Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 30, 1878, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

5 ) CHICAGO TRIBUNE aliall &Il at Jast be placed by t A gizantic truth {4 borne thus upon eiganti: shonl- dere, like tho fabied Christopher bearing the in- ant Jesus, hat thistilea of a future Jife may exert the moat of fnflueuce upon ench nie, it mnst he permitied to change (tacostinme when it changes Ita cra. Whnt was ouce equityand Justiee Iy not, perbans, equity and_justice now, and what wea the beautitul when Danfe wrute may not be the benutiful now, Just 18 what was midnes in old Rome would be cenelty fn Awerlca, The ple: ture of sternity for to<day nead not. bo copicd from the portraits In the ol gallerirs, bhut mnst be Hmned anew from the more deapty-studdied Christ, and the more derpls-studied jastice, and” the more clearly-porcelvéa beauty which are coming with the comlng years, Thus changed to meat the * new millions, the fdea of a world “after this will ‘move omvand the most alznifcant of all human optnlons, ‘To the tomb of vour son or dan hter, or your father nrnna:hemyum heart may ap- proach with steps sad Indeed, but resizned and hopetul, and unheld by the Almlghty, for Ho commauded all tho tong past In Its Rines and Queens to aaticipate you In yonr tearss He com- MO SEPTEMPER 30, 1878, hen one speaks abant y weall feel that e has mpoken for us. Henve, when Boceates soliloquizes over death, and when Zlum'et debates the outcome of the grave, on whoie brink fie atands, all oor oves Bl with teara: for onr eace by such o unit amid the solemnitics ot religion that when one deep heatt ‘utters {t best reflections here we il Teop, Hlence, traversing the past conturies to find the pawer of thie fdea of & sccund world, we heed not expect to hear a chattering crowil, but to catel the plalntive words of _nero and thoro a mortal, ealled by some great gift or great sor- TOW Lo reduce to words the napirattons of an age. Ilence, when 1ace an Fivptian mother embalmiug her child, or sea & David weeping over n dead son, and hear htm saying, “1le will Not retuento me, but I shall go to Wim,” or hear the newer words of Paul, *We hnve house not made with hands,”- it Is ensy to ho- hold I theso wiielv-seattered ones millions upon milifons of men in many old fands bowine thelr knees In one mystery and one hope, From Lire one Egvptiangnother we pasa to t from tho one David to Wil the Hebrew families where a child lay dead, and from the words of Paul to the milllons, Jew and Gentlle, who went to mach water for hot Chriat (eformed Epfsconal} Chnreh _nnmbere: exactly 203 persons. It taen proceeds o com- Dare this with the seating eapcltyof the church, which ft places at LOX, WIH you allow me, then, et to s4v that Christ Chur hhas sittinge, by ictual count, for %00 :perwons, We hage never claimed that jt seated a thousand peonle, Second. on the L5th of Scotember a reporter of the Aliiauce did present maell at toe door of tha church afler the majority of the congreua- ton were seated, and from a pem near the en- france Lonk oiasrvations, That he eould count the ¢ mgregation from the position which he oc- cupled was alinply n phyafesl tmpossibility, Te left the ehurch Jonz before the close of the serviee, and, having slated to one of the gentlomon actiug as ushers st ho had connted 2N persons ns the sum_ total of the atténdance, was promntiy infurmed by this gentleman (whose dnties gave hin the opoortimity to know) that he was wholly mistaken, and that froin his point of slew ft was utterly inpossible to enrrectly count the persons present, ‘Tho' reporter, however, persisted In inaking bisfalse statement. Third, the Alliance of to-day's date returna to the as- saalt. Bat ita new attack fs on the commani- writca the following sansible adylce to the read- era of that paper: Anfmals mast not be withont a liberal anpply of Rood water. They will anfler for wnnt of it and Will not thrive so weil, Arrange for pasture in almndanca for Iate feeding. Sow somo rye for pan- tura late In Antamn and carly spring, when the ground may be plawed for other crope. ook es- pecially affer the noor animals, Thoee which are f20r In autnma shauld be dinposcd of In some way. ‘eed them Di0s ool them of knock them on the head. Itla better to kill them mow then to care for and watch them with anztety for the nest six monthe, and then have them wither nn and die. At thia erason of the year, an experienced ayo will osually pick ont most of the sheep which are not worth wintering. It 18 too lats in the yenr 10 he- ‘ul‘l 10 feed up poor antmals, and do it most proft- oly. te in an bad am mot enonzn, and they had botter freqnently raffer for A drink of watae than from 8 sour #oil cansed by oo much molstira in the pot. Tho Teaves nf lants enonkd be freqnently moistenad, that nz-bores mayv ho kept open, and the planta thereby keep heatthy, I tieard it sald the other day that farmers snd hortlculturists haid an casy tine, for the rea. #0n that * They dld not work more than hail, the timi Brethren, 1s that ao! I know how that le. Tha succeasful hortienlturiat fs the haatest man out of town. And, when the day's work I8 doue, he tuproves the long winter- avenings in reading, for the successful horticult- arist I8 a realing man, But It Is not well for any man, In any calling or profession, to starve (t: 8erve, scrve, serve all the time, ns though eald was the princioal thine, We should all have an eye, not only to 4 livelinood, but to 8 manhoud ! “Think on these things. 5 0.L.B. THE FARM AND GARDEN. Tho Ditehing Amendinent—8ngar from Sor- a practicable deafnage law, 1t s not to be At osed that onr Iaw-makers will make an nojust aw. It {s not to be sunposed that the Feote, fn executing the law, will commit nutraces, Imperfection attaches to most thinax, and ro 16 may to this; nut we do not foregn all eoterprisn and progress merely beeanse some evils accom- pary the good, However it may be in_cltice, “special assess- ments " are needed In this drainage busincas, hecause the lamls to be drained will not ba equally benefited. Faxni teact shinnkd pay ae- mrding 1o the hienefits to be received, nod this equitable principle (s, fudeed, the main polnt {n this proposed amendment. Without 1¢ drainazs may be enforced, buteachone, without Pegand to clrcninatances, would have to pay eqnatly, Mr. Haaf, with his already dratned land, might be compelled to pav s much as his neighbor, whose Tands need to be drained. Fricnd Haal, join In adopting theamendniont. Then let us work to wet & just law, protecting, #o far as possible, the rights of all. The need of a drainage law i almost universal and fm- perative. Its defeat will bea gad blow to ag- ricultural prosperity throughont the State, No Prof. Swing Discourses on the Notion of an After Life. The Extent of the "ower of This Belief and 13 Quality, A Sarmon on ** Tho Uses of Advey&ty g by the Rev. James K. Applepes, TiI® WEATHER AND CORN-CROP, A couple of gentie froste have done much to- whnl ripening the corn-crop. Most uf the fields are already too dry Lo cat for fodder, and all of ‘@ cTop 14 out of the way of damage by frost. tin weather s and has been beautiful, Winter- wheat i3 coming ur weil, and as yet there are Bo complaints of Hesslan flies, RoraL Jn. o Blshop Clienocy Roplies to the Alliance ,,.0n * Churci Attendance.* THE IDTA OF FUTURE LIFE. SEIMON BY PROFP, BWING, Prof. 8wing preached as usual yesterday - o ghum-Sugar from Corn-Stalks=Poverty P e oy o proposed measure will do so much. and sach e Lo an e st i ol | SR 17 fooken aneni 0 1 ot 10 | S oy RNt 97 6 o TSt | it e Bl sl W v | Ebencusar fom Gomitiacboveny | e o sk reven ao g Food T ronda Theatre, Laking as his sabjeet The Tea of & | G007 e derailn of thin baliel I uturite: bo | s cf,nd of inake, yau strung with thelr con- | now compares b with the membersifo, With | 113t Tecesmliotany and_Entomotogym J ] At votot, baaansy Ak 6 receives Future Life—Its Power,” and for his text the | go fs It painful to niatk the dofeets in the homes solatlons, - Deatined all of ua xoon to pass from | tha same sablime disresard of aceurate tnfor. | $18rd Thmes in Europs=Sick Poultry— THEODORE TIIOMAS, « following: tiod will redoam my soul from the power of the grave. Ile shall receive e, —~Fs., 40: 16, Each man and ench age ts impelled onward by an fles. Not only an Edison ora Watt is the willlng victiin of some single conception, hut slt men are allured along by somo form of fact orfancy. Men who write historfes of ldeas and the papers of Stato allude constantly to the Napoleonle \dess and to the Monroo doctrine, and fnforin us that England has been kept in mental tension all the contury hy the Fastorn question. ler inmonse armies ave enltsted, great ships bullt, thelr sides incased in heavy fron and plerced fog territie guns; her press ts kept full of-thupder. and her stntesnien sup- pited with eloquence by A single "fden— England's power {n the Fast. Ambition was the fden of Cwxsar and Huaunibal, and Xerxes and Bonaporte. But that which can CAFTY A 1A 8o casily in Its arins can earry alao o nation or an nge, for even tnany gensratious, and never onee 1ot the burden down, For s hundred vears, the single thought of o republic has ftimulated our continént and has made it Inuk with contetnpt tpon tho lunds which are ruled by a barn Crar or Sultan, Weare all born lnbg certain notions, and and governments and charactera of antlquity, but away from minor errors the worth and mnguificence of the dnctrine of n future lifo stand forth clearly revealed, Few chapters from any age read more delighifully than Sclp- fo's Dream, in which his fattier Pawins comes (o him In a world of excessive brightness and fours into the earof hix eront son on earth aub- ime lersons of duty and de!urv. Beipio kissed his father and sald to Lim, % Why, most sacred nid excellent father, sincs this s ife, why do I tarry on earth and not hasten to come to theet” In this visfon all the stars {ncrcased fn magni- tude, until the dreamer raw himael! surrounded by worlds likke the earth, onlyincumparably more bewutiful. 1€ wo are fndebted for this vision to the genlus ot Cieero working uvon ma- terial furnished l& his friena, then this fact fllustrates only the more how broad und feep was Lho inflitence upon that old world of this notlon uf n Mfe to come, [n this samo annal about ciplo, Cleero says _that 1 do not nzree with those who have lately begun to as- aert the opinjon thas the soul dica at the same time: with the hody," from which words it would e that the fricids of a sccond 1ife were the vast muititudes, the materalists only a fow seattered minds, The belief In a sccond life vassed through all the old empires. 1laving attemoted to innrk the great extentof this power, let us mark now its quality, Of what elemnents is §t composedl The notion of Immortality is composed partly. of the ldea of num;feum;(m). Justice for the good and Justice for the wicked are clemcents i@ this article of faith, Man reaches u sentiment of justice the moment his faculties are developed, and tho tmore he advances Intellectually the more Intenss does this scnso of cquity becume, Children or savages may enzuy ‘mluful 8POrts ur tricks with others or with (Lg helpless auimals, but the mind in Its growth rlses above thls enjoyment, and will not cousent toony iInfliction of any necdless physical or mental rnln. ‘The charncter in fletlou” reveals the tendoney of cuiture when ho let the fly hiavo {ta Ircedom, on the zround that thero wus room in the world for both it and himsell, From this plain lezal justice the hwinan mind passcs on to something higher, which we may eall compeuzgation. When a little ehild dles, or B young persott, or a rorrowful person, or s be- loved porson pusses away, @ future lifo islooked thie world, we snny refoice that not & simple narrow house of clay slinll reccive us, bt that our bodies will be lowered Into a placo that is encompassed with the most powerful fdeas, &rowing up out of the clav more potent than any rose, trec, or vino—ileas which proclaim in : volee not oud, but cloquent, & resurrection of 8 dead, » matlon_(which the Rector of the church would have eludiv civen) it puts the membership of Christ Church at 600, Now, huw reliable this article s can be Judeed by the fact that the bhighest number of come municants ever enrofled fn Christ Church was 439, adémnay e scen Ly my report to the Gea- cral Counell Tast May. This Jociuded s vers conalderanie number who live out of the city, but prefer to be enrolled here. But our ve. faclous reporter prefers, to manufacture his statistics, * Lastly, even had tho count referred to been An securate one, It would not Liave heen fair to sclect n day early in Se’numbur, when & large proportion of the families which make up s city congregation are atiil nbsent. Nor, awain, I8 It jnet to coant the morning congregatlun as thewhole attendance. In Christ Clhurch we have two alimost totally different cungreeations. Moreover, the mers attendnce on public wor- hip i3 not a rauge of the work accompiished by those ehurches in which the minfsters engare in pastoral duties, A clurch, with its aid to the poor, {ts ministrations to the sick, ita praers at the bedsdo of the dying, ity ten thouisand subtle but fovisible spiritual tnflu- coces, I8 one thing, A mass-meeting i one otler. Respectfully you (8 Hails In Farm-1lonses=Sansible Coucla-*| alons=The Weather and the Corn-Crop. From Our Own Correspondent. " Crastratax, 11, Hept, 2—There scems ‘to be a fecling against the adootion of the new Constitutional Amendment that Is ntended to' give effect to the Drainage laws. We do not think that the danger lies In the owners of larze Viodies of swamp-lands getting them ditched at others expense, so much as some do; because the owners of such land would be com pelled to bear thelr shara of the cxpense. The principal object to be gatned fs in forcing an outlet through farms where the owner refuses to_ditch, Bome men act liko a dog in a° manger in this respect, and will neither. dl (itches themselves nor permit others to do it for them, We ouce knew of s csse where the owner of a whole section of land lost the benefit of several miles of drains because hls nelghbor, with whom he was not on good terms, refused to permit him to dig & ditch only forty rofs long. The dificulty has. since been settled - ana the ditch dug; but such cases are Ly no means rare. This is, however, the time to bring up ob- Jections. After the amendment s adopted, ft w1l be too Iate. Let there be = free loterchange of opinion, As we remarked last week ahout amendments to the Joad law: if ple will enl(v [ndicate wnat they want, the Legislature wil not be long in granting it. There are, how- ever, hut few Inws that do_not sonetimes work injustive to individuals, and aditch might some- times be & damage, hut, taken as a benefit to :l Y'u- lthuIe tieighborhood, ft might be proper to L4 From Our Own Corrcpondent. NEW YoRrr, Sept. 20.—By tho time this reachies you Theodors Thomas will have con- cluded bis musieal Iabors 1n the metropolls, and be free to enter upon his five years' engage- ment in the West, ile has rented his house, consigned his furniture to the shippers, aud has Iabeled his goods and himself to' Cinclnnatt, Tho talk about ralsing ten thousand o year ur 80 to keop him bere pruved io be, lko'saveral former grand schemes for a Thumas mastc-hall and endowment fand, all talk. The Brooklyn Philhizrmonic Soclety scems to have taken the only actual step fin testing the willingness of the Clinclanati dircctors to allow Me. Thutnae to come East cvery winter Lo conduct the Philliar- monic concerts. The willinzness was not mant- fest enough to encourage the Inquirers, and new taleot will probably at once Le sought. The New York Paflharmonic Boulety isina fer tuent of excitement over the recent election. It had been predivted with confidence that Dr. Danetoseh, whose popular concert ven. taro last scason was very attractive, If not very remunucrative, would be chosen to succeed Mr. Thomas as.Philharmonic conductor. It turned out, however, that there vas a strong opposition to Dr. Damroseh, 111s obility as a musician was not questiooed, but his qualifica- tiona for leadership were not’ equally admitted. It was urged that he had tried his hand at con. @ucting the Philharoionly, sud without the suc- ceas desired by the society and sttained by Mr. Thumas in & single scason. Mr. Adolph Neuen. dorf, who had galned reputation as a skilltul conductor, was put furward by the opposition, and elected b{)n clean majority, mu~h to the confusion of Dr. Damrosch’s adhicrents. Since this quict stroke, discunteut and dissatisfaction have been brewtng, and it {s ramoured that a break in the membicrahilp of the society will re- Buit. This would be more deplorable than the loss of Mr. Thomas. With the Phiilsrmonte soclety strong_au enionfous, New York Is certain of good m independent of the come Ing or golng of any tndividual, Without thls soclety Lhere 18 no wssurance buyond the field of coutted o negative, 1. D, W. —————— Love Htrooger than Daty, CAatrieston (R. C.) Aews and Owurfer, Mary Burns, one ot tlic white nurses recently seut to Memphis, has returned and gone to Florence, B. C. Mary never left the traln on which she went, and immedistely rcturned. Bhe {s3voung and nnsophisticated, and could not il hetniz separated from her betrothed fa the port town whither sho has gone, Don’t Trifle with the Tenth 1 1fonr tacth were renewed.ae are our nalle, they might not need constant care. Hut teath don't re- Pras themeulves nfter ehtlihnol. The proper hing to do is to use SOZODONT, which preserves « their heaith and beautr. It never fails. . —— THE USES OF ADVERSITY. SERMON IY THB REV. JAMBS KAY AFPLEDER. 1u polnt of attentdance and box-offico recelpts, the scrvices yesterday mornlug fn Hooley's Theatre, In ad of the yollow-fever suferers, ware not an unmized success, to put it mildiy, dlthongh s an {ntellectual troat they wera something not to be enjoyed every day, and something which should have drawn together o much larger audience than that which found it- sclf not at all cramped for room f tise cosy lit- tlo theatre, which Mr. Hooley, with his usual generosity, furnished rent free for the noble use to which 1t wns to bo put. A quartette gave sevoral voeal selections of o sacred eharucter in an geceptable way, and Mr. Ueorge 8. Bowen Introduced to the audience the Rev. James Kny Applebee, of Bparta, Wis., who, after a farvent prayer, nunounced as the theme of his discaurse, ** Sweet Are the Uses of Adversity.” There were certaln couses, ho #ald, which man could not control, and which produced certain disastrous cffects. These causes were as grim aud relentless as all that we could imagine of the grimmest and most reldnt- Joss fato. Among thesn efocts were hunger, starvatton, sickness, plazue, and death, Badly ventilated houses, unclean streets, defouled water, were the precursors of pestilence, and amoug the victims werc notunly thosa who wore responsible for this physical rondition of things out atso those who were entirely fnnocent of any neglect of the laws of health ‘and of sani- tary conditions, The want of wise sanitary reg- ulations in the Sonth was the causc of the dia- ense which took fts start in one of the Southern ‘*Home™ Double Woven Wire Mattress ruar. antred the hest. Frice, $0. For sala by Calhy & Wirts, farniture dealers, 217 and 219 State streat. ——atim—. For weakness of fho stomach &nd bowels, San- ford's Jansica Ginger. § REMEDIEN. SANFORD'S RADICAL CURE T o A Aflidavit of Samuel Spinney, Esq., Meadov Vale, Nova Scotia, fully at- tested by (icorge Munro, Esige, Jus- tiee of the Peace, and by three (er- ‘::’EDWAHD Cnxsar, ELSEWHERE, FRIENDS, Ricnvoxn, Ind., S8t. 20.—Thirty thousand, people attended diviuo servics at the Indiana Sunrwfly Mecting of the orthodox Bocloty of rlonds of thls city today. Suveral prominent Eoglish i hence they come so gettly and slowly to our comprehension that we /seldom measure them; wo are scldom consclous of thelr presence, As we speak. at last, the language fnto which we were born, and without know- loe, perhaps, grammsr or whence the words camie, usp ¢onstantly a grand tonmue an castly as we gse the nir In breathing, o are we eradled mnid notions and o forth into youth and age eguipped with o full outflt ot conyle- tlone, thiouiehts, Tnws, Aud opinlons for any hour of any day. How powerful {s the hotion of wealth or money! Millions hurry out cach murning and run to and fro at novn because of the presstire upon mind and soul of the sollow light of gold! What a tyrant is tnis love of were present. HORTICULTURE. s sl Revisod Tralt-List for the Mididle Btates— Correetions noid Additions for the \West- ern States—A New OherryeFloriculturem Miggestiaun Coneerning Ferneries and House-Plants—The Wintry Time Coming— Make All Things Rendy. From Our Own Correrponent, Hixspare, L, Soot. B.—~1hs Gernantown SUGAR PIOM BORGNUM. In Tie TRIBONE of Saturdus, Sept. 21, there Appeared nuother long letter on making sugsr from sorghum, It 1a oo late to nvest In any such folly. Nelther Imphea nor Chinese cans will prodiics savar tn paylng quantities. The article made will burd!y lirndu with the com- Woneat canc-sunir at tho best. The problem of sugar-mskug from sorchum,_ was scttled long years ago, und milifous of dollars in noney ol tha . to cqunlization of a tender clainy, Heuyon | Cities, and dproad with nlarining rapidity and Telegraph ieives urevised fruit-list for the Mide | was spent fn tryiy to make It pay, Let no one | opes L ght i et Bunces whon we. 1o s8.an equalization of wbenfer clai, Tiouy % | widTatal et Trom place o pised, Witk mem, | 2c States, the more fimportant part of which | bo deluded into nveatiug 1 uy wuch tovaca | L speakiag of Mr. Thomas, T fiad fn tmind his gymen of Aunapolls Countys A mi- women, and children were dying in ghastly beaps. "It was In our puwer to extirpate this discase, becauso It was In vur power to make our bomes and our citles entirely cloan. But poetic justice. Not anly are this claims of law alwuys reforred to that court beyond tha 1omb, but clalms too subtle nnid too sweet for any written law gro referrod to that far- steal schicme. successiul season nt Gitmore’s Garden, [t was objected, at the start, that the Garden was too larwe for an orchestra: that the poople who would frequent the Garden demanted papular wogive below, with correctlons and additions sulted to our Western States, where such cor- recttons or additious are nevded: faint vlcture of Chrlst, stolo what wonld be five millions of doliara in our day from some prov- fnces which Rome had permittea him to govern, SUDAR PRO3 CORN-STALRS {3 also apparently u hobby with our kid-zlove Conunlssioner of Agriculture,—a chemical san- raculous cure effected by Sanford's Radicat Cure, b o % the Innocent were now suflering for the stus of ' alysls Is not required nvi h ! that Theodore Thy ! {dea of - 4] N i ¢ t TEARS. ) quired to conuvines any one that | music, an re Thomas' pop: Just as truly some States are born Iuto tho ens ggm;:‘."i.'j‘:“:,g;m"",‘;‘: el rumste | she guilty. \Vhoro was L Jrstiea her Gy 1. G, G. telle Lucrative, cor-stalks havo loss sacebarino mator than | wies ome rat wuite different from that of the ton of easo and Indolence, and thero the people ‘The hymns “Farth has no sorrow that | this lardness nud pitlleasncas *mean cood? | 9 Farty Catharine. ger, * sorghum. And yet there ara men who really | poople, Heuco, as Gllmore's brass band €oti {eThis may certity that I liave boun & wublect of that prizo abovo all clse the release from Intor, To Hoaven cannot hoel™ and “1'm but a | Where were the sweet uses of ndversity? Ilu- Bloudgoud, Tawrsnce. anpear to belteve thns It can bu profitably made | not sotnd 1ta war (nto popularity at the Sum- | terr ireas mr:‘l;‘u‘ll‘m;cll!z':nmu:“'Tmu . fu be perfeetly {dle I8 their picture of blesseduess. | pigrim here,” and thotr companion picces, are | D30 Hfe was tull of vague mystery and uvae- | 3. Tyeon, . Reading. {nto sugar. That sirup cau ho made from corn | mer Garden, Thomnas' finer company certainly 3. Hartlett, They riven In tho order they are arranged, We should add for the Weatern States Flom- irh Beauty, flowell, and the Duchess, and omit Early Catharine and Reading, aud perhaps the Orstenamed on the st,—~GQIffard. countable strangencss. Children dled, youth faied away to death, nimd manhood, even in the power of its most triumphant strength, suc- enmbed to the same wrim and pitiless force. Human Jife gz best wus Incomplete, with its regrota for something that was not, and It telpatioumol sumothing that, had yct to by It thus appears that we are sot down upon this world not only amid air, and food, anil. sluht, and sounds, but nlso amid {dens,—fucas made for us by our ancestors, and by old and nesy times, Ideas destined to affect us deeply to the soul’s deligate souss of compensatfon refer- ring its case to Giod's court beyond this life. And tho same sonso ol {unllcu and cquivalents comes to construct the lost world, and thus we percelve that the notlon of & future lifs contains 04 8 component part ons of tho decpest und ftaelt 18 evident, as n largu proportion of the slrup of commerce is produced in that wav; but It will not make sugar, Commissloncr Le Duc wili do well tostick to his tea-plant business, and not enzage in_ attemptine to convince any one that sorghum and corn-stalks can be profit- could not, pud the result would bé a fallurg, But It has not been anything of the kind, snd once more the square-shoutdeted conductor pcores a triumph, Tho prozrammes have not falied to meet the public taste, yct they have not tallen below Mr. Thomas' standard of good i e years I i BIMrden t0 myaelt atd friends. It ta wiselens for g Lo say how many dottors | huvt tried, how el mei- clue I have taken. during all thess yenrs uf Oudlevs gl erlng, but thuse wi now Nt 1 never every remedy Wiat 18! w suller wa { have sulfered wifl id o dook far rellet, wad 1o try i krandest of human emotions—that of justice— ably cultivated for suzar, musie. Take them woek in aud out, and It I lisve alscharped from my liesd and noen s sort ot P e e onoof yeae provalént notions | krandeat of I cquity and compensation. slug tho Intollect " ouly, man discerned |. vEACHES, FOVERTY OF 8OIL 1N ONCHANDS, rould be dillicult to match the. M. Thomas | 118 skh fnar Sl o matter. 13 (o neics 1 deniro to estimate somewhat .!mlu),nnmt-l,v. A sceond clemiont of power In this idea {s | Bught' but this landness nnd pitlicasness. | L Craswrord's Early. B, Crawford's Late. “Why don't the orchards bearl” is gotting | {a singularly happy in his sclections, and cvery I hiowl,au larse 83 A Tara br 1 was 31 al8k inen- the niotlon of lmmortal life. Wo rony pass by man’sinnate and Inexpressible love of life. Bome | 1t340n could not mva religion, though it could | = Uale's Early. . 6. Ward's Lato. to bea frequent queation asked of the under- | programine is a study In {ts harinonious com- ‘-nyw:l hodily that 1 wishei i vorily thouglit tho arzument. 1n favor’ of tho truthfulness of | very wicked mon Or some. broken Bearts may | Purlfy, aud disciptioe, und eolarge {t. Religlon | i Jurts Bacly, 1 Simack'a Latey Maned. We believe barrenticss is, In most | bination. _Thepeople have shown full aphre. At it inus L waeufren i iAo dae weuk § thds alimost universal cxpectation, and may find | uxiiress o wish to be anbibitateds they muy Lopy | ¥as the life and nat thio thought, the deed and | 4. Ol Mizon. huiguoRagiin, gusema direct result of poverty of the soil. | ciation, Randroas who had cousidered o brars | SAAIe: not a creed, on aspiration and not n mere bellef, howeves logically constructed, It ns heen tho zreat cffort of rellziontsts to roconelle this piti- leasness-of Nature with the llen of a Delty of We would add Btump the World, the Heath Cting, and the Amaden, and owit Hale's Early and Susquenanna. thouzht enowgeh for tho hour in the Inquiry asto the posver of the {dea, It 1s evidently vne of the most universal of notlonm, sl one of the ofd- that the sleep of death will prove externul, but if thero be ona thing which all love, and'love bermnd all expression, it is life. Tho thinking mind nnd Joviug heart do tot wish to be blot- e Ing tiyseif, so lictie did | Linpw 1ur reliel. Now, siee, his miny seem (nercdilie tu yost and others. bk & grat Jagect e ime Lcan wive yuu boia fida’rout of my uga, Trees are frequently planted twenty, twenty- 4 thirty feet nparl. They Interwoave branchesand completely shade the ground. baud beneath thelr notive, snd Uflmore's Uarden u:nrMI‘y respectable, founa every- thing chanzed whet once the divine Ariuly belivve'l have aob gone wo the eud ‘Thig leaves exhiuust nll the potash froin the sofl, | Thomas had entored luto the pince. They dis | of tho ciia Tt enntiol by told, A o .'.\;“J}!-“.‘:Li’"f'"x‘n""?:.f'x‘.',‘i,'n’é,"‘.‘.‘fi; ) W AL AL zane bitin the | (RS love, towarts Whom man should asbire | 1 qejoqrny e itakons sud vono s left, or at least not u suilicient | voverei tho delights of a summer wvening In the HAD R R ri e P L e of Saxrorive ity " hsourmanlty has | chorlshed o namo of our loved onos we ask that chis [ I worsbip: "t tho k e amneating disaster | i Concord: I Naton, T e o cnable the trea to produce even per- | bour-gardea, and immedlately bronouncul tho | KAk CCRE oL Caratin, S e did % uy living soul may live on. Having once tasted existence, man does mnot ‘dare think of giving it up. Persons brought suddenly to faco death, as In a sinking ship, or in the midst of n fatal pestilence, shriok, or tremble, ur ‘Ihie “only ~ alscouragement of the inquirs i to Le f I 0 tho confessed fupossis bility of marking the loncth, and - breasitl, and »depth of that sea of emotlon which has been created by this one article in man's bellof, The lect blosaoins, We havo frequontly noticed that trees stand. tog fn the outsida rows, where tho roots run out Inty the soil apon which the sua shines, gener- 4. Ilartfond, 4. Creveling, We shiould add for thaWestern States Ives, Isabells, Rodgers' No. 4, Rodwers' No. 1, and Virginia Scedling, and omit Clinton and Salem. + German mode ? everything that Is desirable, The provrictors of the Garden bave not clearvd a fortune this sumner, but they havedone weil, hnd ceteem themselves fortunutd. Thefr senson thrvst, it olean] miy head, it el raicd o tny aatewn In & way thi given mo tr doctors had done, How rap under the In3uenca of this wonderrnl ¥ho liave kuown pie for years cau tewl been only s Httie more religious, in spite of un- sewered streets und unclean houses, yellow fever would hiave stakd away, and, if the Dofty acut a judizinent, what was it but arraving our- gt 15t OMUIPOLENLe 1O sek L0 RYort L i ally p:;ud‘mc xwodl Crops, wmllo those further !]n- is ;llmgm [ anemll;ll nyl(g. a4 The ]m:;lculluml ";F'z‘lfu' l-mmt'-fl'-‘i,‘:’m 1wl i 4 9 " clves ogutnst Omn e avert the HERIES, moved towanl the centrs have nothin n | exl on nakes the Garden n vast conser. S, ¥ et o :‘fi“."r:‘:l',“,‘”n",‘:,'&fl“:;’,':fgg(‘: ;‘;?fi,;’;"‘::'['{{‘l‘.fif ",'f,’,':," 'lll'f,l'ml:"d&hfi’tf“fif:,""v‘,:':l:"gglfiz" f‘; disnsteri Men were fast comiug to sa ;ha: 1. May Digarrean. 4, Elton. cascs whero the trees arc planted wa | vatory, and every afternoon nud eveniug of this e e IR Lt ot A it was ceither philos phleal nor 3. Delieds Chowy, 9. Dawner's Late, lnst week, Mr. ‘Thomas s giving his ad- e endured 100 great tor somn peopta o credit, | tle, bt thera Is no one to toil “us how powerful | think! ccase to love! What! ceuss so bol Oh > [ Iilack Tarta Karly It 1, cabuot caltivate tho surfuce, bu tha 3 EHil WL B Cear eunecieute Kt aeroniest Sath at: Lisd i e e of HUerLy or countrs, o Fesos | HOW tho rainé abu Fle vors bocnmrmos gttt S oarar gsienl disiators o eupormed enirt. | % fack Tamarun, W Eirly Fargietigne, | With a coating of oianura, - Thi ,iould bo dome | mirers coporeUnky Lo heat s (arcwelle,“And fent s ity TS, " B i A 040 or fearniugg, and no ono can assuine to estimnto | such & dissolution! In the Suuthern witles Ive of nan's relialon o Irreligion, " Tnasmecg | D Biack awk. 10. Del. Bleoding leart, | fow. It 1a too late to affect the next crop, but | fust now, as the nz, it gy | found putthits teme anapotty S LL NPT NES for iy the value of the dream of a future exist. | somo half<icvoloped souls of men fied, loayiuge foipr o 1t will help the crop of 1850, DISTANCE APART TO PLANT TEES, In early times, when a pratric-ze hyr" moant a brecze of forty miles an hour, it was policy to plant trovs closely. Most orchard- ists expected to afterward cut out balf the trovs, aud mngst of them hava't the beart Lo do it This winter we shall romedy this mistake in our Maurice Strakosch should renppear with nls milon-dollar scheme for bullding a cagre. Bat Mr. Btrakorch Is busy with other work, and, as times are tluancially, the erand hall wiil doubt- less budeluyed like the Brookivn bridige. The musical season here will open nexe week with the Roze concerts. The programme is ex- ceptionally fine, and the comnpany includes For the West nothing succeeds well but the Richmond. Outsids of tals, Black ‘Tartarlan, Early May, aud Elton do best, RABPBENIIES, 1, Hornet. 9. Phtladelphin, 2. luratine, - 4. Brandywine, Weo add Turner/'Kirtland, aud Dovlittle, as botter for the West than any named, . 88 man was finits sod Nature tufluite, inan moukl never entirely know the laws of Nature, what ho know belug alwave less than what he did not know. Man was ever maklug additions to his stock of knowledge, but _every new dis- covery brought new dangers. o learncd by sxperiment, and experlment brought bim faco o fuce with disaater. Ilouce soms had exalted Nov. =4, Ie77, S8WORN TO BEFORE ME, 234 duy of Novembier, 177, GEOKGE MUNEO, Sustice of the LPeacy. This la to certity that Ramuel Gutnney, Fot., ts a1 ok ence, We can count the people who have lived aod died [n the ngee, but wo enn find no weight or measurement for the part which certain truthis or untruthia played {n tho soulis as they ’uunu!\'cd alone. 1o this abseuce of egrect in- raatlon, we must deal in generalltiea and in shuple expressions of surpiisc and delleht, sich a8 come from higs who first standsamong mouu- behind dylng children and dying wife that they might prolong their own unworthy exlistence, But a coward, lfko a drifting atraw, may tell us which way blow tho storms of even noble souls. Indeod, the greatuess and licrolsm of martyr- dom como from the awfulness of death. Thore woitld be no martyrs and heroes it the tomb Thi s 4 3t vorites. ' 3 Maploson 18 en route | 8ud respeewed elidzen ol Anumpolis o o i wore an unimportant place. All the hymms | 20 e L oxa g orchiard o o cortaln extent, All the weak teecs | inany tavorites Manager " wtatfin'ua mn uarteht and trathiu nian 16 besad sos talhs or by the otonia sliaro, et have celebrated tho Teroledeu,aina i | ichses 8wl sciehca would roulace el faboon | 2. Captatn dack, "V EES | 0 i wout, | i BO cut ot uud ‘e air a4 s b lok v | Wik bis operaic euapuny, wnd T torbint | 2 1t you will sturt with the human race and | the laurels which have crowned thelr foreheads, - By tlls incans wo expect to Incroase the pro- | more the luxurious opera-goe: e Inady £, Heth Boyden, 4, Triomphe do Gand, We add Wilsop, Prouty, Duwniog, and Col. Chlicney. L Diack Naples, We add the Cherry. 5 .. BLACKDERRIES, 1. New-Rochslle. 2. Missouri Claster, A Witson's Eacly, We ndd Kittatinny and Sulder; and omit Mis- souri Cluster, 4 As plunting-time Is ucar at hand, this list may bo ot servics to some youne planters. Some Ibertles should bo taken with this list, accord- Inie to tho locatlon and soll, Cousult the horti- culturtsta of your ucizhborhood, ~ A NEW CuUxRiy, Mr. Charles ' Downlug, in the Guardener's Monthly, gives the following uecount of'a new cherry: ¥ ‘Tho Ida cherry, n new and very promising ear! cliorry, ralsed 7 B, 11. Cockiin Tof - Shogaeric: town, Cumberland County, P’a., who kinlly sent ine, by expresy, a liberal supnly, which cune in o condition, although fully rine snd of tender wh, M Cocklin Inforna sa that It (s & socd- 1lug of the Qucklin's Favorite, about 23 yoars oid, 8nd, Baving horne good crops'fur Aftoon years. s considured worthy of general introduction. The treo lu & vigorous, upright yrower, and an Abund. ant bearer, ripening about the s1ine time aa th May Duke. 1t {s nawed aftor hle dauxhtor I Ifralt rather lurge. obtuse confeaf, slghtly cos pressed, saburo elight; vkin pale 'whitish-yoll toarty covored with hright red more or loss moi ted; wtalk of medium jenxth, slender, inserted 1n B rather jarge, deen cavily: resh vory tonder, Juicy, rich, ‘very good, ¥f not best Quulity; pit very small, This [s a bigh recomnmendation coming from such a gonrve. ‘This secking out and making known nuw varletics of fruit is an Importaut Held of labor, and it shauld bo the ambition of earthiquake, or tha alipwreeks which, from the atrengtl of the ships, were not regarded as pos- #ibled Master Nature as be might, there must nlways bo for man an unkaown realm vaster than the known, and science in that unkuown realm could be no provid for him, Wiicre, thien, was the sweeiness fn the uses of udverslty! Plagues tauzht the tmportance of ventilation, of personal cleanliness, vie., and it was botter that placucs should como than that tnen should loe thuir natural agency, and teasy to become the architevts of thelr own futs, [tscomed, fndeed, foolish to Implore thy Delty to arrest 1lis judgiments, and a man bad better, instuad of putting up such a orayer, ket from Lis kuces sud wash himsclf. The Kiud of 8 prayor to offer {u the presence of auch culutitics was {n epirlt ke this: * May wu wpen our cyes to discern the natural means of Uils disaater. Moy wo strengthen oursclves for 4 ‘Wiso observance of a wise law, that this scourge wuay be by oursclves uplifted.” Wise wicy no longer accepted the doctring of total dupravity, snd thore was no such thing as absg- lute ovil, although there wus such o thing as absolute poo. £vil was good In o dark dress, Cutcawo would not ba Chlcago to day witbout tho advorsity she had gone through. Hecause stie had been o ety of smoul- dering ashus, slie wus to-day a ¢ity of firo-proof bulldings ond magalticent palazes, Men and natloos, ndeod, shaped thelr destiny and meas. ured out ! oo, Through sorrow men be- camo horul, 8nd **no eross, no crown.,” Dig. asters wero unly the openlug of the way along Which bumauity inight salely march to a great triumph, Epidemics lead to the wdoption of ‘rhiolesoma ssnitary regalations, which uot only prolonged the terin of huwan life, but also mada 1t more onjoyable. ‘Iere shonld be thaokfulness that thers was no adversity that i BLAKESEY, Stetaw, &, 4 G EAUR Pn N move alone with ft for .the purpose of notlug 1. K. what musie tho second 1ifo wakes up in the Leart, you will not have juurueyéd far before vou wll find the Eryptlans embalming thelr dead with Iutinite care and uffection, in the hopa that all will meet ugatn, Most of the massive architecture of the Ewyptiaus grow up out of this religions fealng, Ter stoncs were heaped upin tiemendous columus, und temples and vyramida more the nume of the next world thau in _the nnme of this. Tho venerabla form ot the Bplinx was a llon winged,—the emblem ol imtortal foreo and flight,—and !l the nul- mals dear to that land werg ewbalmed that they too might accompany man acrosa tho valo of acath, it is probabie that the eyptians wroto fome of thelr relicious ulterances long before Moses jed away his people; - but more Ywportaut than uny date is the simple foct tuat the doctrine of a future lny all arotna that Mother of Natfons and pervaded each heart for 300 years. Oue of their oldeat writera sald, perhups hefore Moses lved, *Ob, my son, lot this bo the end of relizion aua sout wiil Tive well and die biessedly, In this way our tathers journeyed, and at length thoy At to the good,” “But what was thig good fu which thelr fathers attalned i Let tho samo Writer reply: “T'he wav (s venerable and lutn, but dliflcult for the soul thut {s still in the { Of the sout, that part which can be touched is mortal, but that wlich 18 reasovable is in- ortal, Heaven Is the first elemeut.’ Thus, long; before David samg the words. that ho would fear no evil 1 the vulley and shadow ot death, tho Egyutian multituds bod Marked out o path to Heaven aud were embalming feuderly all thetr loyed ones in hopas of a Ulessed resurrection. What kind of morals ace ompanied wuch an active and universal beliof uzu sy infer from tne inscriptions which urg have been created by the darkness of that val. ley through which they have dared to pass, In vam shall wo attempt to portray the human love of lfe, It s tender, andyot infiu. itely strong, Unabla logieally to helicve in nothininess, unable as mental belngs to think 1t, unable as lving snd happy to sndure tho thought of oblivion, the fdea of fmmortality onens up ita refuge for our logle, our power to think, and for our simple devotlon to exlstenco, t comen, therefore, In these clements. it is made up of human and divine justice, and of tho Intense love of life. Whila man shall cher- 18] lils bosoin a senso of ufmly. of tinal com. pensation, aud wihilo life sball reinain a posses- siou above all zold and above crowws of emplre, the Iden of o future existeuce will romaln’ the arens whero the sentiiments of justice and ox- latonce muy fight thelr battles and conquer a sweet peave, Upon tho massive foundations of jmthl-e and tho sweetness of Nfo does the struct- uro rise. - And uow lot us mark a third element of pow- er present In this conceptlon, ‘That thind form of forcy ta—tho beautitul, Much as the human mind loves fustice, it more widely lovos the beautlrul uly the most moufnuul love equity; but all, good and bad, high and low, love the beautiful. - You perceive that even the Indfan hnstens to find the ornamental. Kiis dross s the assumod beautifuls bis oratory fs full of flzures ouit comvarisous drawn from the vh-rminfi in nature. But tow potent is this forn of human dusiro all the arts attest, which havo inmde so Impressive the Temple of Solo- mou er the templus of Karnac and Atheus, The Ureck sud Romau girls wore roses i thelr halr, aud fastened thelr robes with butterlly broochs 0s. lubylon was poor fu laws, poor In indus- try, but rich [u hongluge gardens. Anacreon wroteo onoof his hest udes about roscs, Plato ro- LAL Stelve AL ‘J. ductiveness of our orchard. If we had tne or- chard to plaut again, not a tree should be set ncarer thau thirty fuct, and most vurlgtics forly fect, Those kinds that grow upright, iike Rome Beauty or White Pipoin, vould be plauted at the tormer distunce, and not ioterlace for many seara; but Beu Daris, Bnow, Stansnl, Willow- wigz, and other spreadlue growers would be naue too far upart at forty feet. BOTANY AND LENTOMOLOY, The farmer and borticulturist have rreat need to study buth these branct yot but few of them have oven o smattering of them, We do not tmean such a kuowledire of botauy as school- girls ubtaly, und whicl fous no furibier thay to anatyxo o flower and furnlsh food for senti mental small-talk; but_svmething practical, What1s nediled §s au Euglish, text-book for schools, in which Lattn fluds no’ place, exceps the aclentiflc namg of the plant or fosect, It Is Just s well to call o leat hafry as * pubesceut.' The ordinary acholar understands ‘the English, and will not be obliged to study o dead lan: suage, or hunt a dictionary every few motncuts. Both thesu studics are thoroughly practicat, but they must firet bu divested of thelr tecunicali- ties befure they can become popular. The pub- lshee who wilf get up @ hand-book of theso branches, fllustrated with drawiige of plants and common {uscets, for the tiso of our public schools, will doserve a monament, ARD TIMES IN EUNOPH, Yesterday we were permiited to see o letter from Qermanv, wotten by s brother of Dr, Dounere 1o rays that timos are very band thera, Thoe harvest bad been Injured by rains, and everything was low, excopt beof. La rents trom 814 10 33 per ucru 10 our moncy; undy although farm-produce was very low, ronts had not come down, 1t wppears from this that others besldes the American (urtuer happy by a reopeniui at the Acadotny nnder ausplcos trom which much is expeeted. I, U. ————— BEST THREAD FOR SEWING.MA. CHINES, CURRA; NTH. '+ Ned Dutch, The Jurors at the Paris Expositfon Agroe with the Jndges st the Ceateunlul, aud Decide that It Is the * Willimantie. It appesrs from tho Assoclated Press dls- patches, and from tho llats of awards pub. lished fn tho Varis newspapers, that the jury on cotton textiles, varos, and thread at the Uni- versal Exposition have singled out the Willl- mantic Company, ol Ilartford, Conn., for a spe- clal disthuction. They have decreed to thay Company a yo'ld medut and the yrawd prize fue 44 Spool cotton especkally adapled for wse on Sex- ing-Jachines.” Outof more than 50,000 medals and awards, there wore only 100 grand prizes, and, sitbough all thy groat thread manufuctur- ori of the world cumpeted, the Willmanie Company_aluue roceives the grand prize for spool cotion. This action of the Farls jury agrees with tho opinlun of the judges at vur Contennlsl Exposition, who decreed a medal, and stronzly commended the Willimantic thread for its surpassing vxcellence. But perlisps tho most significant Indursement of this spool cot- ton is that by the sewing-machine manufactur- crs and operators themselves. More than iy of them, after baviug used the Wilmantic thread on their machioes durine tho Philadel- paia and Parls Expositions, on all kinds of HELPLESS m With Rhenmatism wi whilelh lefh i fielple -3t jerost (hat 1 eguhd not COLLINY VoLTa! Sy saretiers wery ol Ko wulteriog. The rel e i TERA AW North Willlams:cu, Anuaplils C. Aug. Sy 1877, PRICE, 25 CENTS. Be careful toubtaln COLLINA VOLT r.f;iifi'i’ S I e Canad: T, Lruprictor DA TG N GN, 15 Hoasy, L DRESS AN West End Dy Goo Mudison & Peorinests, % % L ' i Lave signed certificatos doclaring that the g deciphered on the old toniba of ‘the Nila, [ wolved tho utlverse Inta beauty. Tho ancarc; | ¢ could uot put to sowo kweot use, May overy horticulturist todo something to this e, | are hard up. work, . s s B o njl Ayuich cpitapts ind In virtue, and all Shoughs that | Wio sturs mud musis | 0K, STIED out of tuess disesters, ani Thavisore b tho uelgiboe faf murpaging | © G ok soviny, | ey ;\uu:...;v.lc 14380 St ety ke gt o ety, and charity the t attributes of char- | as they moved, Can von find a State, an g a clel STV it uct of giving pennius to profeasional 3 1 86w Rg-IMaci /0C0) h ater, 4 A5 | Wilo heart, ot poreaded by i sesm Sog' b | portion that ho made sclence s servuits curs. LInvito hrtiealtnrists Lo acnd e Itos | 1arta ahsing of pouliry. orosctine ouiced ¢ y ‘Ihie yollow-fover sufforors wers victima toa Ereat sxperiment, and would that the teachings ol that experiment wmigut beheeded! The duwd were boyond our holp, but the Nvimg were still pleading forit. Let Chicago glve as she shoutd wive, Bho has already dows nobly, but she could aud should do miore. After the plague should have ceased, there would by the widows aud the orphans to caro tor 1n thelr destitution, A few years ayro the North and Bouth wore en- Kguzed 1n a deadly feud. Now the Xouth was stricken with un uverwhelming calamity, and from the Nurth was owing w magoiticens stream of Juve, “ Bwees wero the uses of ud- venity." Instead of a Bolid Suuth, of which exenness, Eastlcity, fnfsh, and bequtiful shades of color.’ Tho concurrent oplnton of so many ex- verts ougnt no longer to leave any room for duubt as to which thread |8 tho best for sowing- machines. 1t s uot of Britlsh or forelgn maau- lacture, but an American product, and made ut the Willimaatic Mills, ———— THE ‘' DRAINAGE QUESTION.” To ths Editor of The Tribuns, TI8RILWA, Il Bept, 20.—1 am surprised to find my friend Haaf In Monday’s Trisuxs ob- Jectiug to the proposed constitutional amend- Mistoriana recornlzo threo great sources of e civilized natlous of earthy—tho Egyptian Uotaty, gud the Ilebrew fountain, und the T80 fountalu, Frowm these three ranges ran Ye theeo rivers which make up the modern mun‘n of man. ‘fhe Egyptian river Jolned the Chialdean, and almost drica wholly away* {oro our “cra began. The lebrew stream mptied futo that gigantic strean which owed o¥0 from between the Eupbrates and the vMs, aud which spread out and wsio the Greek' and Rowman valleys, and then the Itatian, ad French, aud Germun, aud English flelds so b in alt'the shupes of excellence. But no woner have you gathered earth's eulightened Justice, not “of lfe, but of beauty! Borne on the wings of this zeplvr, like Aurora in her charlot drawn by gracelul steeds beraldiug tho day, comes aigaln o us this dactring of another world. It {8 the fnal statewont of humanity sbout the beautiful,—the beautiful of morals, of mind, and of waterial forms. In this p. dise virtuc and charlty becumno spotless, the mind revesls uo iguorance or weakncss, the heart no bad passlons, and the physical world no deformity. ‘The land s covered “with uufad- ing flowers, the climate is spriugtime, the homes are inarble palaces, tho occupants are angels, ‘The Moses and geen on ghe mount wero transfigured,—thoss ‘whow Beiplo saw were of genorul nterest towching this mastter of tiew varleties of trult, or any facts whichi the, huvs lournied In_thelr exiborience lu hortl- cultarai labogs, We shadl give all such letters tho attention they desurve, THR YLOWHR-GARDEN taust now ba faoked slter, and tender plants and bulbs removed to winter-uuarters, or put 10 th bouss for winter-lowering, A littlo at- teution at the projier time will give the fumily o .u\wly of follage sud flowers that bring cheer o the ‘wintry tlne. We should never know Low to vuluw or enjoy the May flowers and sunny daya If there wers so IJ-:ycunlu-' clowds und chill- Ing blasts. ‘The changed of the season. are country for shipment to Chicago, Iu wauy casts .y“ fowls were muuufiut hardly unough to be notlved, oxcept by une whols posted, ‘Thero {8 uno certuly meuns by which nalek chicken way always bs Kknuws, sud thad sto EXAMING THX CONNS. A writer in the Jural Nes- Yorker #ays truthfully: 1t 1s tho easiest thing in the world—when you £nbie how *1a done—io tell wheu your fowls are in Hli-heulth, eves in the fucipient siagce uf any diss cave ur sliment, Il you but oxswine your fock carsfully. Thu comb of each fuw) Is a true tudes 10 the working of ita eysienr. 11 they o in 1ii- DRESS & CLOA! TRIVSINGS. ‘We have now on sale our Fall Importations of Black S8illc Fringes, Colored Bilk Fringes, 4, and 7 d, tho World was guzing ou a 5 health, 1ho comb wlll lose colur, and becoma Far o Marabouts, Moss Trimmings illions Iuto these thres advancing hosks than | radkunt, thoss whot Dauto saw were matehrcg | tiere was no necd, X IneaDt (o ive us rest and pleasuro; and | have | s el the | ment ou the subject of dealuage, 1 A1d not sup- g y Tull Ui"suive that al ars comug withtheirbearts | lovelinoss. "Tius tho doctring of a net | Solld Aericn aud tho happloat dresias of g | 1W80% L0 gt us feavou wa shall cxperionce | woff, 40, In texture; o tho walady wcecases, completo union of love wero in o tair way of belug realized. ‘Thero was no force so mi; bty in the Bouth as the tears shed which Northern hunds might wipe away,and thers wers uo tears sustrong as tho sighs breathed In the South which eould find & sywpathetic echa fn Norgh- color decreascs, Lill & very sick bird wii) show & comb alwoet devoid of scarlel, bewg of a Ivid duil crimsou, uf elws pale or ashy in anpearnce. If Wo clolers, of any other dlsease, shosld como Into' the flock, cato- fully exaniue the combs of each bind, morning and ll'fill. sud all Lhuse which are waate Pose there was 4 1naw, wowan, or child tn Iflinole opposad to this, unless, it wmight bo some one Laviug pocultar aud speclsl reasons. Mir, Haaf Is the last wau I would bave picked out as su objector, I know bl to be Intelligent, broad- Cloak Ornaments, Galloous, Gimps, Gold and Silver Cords, Tassels, Girdles, Buttons, &c., in designs entirely new, and Tull O tho cxpectution of asccond, Mle. The \beo fountalus, Egvpt, Phaulela, und Asia fead forth auty one water, clear aud sweet, and it flowe tlruugh ull the scattered eenerntions as ey aro encainped to-duy In France, or Beot- hud, ur Euglaud, or Amettca, , 10 wll 'this loag world comes, powerful [n {ts troasures of the beautitul, These nlghty vislons which en- compass the thougbt do not rewmand the notion ovor to the creative art of funcy, for there is o real beausy which no geulus can overdraw, If there ba s hagven, wo inay rest assured that no chauges and alterubtions of stato that will add 10 our happtucss, ¥ YEUNKHIES AND HOUSE-PLANTS, Hero 16 u, word upop this subject that s so Hmely and well sat Lasve it (¢ 43 trom Mr, o Vickorv, i & paper beread betors the Maiug wluded, enterprising, and public spirited. He ea b aud minid it tcas moying wilows she | peutl) o cart cah over-calor sl Tauds aud that O vebeq I sassiar ot leasic o St Hartculiural Ao T dhe i L’i‘-f&.“::‘.'.?.‘fi‘r‘t(.'.‘.ié'.‘i‘l{'&’.!.:'!fi"n‘i.‘;':i"fé l}’:fi;fi Itvoa {n's part of the country greatly neadlug | CORrolled by us, | 3 4 8 Jra V' ' . e il ¢! f Y o - e, ire ould at voce u er . e, V. Ly H PRa | e yelauliicunce. 1t has buen slwuvy soleu, | compoo a byian, 100 sweet I thougbt of socunt forcivia deltveey ,m,':‘&&ffi,‘,‘,f‘.‘,‘,‘"&ffimf best time to arrauge s fernery is 1o Septom- | modical treatimeng, © L draluuge, as Lo shows ta Lis letter. Ho sppre- | Bl ok Njlk Fringo ut 25, 30¢, 40¢, 43¢, ated with virtue, aiways inluential. % wust b romewbered that B0 v zlous URL ur eenthment is o uolsy oF self-ussert- 2 35 anotion {n esthetics, or polltics, or on 'urldlv»rnuu-uphy. Men do nut éaslly tell for the reality, There areentitics hers on earth which mun can not draw up to the life, much less abovo that duaree. What thiuker can over- detine liberty or educatiout What one can tell nd the bost eoil 18 w enf-compost, ln most’ cas04 te DAL OF boMow of The feruery & pot decp cuouyb, a8 i should be al least vizlit or seu lnchie iaze a1 the botio; clatos fts benefits, for “ho has wade miles; of ditehies.® Bub he thinks *each one should make iz ownditehes,' —that speeial gasesaments are unjust und dungerous, 'Tho cowb of » fuwl fsan bonest index of the true fuwarduess, sud should bo durly consulted by the faaciur who valuus the beslth wnd woll-bolng of Lis duck. Look withe combuf s laying hen or ~—*'an sudlence Ht, but few.” CUURCIT ATTENDANCE, ble, 3¢, 60¢, 65e, 70¢, Toe, S0e, Sie, 90, 95¢, $1 per yard, aud up. how great 1a el Who can take an fnfant of o LETFER PHOM BISHOr CUENKY. Fie, Ceith o proveit (ag | pullot] ko b ti the bigt of health aud strongth, iero the wet laud Is wholly oue man's land, x : thadr teliclous “thoughte, Wo' conceal two | yeur and over-palat lts siafie. on mvre gt ol 3 To the Edilor of The Trivune, Trotn o desrons b earis, best toutpsratute ls Rk Gead T the moane i of Bealibllasss o | 10 jud) Hygnscessary wutlet, ho can, aud of | These.are. tempténg prices, WWE—love and religion. 1t is ouly the Mght- | the strage soul fu it bosum] The second life uped the casa should e wvoided. full comb. A viguruus cock or cockerel will varry | course should! Ci1caa0, Sept. 25.—1 bave waiied for a%eck, sinca the publlcation by tha dillunce of a state- ment regardiug the attendawe oo our -larger chiurches, for 8 vorsection which probably othiers oqually with wyself might make, Porhiaps, ilke mysell, other clty pastors haye been deterred from a roply to tho urucle refor- red 1o by a dislike of unewspaper coutvoversy. Common Justlcs (o 10y oW barlan, buweyce, de- mands that, eo far 38 it Is coacerned, tho looss and syeu wrosicly felsé stsloments of the Aliance sbould be corrected. - Especially Is shls mado imperative by the repetition of last Satue- day’s statementsin @ vew aud stall @ord uujust orin. The Alllance makes tho allezation that on Buuday weraiug, Bept. 1, the ungregativn uf , do bits own drafolng, and nobody rupuses utherwise. Whero thres or four aro Fnum»br.d. they can geucrally co-uperate Ly wmntual agvecineut. IEwenll owued, liks Mr., ltaaf, w sweep of 5,000 acres, probably a diten. tug law would not be wuch needed. But suppose, frivad Hlaaf, your 5,000 acres were ownad tu guarter sections by thirty luri- cre. Are yun quite sure your miles of ditches could have becis construciod by voluntagy urue- migut 1 such u ias, wnd Kept b vroper’ repairt Weall uced public rads, but, we 06 1ot depund on voluutary agrcement 10 cstablish thew. ‘Tuough public scivuls are generally desiced, wo duo not gest them on mutual ggrecment. Whete co-operution by beeded by large unuibers, 14 s fouud neccasary to vy some tlbunel to devido disputeid poliits und enforcs wcasures, Thils provused constitutional amendinent sl dvivoris-4 thy Gtaeral Adsewbly (o pass Feruvrics dv 1Ot require wateriug often. us they caungs et iy . hun-«-,nl-lnh U aud they uced but oe, as ANy wp, 1 Ducesadry, mie-bgUL Potodants. for oonting should Be wotica 1o Seotembir, deliud a well-uixed.leatscutnpudt. Given toht snd WateF 1 v winjar, they will Bloom sll the tme sud tu apring may Bo teanafeered o 1he burdet, gl will blogw all dummer, 'alis |ilive shoaid rost through the edmumur, by dried olf, aod the dret of Septoaber the buibe Biould 03 taken from the earty, cicanel. given new soil, aud beougti bty tbe howse. They will thea blaow all® winter, Louvardlas. coleas. bizoutas. W gerantims are all 2003 Lonwe plante 30 the¥ sevas u Jry beat of 0ur rouis very wall. Fie Chiiesa primros® 10 slso & desicadlo Luuso-plant, a1y 18 1 Hreat Lloower, ol does well - common room standing heat aud cold well. T endlile uf intellect 1iat basteus to coufesa fiher shape ot cwotlon. We are williog el all wo know ami feel about music, or l:hm-. Or sciuuce, or arh, but, lew are oed %o will either write dowu “or speak ol the thoughts und fechnge witbin regard- cath and tue scenes beyoud. du secking N gt power of the notiun of a second 1if3 et BUL expect the ages 1o yield us o loud i willing shout as 1o therr betiel in Hcaven, fi.’i WO tust vather up the whispers uf the few 0l tiuliply them by the reluctance of by wu.c-L U sl o speak long or loud tn w Hier 60 grave, 0 mviterious, 5o pervonsl. Vug Lhere s such uuity 1o wankisd that when o s spoken wll wevinto Join fu the volee. ““‘i Lals bs copectally true jo ull religious wedte gyl Iu wmatters of to-uay men differ and Vaart, aud wo Gue can speak for auother; coutatns not the beautlful as a proof of fts fan- cituiness, but us wu element of immense power which I8 making it pass along umong the gen- eratlons with the womentuw of & planet whirl- u around {ts sun. Do we not reuch thus at last some of the ele- meats of power which Ho In this belfet fy 3 world w comet The univerdality of the thought, reaching a8 it does all over the threo ereal sources of all the modarn natfous, Egypt, Palestine, aod Asia, tha justive snd CQMpensa- tlun fu its outline, the love of life, the dread of oblivion seeu In its dowery hope, the gloriously beautlful beheld streamivg from all its tigld, and strects, aud faces,—scen In {te poetry, hea §1 its tusie, ure streans which combine in ong ood to bear forward this ship of elerual, lie. ‘These mirity sogels are rolljug awaythe stouc frow the duor of that sepulelza futo which we as the goods are under valus. In BUTTONS ‘we have tho most varied, as well as the largest, stock to be found in tho West, and can match all Dress Fabrics in Pearl,Crochet, Horn, Ivory, and Metal Buttons, ut such prices as' will warrant their prompt sale. GARSON, PIRIE & GO, th sawme vicn, thouvh ooty perbaps, in 80 emtmoat #ijeurve a3 hls harui, “Tue Healin-Otlleers of your city might do the L Beovle who use poultry a Kluduess by lookiug td the coops. G HALLS X PANMIOUARS, or any other tiuuses, not warmied by 8 furnace, are a fruitful source of colds and consuuiption. Mauy a good mather sud many s duggiter have caught culds in hails whils golug frow vae por- tun .0l the house to wnoher, that ended ln death.” Meu aro not so apt to, take cold, when u\rusexl 0. cOld- uir, wg women, because, 3% o rule, thoy are. more. warp'ly clsd usl ta sxnosure. Bauib the lons, cul mp hall trom the house by all weans. It 13 & vulsance, aud 3 bealth-destraylog wrent, SENSIULE CONCLUSIONS, A urecmoudint of e L ter, 16 Bnoid e dricd b Ll New Yorler

Other pages from this issue: