition into which for thousands of years tho Créator Las been casting 1is varied and diving thoughts, What thy wholo sceno willat last be has beon hiuted at by exalted vrophets, but can bo fully lmagived by non. Iraiah hne seen the desert rejoles and blvssow s the rose, the thorn repluced by the fir tree, and thio myrtle erowlug Whero the’ bramble lud en; but, except b such fgures, the hourt caunot approuch the ultimate wagaificeoce of the seene, It @8 thought enough (or the hour that 3 spiritual realin s in the hands of & pow- tul and wise Creator, whose works In tho Daterfol universo ustrunomers have fouud to hllufendum. We muy jufer n comning vaste Bess of solritual things, lato this worsl composition you can see the Greek and Rowau careying art, und thought, Fudr on \‘\"wlul.'lnlny.l nnmwluw:scd the nmunll BT evlow of horses aikd eatile, atd wore conveyed B T sarelaes, violting o | A8 10 the cansesof tho swine-olazue, ono Tnachiery denarimout.amd_ other purtions of | thine has been wstablishied be bt by e and vicwinge w military and laney dril} | actunl experimenta: that iy, the worbid process L the taapoy Guande, of Portate, 8 mowber of | develops ‘a virus, which, if inocutatel sty o which Mrs. finyes warmly coplitheated white wonm? fn the akin, nomatter how small, or it shaking his hand, absorbed by the mucous membruncs, witl pro- Ample accommodations were afforded for re- e the dise: o communieals the eame (roanthents, nearly tulety hooths belug devoted | from one snimal to auuther. Whether tuls 10 tiils purpass. What with the racea from day | ¥irus ean be whsorbed by the waole, healthy, o 10 day, the addresses by President Frate and [ tuinpured skin or bythe healthy, sonud, o tho Lon, J. k. Doolittie, the owmerous e Milalined fuspiratory muceus membranes, 4 shows,” and the music by the Monroe Cornet | Hulb o, tho week ‘i v« 1 As o treatment and presentlon, it {8 yet oo f,‘.f,':l' tho week wad molo pleataut aud emjoy- | A FigREEN g drtinite, As o the TUE XXHIRITS, former, T wilt caution the furers and swine. The dlsplay of the thuasamls of artlcles in | brecders agmin all hozehoiern medicine ped the Hally of A.\l/uulhewm\. Fine Arts, Moeut- X vt fedt Iy 4 jcuity wero vand and inter- - e st attention, . The ks | Iatter arc an inguosnivilty, aml e ducase, i€ DbIL BF Bordes, cattie, shiows, swine, und poutery | (ully devetoped, st b ranstdered ss m‘lmblf. was the larzest ovee seen In the State, while the | J1 a »‘fm;")';’ s o | ndicstton. oumts s distarbeaces af the Stomace shuw of wgricuttural machiners and tinplements | 18 16 pivisable to Koun fealthy h ot suae ot aiene b pyy S imtted by thousands of delizbted specta. | S separated from disewel one G n e nmis from asange of funl, tors dally, Power was furnished by several In small nuibers, Got exveedlug Tour or fAve, | waler, or etyuaie, cures (sainps sid Valoa breake up oA enines, and the hundreds of machines, | viIF stich autnts Wogethur s will pot et wid | i, Gl and #vvers In vas sigis. 31 promtes wecnpying w large teld, were kept humadng | ® and each other ;1o give each separate fot ol AT ALrdnati i T istit, Amotg the more | boas of pige w eleats wnd dry costig-wlaco under | LRl T T e the mtnd sud uer Toteworthy extiits was that of the cover of o roal dirtng the ukeht s Lo shit them 7. 4 3, 1. CASE PLOW CORPANY, OF BACIXR. g it Ehat pen or resting g uidown, sinl vuuy futcas, and Indeces Fafrmstlag sievp, Vor the Part of the Presidential parts, teluwding Col s (e eontined 1here dunng the nlahl | goung, the sgwt sod the Infirm, on lasd or sea. under Py nd i b Dhue. Comtnsioner of As- 1o dew, Beat morningy has disappesred s 10 | il eireunistaaces snd coaditions. this groat juuares uf e et it (o Case Plow Comany's | ferd notlinis hut eleun and st food, AU | by siaad withwst s wgust ot rast 4 superior sulkies, ateel-beam, unt centre “draft | BV it 0 aach a way that it vannot bo sofled or ¢ataiogue of the meiaria fandies fieware of Mintol Do, a Tk City prairis breaker, atd ux- | contamiared with the exrennts sl M | (4G tuidatioss rwageniet b desters toe rosaa tutr admiratonf e beswfl . | U SRS B SRR NN Nl | paroses o van Seves frar o o s, s ot 1o be fintelas {u every essontial particu- keep - hozw and plas away n | upon bestus rubotyuie all the clements of merit, slougs, * quaginires, pools of stagnaut NI 9 water, rolton manerehcay vadionln, ale i U 3 . . el ek S i el 17 wbamdon fnfevted hog-yards, at uy rata i ml [][‘ S flmama mual‘l Aisplaved thelp cipuer plows. sulky-plows, el | Bratspring, aud to plow them Just s 2ol, [ Vi el g v o 1l bogses are able ta pull the plow throngh ::}.fl:"‘;u‘.(v‘,‘.‘,‘.‘,\“,:,m‘::l":::‘,l,c.;:n:.“&:,fi,‘,‘;"‘! theround, As tonediclnes (o be usal as ¥old by 1 Whalessle and Reval Dugrtsts, tiroea ship, They ook tho zald medal of the Centens preventives, only distafectants can come inta | ond Dealors (o Slsdiciue tlivugbunt the Unled State! wial, aml bave luproveiuents possessed by U0 phostion, and the satiecan be usod to advantate | sed Csusdas " SANFORDS truo. Uther uses of the stato of skepticlsm and |n- yestigation were the romoval of tatlactes and the rejection of falsities, and the dlsciplining of vatlunal reason itaelt, Thero was ulways danzer that one, In passing through this state, would suffer himsel! to be drawu tnto s ueratlve stats of mind, whorein scofling and dlsputation tooi the place of In- vestlpution; also dunger that be would mistake the interpretation for the revelation, and deay both (n pronouncing Judgment upou une. ‘Fhero was above atl danger that one would re- jout tod’s revolation of - Himself aud will—the precepts of tis Word—for this way lay thu. 1011y sud madness out of which none came, save turough Ereat tribulation. Ilo then referred w the treatinent, speaking chietly of self-treatment, for when the skeptical stats camwo §t was of Divine Providenes that it should ba laft to its freo and fundependent courss and 1o seilcompulsion fu the light of reasotl, A negative state of wind was even to be avoliled. ‘The function of reasou was not o discover whother a thing of faith be something of nut, but what it was. This atfirative siate of wind toward all truth, seeking culightoneat 28 10 What wits {ts real apinit aud meaniug, was mado possible to every one by the Diviue fwplantation of remuius and the state of Aradivlonal faith, Next Suuday Mr, Mercor will contlntie tho discussion by preachlug nesermon on “ Reason in Ketgion.® THE BETIER COUNTRY. SEHMON Y THB BBV, DIl THUMAA ‘The Rev. Dr. Thomas proachied to s érowded house yesterday evening at Centenary Church. e spoke briofly, taking for his text the fullow- gy Jamaica Ginger The Quintessence of Jamaica Giinger, Choies Aromatic and French Brandy, - lendeiicloun, Mrmtass. cal alvang:bevlag subaitite for el kindeof attualanta, 1t prawmptle reilevas 1o Pegela, Uppression after Batleg. Al evary spectcs ol 2 5 ¥ uly for the porpose of distufecting ~ sthos, | smeew=s - our day we describa our fectings by thelr col- Hut now . they desire & bstter country; that 1s, | horses b tho West are nut suod, on un average, | vthens. u {2 ol = language, and the LEheows carrving th | ore, ou o by she eoeh leals olt Inocence by | a0 Beaventy, W Nerofars Gad 1o os aviatiea Wi | Bceca Vedr: A @re many v hiye viocs GEOUUE C. CNIBD, O MILWAUKEE, AT T T D S | [ By bt trutbia of religlon, Iho liebrews followed | the whitcnoss of the ruse, all modesty by fts | callod tnotr God, for M hath prevased for thew 8 § o their liorses, except 1 winter, We nave | ropresned the tiale Manut’z Co. Tuts show tx‘ \rary Mae fur oLUEF PUFRUSCA, CAULUL LO kY [thfully their misston, and slood by the re- | red: it isan iuterpreter of sentiments amoug | S8y .~ debrews, ... 10. e Tor wynty years that never hud | of pluws was proyounced the hnest, as the ma- | 4 beporaes W L SIS BOT Now Fditio of JA k ,';;;;‘1; ulf m&l;fl;l‘!h thelr l,fi*h'“;vm bara | notious, u Hvihw book which causes uo debiaies 1le hud been very much Intcrested tho other | sbues ou thew il THeet, | Teans Imi-l :;rfll-‘l siul hv‘n-rllnnn'-\:nufl:emn-‘r;md “u'i."“ ws a8 ety Uil o ar g of tho Christiun cra. iere wereothier | no war, wud la whi 5 the roads must, however, pearly g vely 1o superion w the worl 4 % streams meanwhile fowing down and emptylug ek lilstuey yato cun pend iy |1 day, be, anld;lln looklng at_u}ehartof Muie,, [ Jlis, . ruad 1 owuRel ¥ iy revolutions except those of the A Thus M. Vs, L G ) on all sldes the wreat inpes of materfal . el o4 always kupt abod du frout. Our | WHL A KNOWLTON, OF BOCKPOUD, JLL., ) Somon decs it ae s epeliing Urken: e word tisced iheioiides ol tia idld Puen, s ath reprasadigl by A: Struhian, extivnted the well- | FHNABLCS L A Lo tEre apre "% | «otl, whea wet, L ws alippery o8 thouch gredsed, I enl terws of continents we allude to {ta nant | things licg as mirror or languags of the ratjon. | that had lived and pertshed Irowm the rewotest | go ' i 1 nov sty da s altpury 83 thouch grasels | Kiown reapor aud_ mawer, culbivators and biay- | werenbors Wive lost & fow aloo: Fruia the Lk we | Sk J48¢ [prg by Chatioie iraitels Mreamy, the Mississtppl, or Hudson, or Amazon, | al soul, It is the reflected lught of tho spirit, times. Btudying out the track of ote people | ynshod horses after & ralt. L wosl cases, 1 | rakes. the best in the markel, Knowltou's | seethivm sich tivy re dead Iy twenty-fone honrs. AL, Throatleshwaliv, by Susua Mol ;.'.kwuhc’ ud;m;ilug'nwl ufilucn{tu‘v;lth‘l{nnud Such, tben, is the moral world. [t s rising | ufter snother, he was deeply tinpressod by the | left 10 nature, bupses’ bools adepl theimstives sickie-plate guard ts a valuable, lnorayygisut. 1 iliuk |8 unvecessary togive suu ke sywniaius, as tly Hawi, by i e ol ¢ 50 note of the hundreds of tributaries — up lumense. from the hand of u never-resting Creatur, wud s increasiug lu volume the fur- :22; ““,.“""‘5, l:‘m.m;! s;l'uln.k And now it 16 [ & view which wakes us theo w ready to belleve that' this bcnevulu;v. lf"re:l.‘:{x: 10 WBe roady, and becoe 80 Lard 1bab they can- not be trimued, but bave to be iled down when 1t becoruda necessary 1o UL 0L sbota. A grval ddeal dopenda Upon a carciul driver, aid wd. tbere are mauy bills wnd stouce 10 be driven o¥er. For furii-work, shoes are uniccessary. UEE-BEEPERS' AdOIATION, The Auuyal Coyvention ot the Nutjoual Buee- Kevner? Assoclation will be bl 1o the Coer Lnion, New York Ofty, commencing 13 M. oo Fucedav. the §Lhdpy of Uctover, }373. Tuesxlue bition of bees aud thelr prudugta Wil be beia at soqare dnall probaoility” sequainted with taen. Polln, by the Due f - - . 'calves were ona pastury of fwent law | 33 ¥ivian direy, by Beajaud POSTMASTER PALU!R NEVIES, R e ks Rako lents ut sevess to | 20 The nmes L g,u,,‘,-; e Oubaih L . Ta tae Editor pf The Tridune, etcr, wud srewell cared for I every Tospeot: are | et Lot e . " Cuseagn, Bept. 1.—tu the Cucagn Dally | aboveéihe o diues grade, zud are st sackling the ler Furtus v > cow, wy but ol getbiog sl the itk Vou | WS bl o it oo ¥ Tounes of Bept. 18 appeased wn articte of which | WiTeontor n favorif you can give domefbing so | #€8 Woord anl Suerled. by Ruma ¥ vany - .. tae followiug paragraph was o portion: revent or tae disease, 1o the nuxt meue of | 38 oo 018 Hime; by Maey Lecil 115 Uut Mr. Paliner must bave the crudit of being Pun WeegLy Tuwuse. Jamis Snyru, | Ll ey the origigatur of the Vers newest ay of vayiu: Anuoer.-<Take your calves awar from the okl thigvine debla, Thu lous 1u the Goveruaent | pasture whese the deatbs bave vecurrel; by the peeqlations of Miler & Ca, f8 estimatod by | them on hiZh und dry ground, if pasible L sty b g Stuket, o b8 1 oo 40 pracidesble, thele foods yuter fram a reflection, suguested to hlin by this charn that so many milllons of men bad lived snd died on this earth befors our day. Followinz the dark hues rununiug sentsuchh a being a8 Corist, to live and teach, | across the chart one’ could cgteh a glimpee of aud die ere, 1t secms easy 10 believo that Ha | the histories of entire uations and races exist- came un sugel Lo disturb the waters of this paok }mu for ugws, then dving out entirely or wmere- i ¥hich, with tuch nolse or profound silvace, add I waters, a0 0 Anaiyzing the past the mind Bust meution ouly such Niles as Palestiue, and hnu-e. aud Italy, snd wmust not hope Percelve the tributaries of thoso long 2 geep Hoods. lu the clasee laue lges alons we may find & whols Jday bl morgl creatlon, © The modern specch M hcan express such millions of ideas, aud ich turnialic sucls w gatewsy lor thu soul, ‘mlfmlurn spvech which fipda; fu phe scote of e language only so munydialecta of itsclt, that higher Bfe and Nealth pybely bo given out | 1oz 1 ssill other nutlous or races, and 80 pusi- to ahl us sick oucs helpleas ou jhe bavks, Asa | fue oo in the great stream of timue, fi was fact, 2 certuin’ Nazuring cawe, and with woo- | noticeable that the voe ?flublu which had never derfnl power. - been biutted out was that nation whicn duted te with o lancusge the sithpivst, & philosonty the bighest aua pluaingst, | back to the days of Abrabiam.™ Gaziug at the | the Amerieas, Jovthute, ey ave . Since the discovery of | o1t gt pgive, eqch animal a dose (from four Yot frouw tae Fuatern lana—s aguitcent | with love the wost ingonse.” Lo wuifiduui CBircu coald trace the dark lina of ho le | * Al exinbite siteiulod for thga show slould be o ey e p A At L io sl u‘uurit\ astutlue 1o size aad aco uf aul. 4 e New Tt rorn the dviog yesterday to the youth- | us a sunbeag, a8 powerrul s tornadu, as | brews runulug op ltke @ maestic river ghmost | directed to the Naviungl BeeBocyess Msewia for the Ji ud dollar of | V of sulphaterwl soda, | flenfdes thot, tury 3 giom, Ehw K day i o tiomroms 10 T the Slosuis | weneraus usa dove 03 Gevoted ud o mather, as | 0 the ond: The Je i, care of 1 K& F u“"ruurlér & Cu.y whio :.f"":\‘:xlfuu; 1ot woy 4 o etpes Thevate | the deal ones decinenogzii and,ab aoy deatin L B Gl va Ty Wi e TUL Lab nation ad always bejd ;;m:u; Wheu the Lord hud suwu Lbe grass sud e Ureca ang had wude tha Lerbs of the ticld, Ly ¥led that morujug and evewmog tho * third and declured 3t P goad,”” whiat u pobler learucd as all the philosaphers of all the time, comiblued o ane. Huzo sad lately: 4 Vo). tafro was an epoch,’” but the gifted orator hud s belief tn something bevond ihe wrave mortality was ote of the mist princples of L Llmes, will feceive snd plase thea 15 posibion. Y. AUMICULTULAL sTFETICS “Tlie folly uf ullembliog Lo il the statistics wilen of all 1ho pereons 10 \pe_oWes Gecupyivz - | occur i the stable: un catilepn or if diseased Tesiur pontivae st e Mdccked ™ uunila vafls | ones have secamet 660 "ulates, sttt with civat aravaul Bas Geo shavgil off bumake good the { chluriae of Liua belore 3ud Giler tie stable or relwzious beliet aven b the + That 1dea, it way true, was not contined to the Jews. v torrowed the wea from the Oue who “Lad in- of agriciiturs; productions 1o the State s saown | Lednuey. 1 e vasy 10 pay tu the Culeazo | peu hay beew eleaued. A treatent s sarcly AT WA Ty, i ,"‘“‘ 4t eveping which saw the buman | decd mudy nineteen centurivs date from bus | but they were its chivf expounders. When the | ty the retune wuade Lo the State Board ot R R A dead, = 5 L] ever of anyavait - Butorualy. cuillaentlvdi Ay (aa aing g b i ia % el pos et af a Tanzuage able evermoro | bieth, and who Lk puet cunisl rematulng to | pesder o bistory sorsiders{ the zeneed | Epahiziion e s dactce sl it i Tu the daily viition of the Tuucs of the Tt | luied aeds,—suiphuric w, hidrochlone sch HEWELL Wi 4 all puastble thougliva aud seuiiment, ] wotd Lie ietec coutusics to cone. Cuder | er 13, Csterisalive diluted . Thal charactenized LL died 1 iy [ERNE Yoy acuts witd eonaietdodedy b earbag s do

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