The Bainbridge weekly sun. (Bainbridge, Ga.) 1872-????, July 19, 1873, Image 1

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THE *^BAINBRIDCrE~WEEKLY^SN t-2 ter annum; VOL* IX I HE WEEKLY SIIN PUBLISHED Saturday JOHN It. lIAYES* Proprietor TeKMS OK SUJiCUirTION. mCopy, Ono Year .. ..02,00 e Copy, Six Months, 1,00 u:ie Copy. Three Months, .75 Invariably in Advance Adver isiug Rates arid Rules A<lvertisenieiit« inserted at $2 per square :>t each insertion, and $1 for each subse quent one. \ (quare is eight solid lines of this type. iL-rai terms made with contract adver- Mo-rs. > :al notices of eight lines are sls jp£* r or 850 jier annum. Ixicul notices . Com three months arc sdbjeet to • « .slant rates. ' v i ivertisers who desire their in i.B changed, must give us two c-ig advertisements,’ unless other •jiated in contract, will beclmrged , per square. . -i iges and obituary notices, trib respoct, and other kindred notices, ivcrtisements must take the run of hi »er. as we do not contract to keep ■ ~.m in any particular place. 11 ouncements for candidates are $lO, ,f only tor one insertion. I’.ills arc due upon the appearance of the .i.lvi-rtisement. and the money will be col-' lifted as needed by the Proprietors. We shall adhere strictly to the above juleSt. and will depart from them under no circumstances. TKKMS dF SUBSCRIPTION. lVr annum, in advance, - - $.200 Per six months, in Advance, - 1.00 lVr three months,'in advance, - 75 Single copy, in advance - - 10 LEGAL ADVERTISING. Sheriffs sales, per levy, $3 { sheriffs mort gage sales, per levy. $5; tax sales, per levy, s;i; citation for letters of adfriirmtration. <1: citation for letters o's kUarilritiiship. 04 ; application for dismission from atlminis * tration,s.); application fordjsmissim from guardianship, 05 ; application for k v. to ~•11 land (one square), 5, and each addi tional square, 3 : application for hotne- Ktead. 2 ; notice to debtors and creditors. 4 ; laud sales, (Ist square), 5, and each ad ditional square. 3 ; sale of perishable prop erty. per square, 2.50: cat ray notices, sixty lavs. 7 ; notice to perfect service, 7 ; rules nisi to foreclose, mortgage, per square, 4 ; rules to establish lost pappers, per square, 4 ; rules compelling titles. 4 ; rules to per fect service in divorce coses, 10. Sale* of land, etc., by administrators, ex vutors or guardians, are required by law to beheld on the Ist Tuesday in the month, between the 'hours of 10 in the forenoon and 4 in the afternoon, at the court house >loor in the county in which tile property is MluVled. . Norice, of these sales must be piven in a publid gazette 40 days previous to the day of sale. Notices for the sale of personal proper ty must be given in like manner 10 days previous to sale day. , > /. Notice to the debtors and creditors of an estate must also be published 40 days. Notice that application w:ll be made to the Court of Ordinary for leave to bcu land, &c„ must be published for two months Citations for letters, of rid ministration, guardianship, &e., must be published 30 days—for dismissiou from administration, monthly for three months.— for dismission from guardianship,'4ft days. A Rules for foroclosure of mortgage must b*' puhlished. moritKly .four months— for estabUsliing lost papers for the full space <jf three paoriths—for compelling titles frcrr» 'executors dr administrators, where bond has been given by the deceased, the full space es three months. * ... Publication will always be continued ac cording to theso. the legal requirements, unless otherwise ordered. . OR K TRIBUNE . 187& ~ a- here ofore. TBa Tribune strives ' -i' i tit aud pro emiucutiy anew a It-, public- England * bud OVif* . .ally p' < meatod with Republic , ,*>.i dll -w-ivinsi in tbo mrv.det^ -. < \ ruler too g>o i for a Ki tr *? nod a.' i a Republican. wh * is un-ib e i island’ blocks the . tulfof Mexu-O and eqjn-il t ,iv. <i up —ihe German speak* ~.aU‘d by anew Fiote>tau~ , . U„ f ..m the See of Rome on ili : ■, m „f ‘ J a. 4 InfaiJ'lHtity and as ; filming to tecog .ize the “ Cld Catholics the weiole Contiueut petvaded by the tutpllymiul ferment that comes «>f the cons Hict betwjen ,old idea-, philosophic>l. tue mortctl, material, and,the advances or Pii‘.4& ! l Ilnssiaaud Great B'tUiu running a race fcr the final gens determine Asiat'C supremacy--*-0 >n b , jng ready to abandon ber advances ft reel ore her lialbdpened gates — ,a P* 1 . ishing feudalism aud inviting Western ilizaiion to irradiate Western commerce enrich her loug hidden empire—snen ■ phases of the news from abroad whic i mails over all Continents and the wii under all seas are daily bearing With able and trusted correspondents the leading capitate, and wherever £J*ea changes are in progress, The Tribun* at whatever cost, u> lay boforo its reaile the most prompt, complete, and p *Rj“‘J r presentment of these diverse and ing movements—through all of w bico. as it fondly trust®, the toiling masses me everywhere struggling np towaid larger recognition aud a brighter future . At home the struggle for Freedom seems over. The last slave has long been a citi-, sen , the last opposition to emancipation, enfranchisement, equal L civil rights, hap been.formally abandoned. Jfo parly, North or Nouth, longer disputes the tesult of the war sot the Union ; all depute that these results must never be undone ; and, wuR a whole people thus united on the grand platform of All Rights lor .All, whereto our bloody struggle, and the prolonged ciyii ooute-ta that followed, have led us, the Republic closes the records of the bit" ter, hateful part, and turns peacefully, hopefully, to the less aborning been use less vpA| problems qf the Moure Tv what T ever may elucidate tbq general discussion or action on these, The Tribune gives am plest sp tcvj.and most impartial record, Whatever p titles mav p'opose, whatever political leaders may say, whatever officers may do, is faiily set down in its columns, whether this news helps or hinders its own views. Its reader** have the right to. gn honest statement of the facts: and this they if!ways gtri. ,But as to its own‘political principles. The Tribune is of course, hereafter as here tofore, the champion of Equal Rights, ir respective, qf race, nativity, or.color, ft Rtamls inflexibly by the amendment* for the permanent security of those rights, which have been solemnly incorporated by the people, in the Constitution of the Uni toil Nta'es. . Independent of political pair ties.it ••udi-avois to traat them all with judicial fairness. ,It labors to purify th" administration of government, national, .’"late anil municipal, and whenever those In authority, whether in national... Mate, or municipal attorn, takf the had in this work, it will therein give them its cordial support. * But it can never tie the servitor of any poli'.ical parly , nor will it surreu-t der or even* waive its right to criticise and Condemn what is wrong, and commend what is right pi the action of any parties or of any public men. , Now. as always, The Tribune labors with all its heait for the promotion of the gieat material interests of the country. The progress of invention and of labor saving, the development of our resources, the pre servation of our land for the landless and Its rapid subjugation to human wants, the utilization of our vast underlying ores, the extension of. the facilities for biinging pro-, dudei and consumer nearer together— whatever tends $o swell the ranks, the knowledge and better flit} Condition oi those devoted to productive industry finds mention and encouragement in our co!«= urn ns. The Weekly Tribune. ,now more than thiity years old. has endeavored fo'.keep np with the progress 4 tlieage in improve non and in ti rp se. I <U*v.*l«s ifc large "h ue oi its cO’HimA’a to agri<u tnw as the iim st < s e dial and gene t.T «>f human pur soils. It employs; th abl'st mcl most sues ce gfnl euittx atoi's to mu. t'o;tn in In-ief, clear esflija their practical views of tin: Fanner’s work. It reports pu lie dirCiiss sinus which elucidate that work : gathg's from every source agiioultural news, the repoits of t!ie latest experiments, the stories ol the latest successes and failures, and, whatever may teud at once to belt , a&iicujture. and to commend it a* the firs and most, important of pr gfeishe aitsr based on natural science. Thera are Hundreds Os thousands engaged .n and wise pursuits who own or rent a '‘place," •ml give .‘pine portion of tlieir time to i'fi cu t>ne and improvement, Tne Weekly Tiibune shows them how *o make the most of tlieir roods and their honis, both by direction and elan'pie. No in formation equal in quality or quantity can be elsewhere obtained for the price of this journal* The Weekly Tribune appeals also ,to teachers, students, and persons of inquir ing mind", by the chai-actev of its literary contents which include reviews of alljhe works proceeding from the master minds of the Old or of the New Yorld, with lib eiftl extracts from those of especial inrer est. Imaginative Literature also claims attention,’ but in a subordinate degree “Home Interests!’ are discussed weekly by a lady specially qualified to instruct and interest her owji sex, and the younger por tion gi the other. Nq., owlnin'n ie. moye eagerly sought or perused with greater average protit than hers* .The news <>f ihe day, elucii ated by brief comments, is ; so copdensed that no reader am dee pi it dif fuse while given sufficiently i.u .detail to satisfy the wants .of the. average reader - Selections are regularly .made from the extensive correspondence of the The Daily Tribune from every country, and its edito rials of move permanent- value are her reprod cod In short The Week'y Tn bnne commends it tell to millions by min. istering to tlieir intellectual wants more fully than they are met by any othe jour nal. while its tegular reports of the cattle, country produce, aud other markets, will of themselves save thy farmer who yeg«- larly notes them far mar* than his journal s For the .family circle of the educate fotmeror artisan, .The WcCltly Tribune lias no superior, as is proved by the hundreds of thousands who having read M from childhood, still cherish and enjoy it in the tiriffie ami on the down hip *>t life a e respectfully ui„e those wh«* krow its worth to c .mmenn The WWktv-Trtttfne t.mheu Trfends and neighbors, and we pr< *er, at to cl 1“ at prices which Inrely pay the cost of paper and press work. TERMS OF THE WEEKLY TRIBUNE TO MA.IT, PTTBSCRIBf.RS. One copy, one year— s 2 €2 00 Five copies, one year—ls 2 i»suef...... .00 TO o\E ADDRESS. TO NAMES 07 SUBSCRIBE AH a> one P. O j All at one post office. l6wi.fi 25 each 110 copies.:. sl.3s each °ocop’s. 140 each ! 20 copies.. 1.-0 each. 30cop’s. 1.00 each j3O copbs 1.10 each , And an extra to esch Gino For Clubs of fifty The -Weekly T-ibune will be sent as an extra copy. »■ nals. wh,ch oewtace Address Amer g,m S3 JournalT arkeibnrg. Chester County, Penn- , P. S *sVinch tS k W «) receive & Road \V**». b* picture,. of Dexier cacjptnsM* *HE PRINTER’S DEVIL. Ink-bespattered, Clothing tattered, ( t . . With the broom in his hand, Leaning, Cleaning, Rubbing, scrubbing, Under every stand. ’Neath the cases, Type and spaces Trampled where they fell— Ry this Pluto Doomed to go to Printers’ batter “hell.’* Running hither, Darting thither, ,Tail of all the Staff, Out and in doors, Doing all chores, bringing telegraph. Runs for copy, Sot dare stop he For his paper hat: All the jour'inen, Save the foremen, Yelling for some “fat. 1 ' “Troves” the galleys: Then he sallies, On Satanic pinion From tne news-room To the sanctum— Fart of his dominion.' And the booses-- Often crt>3B as Bears within their holes— Make the devil * Find his level Stirring up the coals, Washing roller, . Bringing coal or Lugging water pail; Time he waste not At the pa ite pot, Wrapping up the mail. When the weeks done, Then he seeks one Where the greenbacks lay. There to settle For the little i lie fUvil »w» puy. In this spirit There is merit, For from tint or shame; Often gaining. By his training Good and honored ua mo. Legislators, Great debaters, Scientific men, Have arisen From the prison Os the printer’den. I P’OW THY HEART re MEMBERS ME* BY JAMES G. CLARK. I know the heart remembers fiae In all its pain and pleasure — And oft my own goes back to thee, Its last and dearest treasure ; ’Tis time to gaze on stormy seas. And view its wreck of glory there, And thine to feel life's morning breeze Udmixed with all chill despair. [ sometimes call tihe world my home, The world which has bereft me ; Atd dream awiiile th&t joys will come As bright as those that left me ! And then some wounded bird will stray jFrom memory 's track of withered flowers To flutter o'er my future way, And sing the disge of holier hours. The day that died on yonder height Shalllive again to-morrow — v Biit.when the heart goes down in night, It finds no morn frpm sorrow; H . The frown of night, the smile of dawn, Will vainly bloom to gild the sky— ’Tis always night when thou art gone, ’Tis ever day when thou art nigh. Thou may's* net feel that I Lave loved As man no more may love ibee — Until the vows of men have proved, Vain as the clouds above thee; But down the burial vale of years My words will rise with mem ries rife. Like grave-stones wet with useless tears, Wnich cannot call the dead to Life. A boy thirteen years old a few days ago put a false head into a flour barrel, procur ed four quarts of peanuts and poured them over the head so as to make one think he had a barrel!nl, and then took his station on woodland avenue, and cried out, All these pearthWfor ten shillings.” A g roeer passing by whipped out, the money like a streak of lightning, and the boy got away before the trick was discoved. '■ •' -Hi ■■ —.. , ’ tl , A Louisville company, after a loqg series of experiments, have achieved a grand -access in the manufacture of soap from cotton seed oil. This company, says the Courier-Journal, is now supplying Louisville with the best soap offer© iin that market It is free from *ll rcmcid matter, is purely vegetable, and does not con tain any lime, salt or other injurious matter that ruins-the skin and rots J the clothes FOR THE RIGHT—JUSTICE TO ALL : BAIXBRIDGE &A-, JULY 19th, 1873; i Terrible Fall and Heath o t an Aeronaut. , j Special Di%atch to the Chicago Tribune." Dxtsoix, July 9. 1873. Mail reports give some interesting of the fatal accident to the seronant LaMountaiu at lonia, last Friday. His balloon is what as known as a hot - »ir one, &hc( was simply filled with ratified air, and hot gas. The canvas had somewhat of a worn '‘appearance, as if the worse for being filled with lieated air too often. At the summit, where the canvas was sewn together, a block some ten or twelve inches in diameter was fastened, and through a holp in this six guy ropes were se cured, hanging down over the sides of the balloon, being at the bottom some seventeen 1 feet apart, and these were tied to the basket by the Pro fessor himself. There tfbre po ropes running around the room horizon tally to keep the guy ropes fiom slipping or to prevent the whole ‘thing from sliding out between the ropes with a gust of wind. At 3:3f> p. m., the professor step ped into the basket, and the balloon took a shoot up almost perpendicu lar, with the Professor swinging his hat to the crowd, all apparently enjoying the sight. In a few mo ments more, however, the medth of the balloon was observed to wave about two or three times, then to pass between the ropes, careening over oh the side, when the ropes broke out from their fastenings at the and the fall 6ornmehced.— La Mouutain was noticed to be ap parently making some effort to get the basket above him, aud if possi ble to break the fail, but after toe first struggle h * feM so rapidly that n itliing could be di-tiftguished b it the falimu body, Lis hat Qom.no after him about on.: h imired feet or more behind, the old canvas, nearly colapsed, falling down gradually.— The body struck the' ground half a dozen feet from the northwest cor ner of the jail building.. It struck witli such a terrible tlmd that it jar red the ground sot fifty rods around and made ah indention in tha sou l ground eight inches in depfli. There • was senreeley a rone in the whole body not broken into fragments. It was as limp as a rag. There were very few fractures in the skin, except the right foot, the bone of thq right leg driven thiough the bottom of the foot. ... The body, was laid out on a couch, a circle formed, and a pro cession of all who wished to view the remains passed around, Tfie Professor is a brother of the cele brated aeronaut who died two or tbx-pe years ago. This one s name was Edward LaMountain. He was a jeweler by trade, and lived at Brooklyn in this .''tate. He had said just bes re lie went up that he wished to take th©; train for home as soon as possible after coming down, as his wife was very sick. He himself bad not had his clothes off for ten days. There were from ten to twelve thousand people who witnessed this horrible tragedy. He was seen by people four miles from the city at an an 6 le of thirty five degrtts. The best estimates* make the height from wh ch he fed from one' tLousand to fifteen hundred feet. Those who were on the hill back of the town said the strangest sight was to wit ness the people swaying back and forward like a field of wheat moved by the wind* .... Just as life instance canvassers were beginning to get tired after their winter tours aud the rustic population hoped % peace and quiet,' the season of thunder showers set in, and the rural districts swarm with lightning-rod agents, who won't take no for an answer. Cm for Snake Bite. —Take one tablespoonful of gunpowder and salt arid the yellow of an egg. and mix so as to make a plaster, place on a doth and apply to the wound, letting it extend an inch on all sides of the wound. As the p 0:300 is drawn .he plaster Wriliose ite seeking qualities aud when full will fall eff Apply a sew plaster natjl it sticks, which is a sare evidence the poison is all out I Health Hints, Warm bread “packs” the stomach —Don’t eat it. f.tie best and safest tooth Wash is tepid water. Never sit or sleep with cold feet. A mixed diet of animal aud vege table food is the bast; the vegetable portion should predominate Regularity of the tiriie in eating lias munh to do with the profiAi vatinn of health. Do not eat late sup ers. Yfater standing for some time in a room becomes impure, by absorb ing noxious vapors f~om the air. All sleeping rooms should be tho roughly ventilated. The bedding should be often changed and kept well aired. ‘Hay Fever’ may be instantly re lieved by bathing the nostrils and clp-ed'eyelids with spirits of 6am phor arid warm water. W hoever eats “heavy” piecrust* or “soggy” bread, commits a crime against his physicial well-being and must pay the penalty. Thoroughly cleanse the cellar.— Ventilate it from without, summer aud winter! Suffer no decayed veg etables to remain in it. Colds are often caught by stand ing in aft open hall or doorway du ring cold weather. The transition of the cold and warih currents cau ses the trouble. An eminent physician Drinks' t&at more than thirty tiioused deaths are caused annuall by tight lacing. "Wet or damp clothes should be instantly removed. Wuy? Because they rapidly chill the surface of the body, the heart being earned off by evaporation. A Kentucky con-respondent of the N. Y. Times, replies to a m m who wants to know how to free his cab bage from toe a. roagv worm. Tiiir tv year.*’.expur.e ice enables Tne to tell him. le, what is called riere ship Tuff, or snorts, huju a* vve iced to stock wheat, bran wall do as good as the shorts; examine file cabbage before they head; if you see the web of the catterpillar, or holes in the leaves of the bud, put a fable poorilul of the shorts iri the head. If hard rains follow you «mav have forepeat. The cure is effectual. — The worms become mired in the shorts made wet with the clew. The worms seldom attack the cabbage after they are headed.” A farmer and his wife called at a Detroit photograph gallery, last week, to order some photographs of her, and, while the operator was getting ready, the husband gave the wife a little advice as to how she must act: “Fasten your mind on something,” he said, “or else you writ laugh and spile the job. Think about early days, how your father got in jail, and your mother was an, old scoMder, and what you’d have been if I hadn’t pitied you, Jest fasten your mind on thatl” She didn,t have any photograpW taken. ■ Recent Fbench Discovebies. —The following is a translation from La Bien Public An. agriculturist has (discovered, it is said, the means of preserving the grape vine from its most dangerous enemy, the phylloxe ra, a sort of vine fretter or vine grub. It seems by mixing soot with the earth around the. roots of the vine the insect is paralyzed and is killed. Secondly, a discovery curious enough has been made recently. An agriculturist has observed that by watering vegetables and fruit trees with a s drition off sulphate of iron, the most astonishing results are obtained. Beans have gained sixty per. cent on their ordinanr size, and, what is better, their taste is much more Savory. Among fruit trees, the pear tree is most bc-nefitted by'this pro cess of watering. Mcbtabd Plaster. —When you make a mustard* plaster, use no water whatever, bnt mix the mustard with the white of an egg. and re sult be a plaster which will “uiaw" p..rfe--tly, bnt Will ri-t pro duce a blister evssii upon h.Yj t.u an infant, no matter l.o»v long it all wod to remain upon the p«nt- [From the New York Herald] The Fighting Editor ofN‘e\v Orleans. Col. R. Barnwell ifHett, Jr., the surviv. ing duellist, is well-known among the jour* alista off the United States of the now de funct Charleston Mercury, anterior to and during the war. Probably no paper in thj South contributed so niuch to bring on thatfterrible struggle, and few men yielded a more trenchant pen on his side of the line He is a son of ex-Senator Rhett, of South Carolina, and ia about. 40 years of age- Inheriting from his family aud home surroundings the perculiar feellugsof hon or that find redress in the duello code, he has never hesitated tqfiold himself respon sible for all language uttered m his journa listic column or elsewhere, and more than once has been involved in controversies that found settlement only at the muzzle of the pistol. Some of liis brothers have each like-, wise “killed his man” in dffels. Personally Col .Rlretfc is represented to be hfro-toned, gentle and chivalrous—a quiet, low-spoken man, and the last either to court a piarrel or recede from it at the expense of his own honor. A per the suspension of the Mer •• r :Jr ’ * cury he retired to his Alabama plantation, whence he was cafled about a year ago 10 the editorial chair of the New Orleans Picayune. ,„■ ? , A Rare Curiosity. -A remarkable boy was to be seen atilije Nashville depot yesterday; in fact one of the greatest curiosities of the age. He is half white and haif black, not fn the mulatto arid'miscegenation sense, but tile lower iralf of his body is whiter than white folks usually are, while the upper portion is as black as midnight. H:s motfier a <jold black negress, was with him, und they left on th*. Nashville train at seven o’clock last evening. He is bijt three years old, and has already made money out of his peculiarities. Re made several nickles yesterday in a very few minutes. There is a rouud paid), at out three inches in diameter nT-pertfectly- Wtmlii nl. The ol bis head, which is surrounded by little Kinky negro wool.—Wheeling (Yu.) Regi ter Cisxriß Beans DMm to Stock. it.seoms certain that castor beans will kx 1 horses and eat la. Within a. year or tWcj it has been stated in the Fanners’ ‘ lub of New City that if placed in tire paths o£ moles or in tfie holes of gophers, they would ex -terminate these animals. Now it is recorded that a span of horses in N c brashadied witfun twenty-four rs after eating a half handful of cas tor beans divided between .them. Comments on this fact the Prairie Farmer says:—“That, castor beaus injure stock is certain,, and that death has resulted from eating them seenis also euro V. Wrong the earlier acts passed by the Legislature of this Stale, was one attaching severe pen al ries to persons who left castor beans in exposed situations, or who left ffelds of them exposed so that c *ttle could enter ” Our readers who grow tfiesh heaps should, therefore, be careful how they expqse them to stock,' at least until the fact whether they kill is (feffnitely settled, if there is ariy’question about it. A M ACHINE EOR KILLJNG THE CaTEB- FiL'AB —We are told of a ma chine invent© and by some one in Colum bia, Ala., which has beyn used w ith success in Henry and other counties, sa , s the Columbus Sun. Tko object is to destroy the fly which lays the eggS whence are de rived the immense hordes of cater pillars. Tbe fly, it is said, lays a thousand or more eggs these hatch and are multiplied over oyer* again. The machine is very simple — being nothing more than a lantern with eight reflectors and a vessel containing molases or some slic iy substance into which the insects fall and perisi*. A trial cf one of tliese machines was lately ma de. ihe first night, five thousand insect*-of various kinds wer caught, the second, three thou sand; tfee third two thousand; tbe fourth one -thousand, and tne fltth sefificely any—all irad beea killed. A nian to nted ’em. One of these I placed at pt'tJ&r ,• center, w ill neLi trem cskei p*.*. Twin*? • j as gram SS tb«' rikfe ily i# k r *£ «(»' who iidve wit-j IN AiiTiNOK. nessed the operation claim. We give the account as ii reaches us from the river- In Florida recently, large fight woo'd fires woro. used on tn© iiordefe of cotton fields, .hoping thereby §o attract the files arid end their exls tence. Things Worth Knowing. ( Ouri Food.— There is no country wnSre there is so m ic-h dyspepsia-** in America, because our people f>ay so iiUle , attention to food, and esi too mncfi meal for the exercise they take. If one has menial labor,’ fish v x .v, n j 1 i 1 every second day, at least, is requis ite. r oup sets all the glands at work and prepares the stomach tor thle more important function Os digestion and therefore slionld be taken at dinner every day' i’cef broth is to the pld what milk is to the Cookery, properly attended, keeps a man in health. If the stomach is out of order the brain is affected. We should eat mnro fruit, vegeta bles, soup and tikh. Good and well prepared'food beautifies the physi que, the same as good, ana well di rected education beautifies the mind Wrinkles are produced by Want of the varioty of so id. The man who does rrtVfc use his brain to seleot and prepare his food is . not above the brutes, which take it in; the raw state. —Home and Hearth. Indians as Israelites A correspondent of the Flireno ogical Journal, writing from the South, gives the following state linent: -Among the joints of resemblance which seem to give plausibility io the theory that the American In dians are diescen dents of a remnant of the lost ribes of Israel is a custom of theirs, agreeing iu its main fea^ viro d-.«««>IV in the book of Leviticus! According to the Indian usage, the nearest of kin hiad a right th slay the murderer when ever he found him during the inter val that elapsed from the time the • f* 'i i.* • t*t if** i deed was done till the green-corn festival, but if the murdeier eluded his pursuers up to that' time, and then 'effected an entrance into the sacred circle of the dancers, lie was! safe from the “avenger qf blood.” I Tins “avenger” had it also in his power to gnyittbe murderer.a' res pite. An old white settler, jylio liv ed in this country before the Indians left, tells a story of one who was thus rc Q p tied for a fortnight, at the end of which time he was to meet thg avenger of blood at ft designa t and spot to be put to de tli. Every day during the interval the doom ed man approachpd the rendiizvoiis r n*.» - <•« and sang his dentil song, recapitu lating his deed? of prowess,and hi? immortality of glory. At § o’clock on the iaiy spring moaning of the appointed day the victim, and the executioner appeared under the shining green leaves of ./he beech 1 in the heart of the dewy forest glade The white hunter had concealed himself near, and looked pn eagerly half expecting to the v'etim sue for mercy, or the stern no— cnitoner relent from his purpose bus hot he first placed himself at the right distance,- erpesed Ij's ai ms on his breat, and looked calmny in the face of the avenger, Who* coolly taking aim, shot him through the heart. In and In Raer mxo.—Purirg a discussion of this subject in England, not long since, it was asserted that tfce taofi successful lines of "boft- Homs were (hose in. which one ani mal was the sire of 'he sire and of the dam also- ihjta making tjbe parents half brother and sfrter by the same sire oat of afferent dams. This system ©threading had produc ed some of the fbaVet cattle hi the country. It waa adsf said that where ca £le were Closely in-bred end pre sv/fed thefr eO'S'r’u'ion, they had & ■ibrtmwty 't* save pc: baps' © whiter. r » " T* ndf - ')£& iWtjfa fobidden in po ll it* woigtft •Jobo«|pse it isn't loud NO I