Newspaper Page Text
ON GRASSES.
.fjfetlifc
l Groat Britain by
' meadow */;
land by that of herd’s
gnue. ' It la one of the moat val
uable grasses that are cultivated;
and, whatig worthy the notice of
every farmer, it affords more than
double the nutriment when ciif in
the seed to what it does in the
flower. In tenacious,' strong,
and moist soils it is entitled to a
precedence, perhaps, to any angle
grass for hay; yet does not seem
to be suitable to mix with clover
seeds, when intended for meadow.
Another consideration,. .which
renders it particularly worthy' of
attention, is the seed which it af
fords, and which may be saved
VOL. VIIL
ATHENS, (GEORGIA,) ERIDAY % APRIL 23, 1841.
NO.-52.
hope or manmineg regret.
- “Ab night erowmdAfi* patient
forbearance af the neglect*, j Julia
with ita just reward, and i
blow to folly in the boeoni of
i:—! 'era. Returning * with dilgost
frotti the tones of the hazard tab
meadow oat grass appear to be
best calculated to insure profit
They grow early, delight in. a
clover soiL and are fit for the scy
the when clover is in the bloom,
ihe time it ought to be cut,' . The
hay from this mixture may be
made beforejiarvest commences;
ancLif the soil is good, a second
crop may Be cut almost equal - to
the first If intended for pasture
the second .year, either of these
grasses wiH afford more abundant
fbod than timothy. ' r -
In clays, the meadow fox tail,
an excellent grass, might be sub
stituted, though according to Sin
clair,' the tali pat grass will do
well here’ also. Tn wet-soils,
fweiw
think would be best ibrall grounds
which sire moderate dry.- The
rye and oat grasses, or meadow
soft grass, might be either substi-
d for the two first,-Or com
bined with them.-' ; These would
afford spring, summer, and foil
feed, abundant in quantity, and
wholesome and nutricious in du
ality.- .
^red grass
s : a good' selection, sown
BT JCtS S. STEPHENS.
Death slttcth in the Cap! to!! His‘able wing
Flung its black ahfcdow* o’er ft country’s hope
And 1 lo! a nation bcodath down in
A few short weeks-and all wns jubilee,—
The air was musical with happy sound®—
The future full of promise—joyous smiles
without materially
the bay crop. From tento thir-
ty bushels of seed -maybe taken
from an acre of timothyj which, at
tbe.price it now bears, te opittelf
a handsome remuneration. . either separate ojr together.
Florin has oi late years been ■ Lucerne and -.sainfoin require
brought into notice in Great Bri- a ; deep dry soil, and are generally
tain, by the experiments of Dr. gown without other seeds. The
Richardson; who -particularly fi r st does
recommended it for the cold bog- before the -
gy soils of the mountainous dis- wfagresucct .
tricts, where ordinary grasses permitted to occupy the ground
would not thrive. The peculiar f r om six to eight years,
value of the florin, and of other . 2d. Meadow grasses.—In se-
grassos of the agrostis family, .focting these the object is to ob-
arisez from their fitness for winter tain the grstest burthen of good
pasture: as they lose very little hay, and to mix thoso kinds which
of their bulk or nutriment by _fe- may beprofitably cutatthesame
*-ne- . fv -«£l 7'
-For clayey and.inoist. soils,
(creeping tent or couch grass) many valuable and 'nutritious
implies a difficulty in mOwing.it, kindsseem to he, well adapted;
except on a surface perfectly that is to say, meadow fox tail,
smooth. Wo BareSeen itrecom- timothy, tall oat; meadow soft,
mended to the notice of American grass, floating fescus; rye grass,
formers; butfrora.the very limit- Iee d ■ meadow, smooth-stalked
od progress which* seeins to have meadow, American cock’s foot,
been made in its cultivation wo in- upright-bent or herd’s grass,, arid
fer that it has fallen short of pub- tallfescue. And the five last are
.PRACTICAL DIRECTIONS TOU RAISING
SUGAR-BEETS;
l.The soil- ought to be rich .
arid friable, so as to break up fine 1
without heavy -lumps or unbrok
en clods.;
caanot eat them without a reduc
tion of size by' slitting them
lengthwise into four or five slips.
12. They arc so rich that a
peck of salt beets is one .full
feed; and given morning and
night to a cow, with the ordina-
ryaDovrance of bay,lias not on
ly enriched the quality of her
milk, but. actuafly.dpubled the
quantity of it in ten days, put her
in-excellent-, flesh, - and given a I
lively coatol flossy hair,. More* And now his green old age was yielded up
will scour them. . , Mm
. 13. The seed, was plauted the
2. It maybe moderately moist, fifteen^
but .riot- very, wet or sodden with
water..- -
3. The ground ought to be
plonghed and- harrowed three
times;once early and deep; a.
second time 10 or 12 days after
the first, to turn under the seed
ling weeds' and extingishing
them; third and. last time less
dcstp than the first; and about a
week after the second. When
the third ploughing gets harrow
ed down smooth the seed-beds
GENERAL HARRISON DEAD:
each freeman’s taco and lighTcdup
The gentle eye ofbeanty.
TAe"/froow<—a'nullity go^d old man— - • *
th® wealth of !us .high. purposes.
Age tax upon him wi>h a gentle grpee.
Giving unro his manhood dignity,
. _ Jthe heitof
- - dionin Boston,' 1 when
every body was holding on, waiting for
the article to advance, an old mer-.
cliant,. keen as a razor, whose store
was packed from the first to the fourth
floor with prime Green Rio, conclu
ded from the signs which he well tin
flupclAAfl ' r fhnt .npiee, I,n4.
15th day of J^Iay, which in our
Silent and motionless in their deep reverence,
climate is fifteen griys before the
first p;
awberies, and
hefirsfrip-
;em in Carolina would'
e best rule probably tor
Surcharg’d with grateful joy. The mighty dead
Bent gently o’er; him with thpir spirit wings,
lie expectation.
xfcnliarly suited to swamp or
Upright. bent grasSs-rUr. bog soils, 3 Eor dry loarqs, sands
Mnhlenburgh,qonsiders.th;s the ara j gravels, which ought never
herd's grass of the southern, and to be kept long in grate, the cock’s
the foul roeadows.of the eastern fog tor orchard grass,and tall oat,
.states; of winch whitetopand red ^ probably the best; apdsto
..top are varieties. This grass is those might be.added red and
congenial to our climatc whitbcloicr^ ’’*' ’ '
than to that of England. In many ho great ist opie-
boggy soils, both varletics of this ven | deterioration of meadows,
grass have come msponteneously, >j<bis .taken place from the better
as soon as the ground _has been „ rasse3 rn nmng out, arid giving
and draincl, have soon ^ pace to ci kin di in th!
formed acompact sod, and afford- masg or to useless and. noxious
1 pasture. plants, aided often by a neglect to
fsa&xss&ai
wthoMiiqgraaB, which a con- thrive best in moist, they will not
Bve long in wet soils. .Hence it
e grounds ^Thesmall.crop ^ 0 f, he fi rst importance to keep
i it grvra, shows the httie de- t j ]Q sur f aco soil free fi-om standing
«*■*“!• water, by good and suffident
ditches; and it often becomes
mmmM
of milk-were frequently greater,
and dbw well
Floating Feseus grows well
In swamps and bog soils, where
good Unas are most wanted.
• I would r —~~
the. land in ridges at right angles
with the drains Another pre
caution to be observed is net to
feed them ; with stock; when the
soil is wet and poachy. -Harrow
ing in the fell has been found
beneficial to meadows, It ;dq-
; be divided, tor the,
fit of the former, into three kinds,
to-vrit: Cultivated
ly, are cultivated
the term* as eerier
of grasses which have fallen, or
may be-sown, and thus produce
which the g U rope, lime is^usecP vrith effect
But
and
as are also ashes. With: us, the ^
in thri sense There emrilov it ai>- annual application of n bushol of
intnesmise lnere mpioy^it, ap- gyngma to the acre is found ben-
ufinial* It not only thickens the
verdure with cIovct,hr*
rot^ m a systematic relation of to in ^Qstqther
f the Steble manure- shout
thra purpose are, generally, the 0 „i y wh en it can be
red clovers, lucerne, sain fbin, .. ■« ■ ■
orchard; tall oat, timothy, or rye
grass. Cloyer is the primary de- '
trom
the'more profitable uste of tillage.
.When the means above enumer-
era. As vegetables to exhaust
from the soSoXrera the seedsare once, ntreduced up-
are entitled tothe high 1
datum they havesfotain
American formers.
liable to
- atfuctiou by the
it is both *
, ' . tormixwithfoeir
. some other
we shall find little]
in naturalizing them
orchard nor vernal
are said to be indig-
country, are recog-
ss lands which
my observation:
:the fox
>. earliest
for
.. - ■ . - "; 7 -
should bepreparedimmediately,
in' order to prevent weedseed
from getting the start of the beet-
seed. ... *-t
4. The seed-bed is made by
turnjng two furrows together;
butsothat the bed is elevated
three or four inches above the
bottom ot the furrow or ditch on
each side of it, and not more,'
The next bed should be so form
ed as to leave an interval be
tween them from 2 1-2 to 3 feet
wide, that when 'the crop comes
to be dressed by the plough it
may admit of two furrows.
5. : On the top of each bed,
plant a single line or row of beet-
seed, at the distance of one foot
fromseed to seed to be ascertain
ed by a small hand stick, just a
foot long, which the; planter
keeps iifnis fingers. Tull a lit
tle dirt on the seed with the fin
ger, or set the foot on it. The
process of planting is apparent
ly slow, but a hoy soon becomes
expert. There will be a great
er weight of beets at a foot dis
tance than at any less.
6: Put two seeds at least in a
place, in order to iusure one.
plant; but if they both should
fail tocome up,one may be trans
planted, at the first* or second
dressing from a redundant hHl,
anditwill be sure to grow though
it rarely becomes of an average
size. .
' 7. As soon os the plants have
aD come up and . get a leaf the
size of a five-cent piece, extract;
with the firigers from each hill
all but the.two strongest plants,
and destroy with a hoe all-the
weeds around them, and on the
top of the bed up. to the nftxt
one. - This must be done with
the fingers and hoe. The plough
is not admissible. One hand
will dress h alf an acre e asily in
three days.;. This and plonting
them is the principal labor. - At
the second dressing reduce them
th only one plant.-.
8. Four or five days after the
first dressing, the weeds in the
intervals maybe -cut Up by the
plough, which is to be immedi
ately followed by a hoe, to un
cover such as happerito get bur
ied, and give a clean circle round
each plant.; This hpcing is done
with great expedition. .
9. The ploughing and hoeing
must be repeated from once, to
twice, or three times more at
short intervals, subduing, while
they are young, all weeds, until
the tops of the beet smother
them from growth.* The crop
must be kept very clean, but is
done with very small labor after
the first dressing.’
10. For two years successive
ly, half an acre has yielded S00
bushels of beets, without the tops
each year; last season the quan
tity exceeded that by Sve bush
els, and fell short of it about as
much this year.. They weigh
pounds to abusel, or fifteen
tons to an acre,
; 11. (Morses have no. taste, for
" ' s^while cattle and hogs de-
taem greedily,-and the tops
eUy as'tbe roots. Cattle
Wly
that .cliniate. The .seeds" are
soaked aboutarihourbefbre he-
irigqjftmted, in tepid water, and
then rolled in ashes or' plaster,
to dry them. It gives them a
small start of the weed;
The frequent laudatory com
munications I have read its to
its adaptation for cattle food,
has induced me to follow the
crowd, and cultivate, both ..the
triangle wurtzle;and sugar beet.
During the winter of 1839,1 fed
from both kinds, and observed
then, after ri few weeks’ feeding,
the effects upon the cows and
■milk, which I have repeatedly
noticed since, and that-is, when
As solemnly h« took the earthly .
Which flung its purple o’er his path to Hear cm
The oath was said* mrid 'then one mighty pulse
Seem'd throbbing through the multitude,— . ■
Faces were lifted upward and a prayer -
Of deep thanksgiving wing’d that vo'w to Heaved.
In Heaven die Hero answered it .
Time slept on flowers and lent his Gloss to"Hope-
One little month his golden sands had sped
When, mingling with the music of onr joy,
Arose and swell’d a low, funeral strain.
.era an an
t inthc quantity
Darkness is o’er the land,
Forlo! a death flag streams upon the breeze,-
The Hero hath departed •
Nay let tis weep, our grief hath need of fears—
DIAMOND CUT DIAMOND.
eyes, and Vice, in ber own: I
datotrmity, stood anmasked
lumtv' ‘ -" " " ' —
at' the bellows not to know that the
mopienl hel with his iihihensc .stock
began ter sell, aa alarm would be 'ta
ken aiHl tlovv” would go the prices.
Quietly sending off a prctu* stiff in
voice ' a »licle ‘to' apt!
, |nt;to min'd j his bu-
thc «flc Riiffvi»d r^t
Tailing prirxa^for 11
holders, who knew WffK/tKKfi ...
four timfes as mych on hand as they
had, cpncludetithht it was safe’to bu r
whenihe did, and so stood up manful
ly and bought- largely." -When ol<
Mr. - -V carmen, were tumbling
• his purchase.into the, front door of his
1 \varefiouse, five times ixa many were
carrying coffee away from the back
door. Oh the next day of sale ite
Ten years Uve passed
solitary midnight, when the i
trbn beat in tears .over fiet
boy, BeftoM her now K IStillanfo#
pride of womanhood, surrounded, fcfr
their cherub' faces, wh6 are listening
utenray , wuirc « i
is bending over the music p
the teara: of. happiness a
that ^ springs* from a awel
““ he ^contemplates ’ * L *
Youl
joauxtr^v\ ye,, whp
watch oyer ^^wna^rtag^
erring heat—wfen^.r*woach trto
bies upon your lips towards a trtiaht
* imitate Julia DanveW, aJftJ
like th'e sword of fi
be covered srilh Bgyrtirsfrtl ^ w
ness andirntabiUty^do but, harden, AT
not.wholly estrange the heart-~whiMS
ondhe^ntrary patiehce and ^ehtle-
_v.r-.-_* ^ fojjpin^itfn
wearititb
nefs of manner (as. water droppir
tfi& flinty jrpck will in ttrae wear
Tears should einbnhr. the dead, and there is one,.
:le woman wjth'hor clinging love,
wrung her heart thftt she might give him up
To his high destiny. Tears are for her,—
She linger yet among her household gods,. .,
And know^th not how her heart is laid.
From battle fields where strife was fiercely waged
And human blt>od-drops"fell, ii crimson r
He had returned to her. Uod hclp thet^ Lady,"
Look not for him now !-
Thron’d in n nation's lovo he sunk |o sleep, ■.
And so awoke in Heaven.*;
KINGDOM OF JERUSALEM.
- Wo hove often had occasion to ox,
press: to bclicvCra in a' literal return
of the Je ws, our opinion that there is.,
at present a hotter prospect of the.
freely as- evor. and this contin-
ucji for some two or thtee weeks;—
One day he jailed to appear at a ,cof,
fee sale, and most of the dealers took
the alarm, and prices declined a lilt]
—Daring the alleriioona pretty ,lar
holder; who had always been.’
to buy when lie say Mr,——-
mg,methim. in-the street and asked
the rate of Cuffee.... ' ; , ' V
* 1 don’t know what it's going at'tp-
day,’ replied the old fellow, as. icool
and pleasant as im fee crean#* ' '
* It dectined.a little thi-s nioruing.'y
-‘Did itf* resetimed. IVfr.
with* what seemed : to Ills teilow trades
man a manifest,-,! inn.ofnKbfTerencc.
anda..
kidneys of the cotvs.
These results, So different from
those assertions of more .expe
rienced -.farmera’’. tiian ’ myself,
have led • me, nevcrless, to ex
periments from time to time, but
with-tlie same results, and I now
have come to the conclusion that
where the object is the quantity
of buttei*-tbey.do riot answer as
cobmeal;~bu't when milk or beef
is the object, they are . all that is
said of them.
My system of feeding, when
with beets, was to give each cow
a peck night and morning, fill
ing the rack before her with clo
ver hay, 'continuing it for some
times two.'weeks;. ’’
Then I have changed to cut
straw nlixeil up with one peck
Ofbroyvnstuff to each cow, with
hdy_to rack night and’.moniing.
.Then again T Have tried a
peek of beets with about two
quarts Of brown stuff. sprinkled
over them, night and morning,
with hay as before.'
‘And lastly, I have given a
quart of cobmeal mixed with a
half bushel of cut-clover hay, oh
corn blades sufficiently moisten
ed, night and morning-: This
last feed, ! think, is preferable,
besides having good effects up
on the flavor' and color of the
butter.
' The brown stuff above-
mentioned is an offal oftheiriil-
ler3, rather. better than, bran,
although not as good as ship
stuff, and costs me from thirteen
to eighteen cents per bushel.
The -cornmeal costs me.a tip
per bushel to grind,
'. A. GOOD
Let every, one "rea!_
which.^e' find iti ifio C,
mocrat. ■ Like the ‘Universal Altnart-
ac,’ it suits all meridians, *'-
idlers who having nothin^
busy themselves w^h intc
the affairs
'A good business, dn exee^e’w.
nsis.’s—We heard a sloryT lhb’ IW&r
day whidh amused us
one we consider alto;
fulfilment of this hope, than has exist
ed perhaps since the days of , Julian
the apostate, We have told them
that the matter depended almost sim
ply upon a word from Prince 'Me|*
ternicb and • Lord Palmerston. Wife
happen to know that a pamphlet xvai :
P noted and circulated last summer iir
erlin, urging upon the, four powers
the establishment of Palestine as an
independent state, Whither the Jews
might return with an assurance of
protection and security. , The fbllaw-
ing,extract from >a letter received '
this city from a gentleman of h 0 „
standing in the literary and diplomatic
circles of Berlin dated Peb. . 15th,
serves to show that the subject lias
not been lost sight of, and is ( perhaps
brought nearer to-some important de-
cision than the public has beenawafe.
of; t ‘The allies, having obtained their
end [in Syria} are somewhat at a’loss
how to dispose of their’ conquest.*—!
They are serioiisly thinking of setting
up, or reviving, a;Christian Kingdom
at Jerusalem—a project vyhich .seems
to be received with favor at Vienna.
But then what are they to do with the
other Christian population of SVria ?
Th., .1— ‘
• Yes, certainly ! havn’t you heard to be lost.. A few we^ks sincOi iLper-
it beforef . v>! iv.-'C son of respectable exterior, Rnd, geu-
- • No ; but I expected as much.’
j ‘ Why, we shall all be ruined if; the
priijgsgo-'dowa!' .
‘ Not all. 1 .presume,. replied Mr.
— —with an unmoved coume
nance.. V ‘
* Why,you arc deeper than any ol
ance in a village not a t.
from NewHaven,when
tints are. somewhat: pi
keeping a closer eye . r ,
bors afiairs than to theirvowmdv
stranger, took v If
Me !’ exclaimed Mr. —— , in to perplex or ^isturl
ill feignc<! * astonishment, « Why I i ged off, apparently
vrtt got it Itagin my Store /’ . * self, but much t
■The next daytlic bubble burst, and neighborhood.
^air*t f dqjKcn. sj^-oulitjy*^* who had '■*'
been.Tor a month H/' iwd dreaming
nightly, over^their golden "gain?, were
ruined. -
THE TRUANT HUSBAND.
•The painful Yigiimay I never know
f*«ut anxious w^ches o’er a wandering heart.'
It was past midnight, and she sat
leaning her pile eheek ofl her hand,
counting the doll tickiug of the French I membrancc.
clock that stood on, the tnkrble chim'- 1 '
m
resklesa tor me * " ** * v '
allagogfoTca
ness and r ‘
were the
raises as to bolu, uiitil
general ; consultation and tho r .
canvassing of the pros and cbn», : 'I w
the board ofgdssips. it was cancluded
that' he liad.neither, and tba‘ ‘
eventually leave the
uncancelled score as if token
“ -
mmmm..
ney-piece, and ever and anon lifting c f the medlers resolved in his'b<frn
tier wmijy eve to it s dial, to mark the ,n', n d to broach. the .subject - to- the
This .is one, of the questions which
France has asked them. They are
now yery anxious to draw her from
t^e isolated position into which they
have forced her; as they find after ail
that, they cannot permanently -and
satisfactorily : settle the East without
her concurrence. ( To those who
haver an* opportunity of reading the
diplomatic papers, it is curious and
Amusing to see the game that is going
on between those, faithful, confiding,
and loying allies, England and Russia,
in attempting tocntice France to favor
‘heir respective projects in the Levant.
Under the pretext of preserving peace
among the different members of the
great Mohammedan family, they have
put at immediate haznrd-the peace of
Christendom, and how affect to. be
.very much surprised that the French
should think of fortifying their capital.
Their real opinion is in favor: of that
jeet, as a means iof
; France
additional strengtfi not merely for de
fensive but for.Oflcnsive war.
GALVES RUNNING WITH COWS,
A writer: in the Elmer’s Cac-
inet says; “My experience extends
to many hundred cases; for upon
the hilfe of Scotland it is the uni
versal practice to permit the cal vs
to remain with their dams during
the summer," but such are never
known or expected to make su
perior cows :fbr the dairy, and
for this reason lx
*• Depend upon it, to make a
deep milker the . hag must be
periodically distended, and those
who supose that to allow the
calves to remain with their dams
through the summer would be to
the injury of &e <fows^. have not
come to that dbfMJlnsron without
reason £or
does not the
admit the pi
when lie tliink^h}
THE SPECULATOR.
His wealth, is imaginary, and no
where. He contracts debts - and cal
culates on miracles to pay them. -He
trusts every body. and *evcry body,
trusts him, while the ball can be kept
—and when it falls to the ground,
they all roll away and perish together,
The idea of owing more than he can
ever reasonable expect to pay, does
not rob h;m of a wink of sleep or re-,
pose for a moment. “Eat drink and
be meriy for to-raoribw you die,” in
his maxim. ‘ He lives as if tuo Worn!
Were at Ilia command; he despises
the sordid maxim of cutting his coat
according. tO "his rlolh for Hip. rlnth
according, to his cloth for the cloth
belongs to others; he goes the way of
all flesh, and when his books a
amined by tlie assigned
that though he has lived
and spent bis hundred oi
he is never Worth a fai "*
debts are paid,
The Colone
” [just fill out this
We like to see yoangmei
staring at eaefi plhe;
shows s
liows a dispozjtipo to
tanfl. ‘let ns Invn ■
maud, ‘let us loye une
lapse of another liour." It was. past
midnight, and yet he returned not!—
She’ arose, and taking _up_thc : Jamp,
whose pale rays illuminated the soli
dary chamber, prdceeded.with.noises
less step to a small'Inner apartment.
The curtains of his little bed were
drawn aside, and the yQuhg mother
gazed oil her .sleeping child I ' What
a vivid contrast did diat glowingcheek
and smiling brow present,' as he lay in
rosy slumber, to the faded, yet beauti
ful face that bung; over him in tears!
‘Will he resemble his father ? was the
thought that passed /or a moment
through her devo ted heart, end a. sigh
was the only .answer L;.;::
‘Tis his well known knbek-^-and
the steps of the drowsy porter echoed
through the lofty hall, as with a mur
mur oil lus lips, he drew the massy
Ixj'ts and .admitted his thoughtless
master. ‘Four o’c!ock, Wilfis, is it
nofl’ and he sprang up the staircase
—auo.ther-moincnt he is in tlie chain-
berr-in ber arms!
e* l J|o reproaches met the truant hW
band,: none—save those she could not
but spare'nim,,inr iter heavy eye, and
faded cheek—vet these spoke to his
heart.
‘Julia,/ have been a wamlering hus
band.’
‘But you are come now, Charles,
and^aUis.vrelL*,
’Andail was f well,, for,' from lliat
hour, Charles Danvers became an- al
tered man. Had his wife met him with
frowns and sullen tears lie had become
a hardened libertine; but her affec
tionate caresses, the joy that danced
in her sunken eye, the hectic flash that
lit up her- pallid cheek at his approach
were arguments he could not with
stand Married in early life, while he
felt ail the-ardor," but not tire esteem
oflove ;. possessed' of a spleuiid.for
tune, and haying hitherto had the eo-
ind of his ou*n pleasures,
I into that common -error,
married men—the dread, «£
iptrolfcd./ In vain dkl his
•viso: beheld with sorr^w tbe
:s aftd misery 1^: was
r for. himself in afteriifo, ri
eyCharles/JanTcrs Uirneffi
djftdvice, andpur-*-^'—
ms every Way
ty.tlie path of i'ofty ifnot
gyiit- * Tlie ifovcrn, the ^fitb
race coqwei tori^pften 1
solitary rnoumcr.prhi
stranger, and thus by performm'g an
act of kindness for his neighbor unsoli
cited-—whose? easy- nature/^he.^ps
himselfas to the stranger s.re'al chafac-
} He accordingly introdueod hrmsolf,
when the # -following dialogue ensued:
‘Well, stranger,you’ve been in the^e
here -parts considerable timp now I
reckon^.
PBPPPPRBHIRPI^: 1 -'^?
•Pretty dear travelling i¥6w : ; Merits
you-! i good deal to live at tovepM/I
guess,l ^ ■ * - ■ ■ - muganj—
in the first piace. I make twontyldpl.
lars a month simply
own businett, and again I make twenty
dollars by letting other people’* alone.'
Our informant adds that ithe inter
rogator forgot ^ impart tliq reaalttof
his enquiries tojiis curious neighbors.
innate■ naas. . ';
Itianov !rf(^f ; iho
reflecting portion of ,ociet;-/fost'a-
man is bora with no ionaierifleu^--
Every idea which a child aaqutrtW.hr
receive, either ditectly qtterqal
tmpresiions [iial h..e n matfe'nto—
hia „Kiiee8 ; ..or indirectly.,frpni.'TI
comparison of- f-i-.t;: 1 ,