ee EDWARD WHELAN] A WEEKLY J( ek ee (AL OF POL CF Er I ay ees ¢ Grami MIN ER. CT. TICS, LITERATURE AND NEWS. ———— ae : i wot. Teen as cn ree cae This ic trne Liberty mhenw Free—har ‘ ; : <A arcumrn — Chis is tru Liberty, when Free-born Mlen, having to advise the Public, man speak free.——eurrpies. [EDITOR ann PUBLISHER CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLA ND, MONDAY, AUGUST 16, 1858. RARE .CHANCE. A dosirable Freshold Estate for Salo by Public Auction. HE Subscriber is authorised to sell a beautiful and valuable FREE- HILD PROPERTY, situated on the New Bedeque Road, within 12 milesof the city. It contains about 75 acres of excellent Land, 30 of which are under cultivation, the remainder is covered with a heavy growth of Hard and Softwood. It has a frontage of 27 chains, 50 links on the main road. There is an excellent COTTAGE thereon, 36 x 48 fect, nearly new, and finisked in a superior style. It has 4 rooms on the first floor, and 5 on the second, with kitchen, pantry and servunt’s room This Cottage is well adapted for the residence of a private gentle- man, having cost £600 for erection. There are also a Barn and Stabling on the premise Thea above ' DAY the 7th SEPTEMBER next, at 1 o clock, on the premises. Terus—25 per cent. to be paid down; the remainder, bearing interest at 6 per cent., to be paid in two equal instalments within two years. The Furniture, consisting of Parlor, Drawing Room, and Bed Room, in Mahogany ead Rosewool,—KITCHEN UTENSILS, &c, togethe with two very beautiful MARBLE MANTELPIECES will be sold on he premises at the same time. Terms for the Furniture made known at the time of sale. i" Sale Positive and Unreserved. August 2, 1858, BENJ. DAVIES, Auctioneer. Sait, Flour, Corn-meal & Grocories. an USHELS Liverpool SALT, 2500 B 200 Barrels extra Canada FLOUR 100 Barrels CORN-MEAL 160 Bags do. And a choice assortment of Family GROCERIES, just reecived - and for sale low for eash only, at SELL’S PROVISION STORE, Market-square. Charlottetown. June 14, 1853. om Fricks. - ~ 2 re BRICKS for sale, on approved joint 7O a 80.000 Notes of Iland, p vais from thre to nine m June 14, 1353. 2m J. P. BEETE thampaigne Cider. B” ('TLED CHAMPAIGNE CIDER for sale at the CASH Drug Score of r 2 Ch. Town, June 14, 1858. Isl. Grain, Grain. a highest price given for BARLEY and OATS at Colos’s Brewery and Distillery. Constantly on hand at prices cheaper than can be pur- chased in the Market, the best of Rum, Brandy, Gin, Whis-| key, and a superior article of old Malt Whiskey. Also -- X, XX, and XXX Ale. Ch. Town, Feb. 16, 1857. Silk Hat Manufactory. THULE subscriber, grateful to his friends for past favers in| the Hat and Clothes Cleaning Business, now informs them that he has also commenc cd the m riking * Silk Hats, and is prepare | to eC. rentiem n’s, Ladies* and ildren’s Hats made to order in any style, and : ai i at such prie-s as eannot. fail to give satisfaction. He wil <eeute orders in the above line. Get . attend the Siturdays’ nfarket with a supply of Hats prior to | 1 his removing to the City. re Uld ilats and Clothes cleaned and renevated on im- proved principles. Agent—Mr. John Williams, Market Square, where 2 supply will be constantly kept. JOHN HOBBs. J ] ; *¥. 08 FQ 9 Charlottetown Royalty, April 26, 1858 2m ee — For Sale, PHVUAT valuable Leasehold Property, situate in Grand Tracadic, nine acres, with a valuable Marsh, cutting about six tons ol Hay, or ther-abouts; Lease for 909 years. Atso—Fiftr acres of Commons, wh the above during the term of the lease. [he whole fronting on the entrance of Tracadie Harbour, | and the rear bounded by the Winter River, which makes it a valuable situation for business, vessels being able to load both at front and rear. Sixty acres are now under tillage. Building stuff, longers and firewood in great abundance on the land. [t is also eontiguous to Cod, Herring, Salinon, or Gasperaux fishing grounds. Also a Dwelling house 52 * 22, With good cellar and ebimneys, and out-! os being now io excellent order. Rent £10 2s. Gd. per annum. Possession can be given at any time from this di further particulars apply to Hon. Cartes Youna, Charlotte- town, or Mr. Rexatp McDonatp on the premises. March 29, 1858. To Lot, and Immediate Possession Given, HE STORE in the west end of Graften Street, lately occupied by yuildin clearings the subscriber, with two WAREROOMS, one 29 by 20, the other | t r 40 by 25 feet, attached to it. Also the western teneme nt of the House } immediately below the Store, containing four well finished rooms. For further particu!ars apply to the subscriber on the ae sees t 7 ; M. é d PUN. June 21, 1853. an ——— Valuable F'arm. OR SALE, and immediate possession given, 60 acres of i} LAND. north side of Lot No. 44, East Point, the pro- perty of Ronald McDonald, jun., Tulloch, and now i posses- sion of Ronald MeDonald, Esq., his father, who is authorised to sell the sarae ; and who will extend a good bona fide title of it by reference to the Hon. Charles Young, Attorney-at-Law, Charlottetown. Timo will be given for one-half of the pur- chase money : Big Bush, April 26, 1857. 8. McDONALD. | Saddle, Harness, Collar and Trunk-making ESTABLISHMENT. FNUE eubseriber respectfully intimates to the public generally that he has commenced business in the above line in the house. on the corner of Queen and Sydney-streets, near the store « f the Hon. Daniel Brenan, where he will kee p for sale a large assortment ol GIG, CARRIAGE AND CART HARNESS; SADDLE:, BRIDLES, COLLARS, WHIPS, TRUNKS, &c. All orders for any article connected with the trade will be punctaally attended to. He is also prepared to trim Sleighs, Gigs and Carriages in asuperiorsiyle. The subseriber feels confident he can give satisfaction to those who may favor bim with their patronage, from bis having had a long experi¢iice in the business both in the Old Country and in this Taland. JOHN BOWERS. Charlottetown, June 7, 1858. N. B—A liberal discount will be allowed to country wholesale dealers. 8m. : Removal. es Subseriber has removed to the new building on the site of his old stand in Water Street, where he offers for sale, Chests and half Chests TEA, barrels of FLOUR and MEA L, Kegs and Boxes of Fig and Fiat TOBACCO. GEO. F. C. LOWDEN. ({sl 2m.) - Charlottetown, August 2, 1853. ears’ 3. STANFIELD & LORD beg to inform the Farm rs of Prinee Edward Island, that after this date and Dressing Cloth, having spared no expense in fitting up. + . . ° . 4 iy ane 22euLre ae The services of Mr. Lippincoit, of Pictou, being secured as manager, they guarantee to finish work in Inanner, on the usual terms. Mr. H. Causeck, of Sydney Street, Charlottetown, receive Cloth, and attend to its being forwarded with despaten. Tryon, July 27. tf ithle Property will be SOLD AT AUCTION, on TUES- ' on Lot 35. containing one hundred and sixty- } h cannot be taken from } will winter to let me go away, and he refused 5 I once and be caught me and brought me back, and lic ked me; Dawson a llicked me several times ; the first time 1 went there, before | himg | age | Gleanings from late Papers. AAAS ANe CHILNA. | Tue Pxesscre veox “tux Dracgoy Tarone”’—Arrempr to Destroy Hona Kona py Frre.—We have received advices from Hong Kong to May 22. The principal items of lowing extracts from the Overland Friend of China :— “Our intelligence from that part of China to which all eyes are now directed—the Gulf of Pecheli—eomes up to the 29th April. The Russian steamer America, with Admiral Count Putiatine on board, anchored off the Peibo ‘on the morning of the 14th ult., followed, a few hours | afterwards, by her Majesty’s steam-ship Furious and ganboat Leven. On board the Furious were the Karl of Elgin and Kxeellency Mr. Reed, reached the anchorage on the 16th }and on the 23rd, a week afterwards, his [mnperial Majesty’s |ship Audaciouse, with his Excellency Baron Gros. Next day the squadron was joined by the Calcufta, bearing | Admiral Seymour’s flag ; and, finally, on the 25th, Admiral Rigault de Genouilly made his appearance in his Lmperial Majesty’s ship Nemesis. Before the French admiral arrived, | viz., on the 24th, the four ambassadors joined in a letter, or jeach sent letters of similar import to the court’ of Pekin. | [be exact tenor of this letter cr letters has not transpired ; | but itis reasonable to believe that, as reported, a demand Was mac . a : : é ade for the appointment of an envoy of equal rank, with full 7. 1 powers 5 i, indee i, audience at the drag n throne tself were not peremptorily required. Six days were given for an answer. The period expired on the 30ih aluimo, the day after the Sa upson left. On the afternoon of the 28th, } . ® ° r ‘ . letters were received in which Tao, or Tan, Govertor-Gene- }ral of the province, was named as the ambassador. The etters being informally addressed, were returned, Dut were t for again by the 80th. The fact of the Simpson having taken up two gunboats of lightest draft aud 1350 sappers, lends confirmation to the opinion that fort destrue- tion is contemplated, The rebel section of the community of China are again making headway, and creating unnecessary . e . 1 ars for the season’s tea crop. Adviecs from home, and the effect they have on certain parties at Shnanghae, t \ c rumours obtainable from disturbed distriets Lie troops remain in @ ol he: tn, and nm fire hi Spreits itv’ 6X- ag ae ' my “ain Rae been al ' 'nectation of being sent north. The rain has been alinost incessant. Eve rything remains q iiet, and the rumours of! . . ? } | catherings of braves” for an attuck on the allied forces j ’ 1. | ‘ . ‘ ‘* have died away. ‘The soldiers have been amusing them- . eo : . a my 5 eet selves with horse-racing and theatricals, Che LwOOPp-snips 2 a . officers, i} ‘ . . . _s ° Y ' Sydney and Sesostris arrived on the Orch from Caleutta, w ~ Native Infantry, and 4 officers, 355 men, and 6t ea:np-'o!- | owers of the 47th Bengal Native Infantry ; and the Tubal ‘ain on the 12th, with an additional 450 Sepoys. The i'rench auxiliary steam transport Gironde bas brought oo ¥ jsome 900 marine infantry ; and two other transports, La | Suone and Pregent, with the steam corvette La Place, are | shorily expected. ‘These must prove a welcome addition to the allied forees in China waters. [In Hong Kong attempts have been made by incendiaries to fire the Tai-ping-shan, or upper portion of the Chinese town; but happily they proved u isnecessful, and four out of teu men engaged in them have been apprehended, CENTRAL INDIA. Gwattor.—The Maharajah of Gwalior is now a fugitive it Agra. The main body of the Calpee fugitives, with Tantia Toppe, the Ranee of Jhansi, and the Nawab of Binda, fled first to Indoorkeo, where they were joined by Kooer Dowlut Singh and Rahim Ali, with about 1,500 men and a ia few light guns; they then decided to march on Gwaltor, which they did rapidly, so as to allow Scindia but little ti for preparation. They reached Gwalior on the Ist of Ja their numbers are believed to have been about 5,000 infantry] and 800 eavalry, with a few small guns. Seindia went out | | to the cantonments to oppose tncm with L000 cavalry, 2 OUD ‘infantry, and 30 guas. No sooner, however, had the action commenced than one of Scindia’s cavalry regiments went over to the enemy ; a large proportion of the rest of his army fol- ? ‘inost gallantly, and brought off Scindia safely from the field, | losing. however, 200 of their owa n with his Dewan, Dinker Row, j fed via Dolphore, to Agra, whic ‘June. The family of the Mabarajat palace is plundered, and the fert is said t rebels. The bulk of the Calpee force ior. Sir Hugh Rose will direct operations. Brigadier Smith’s brigade will co-operate from Seepree, and a demon- e 30 of@is sirdars, swur, but his istration is to be made from Agra in the direction of Dhol- | pe re. The rebels are said to have procaine d the Nena as i . on - @ z . a Ba Peishwa, and Tuntia Topee as chiet uader him. The prison ers at Gwaltor had been released. | : Be a Sa Wire Staves 1x New Yorw —The breaking up of the i devils den in New York, kept by one Peter Dawson, which ed in the papers, Shows a more degrading slavery has been notic and miserable licentiousuess thas can be found inall the South, And it is asserted that hellsin that city ; though, perhaps, few in Which the proprietors there are many more of these literal have yet becume so Wealthy. : Forty-eich! persons were taken out of tl y and the rest vrine:pally sailors, and all but The girls in this establishment were fs ee and when they ran away, Were arrested Dawson’s them young giris, one of them foreigners. never allowed to goout, : lon a charge of larceny, and eompeiled tocome back. | wife appeared in Court, dressed elegantly, in the extreme of lfashion. All the sailors were discharged, but the musicians, four in number, who performed for 75 cents a night, and the females were- held for examination. The testimony of one of the females. a pretty and intelligent | sirlof 18 vears of age, among other things, stated the following : Po signed an affidavit that | made this morning ine if have lived with Peter Dawson 11 months ; ebout 12 girls were | living there priur to the officers coming there last night; j = | 3 ‘| hoid of me and kicked me uo stairs : intelligence by this arrival are thus summed up in the fol- | however, are more likely to check tea export than all the} ’ “ m * ° | There has been vo change in the stafeof affiirs at Canton. ‘ : , ‘ ’ . 380 men, and 120 camp-followers af the Goth | lowed the example, and the remainder fled precipitately, with | the exception of the Maharajah’s body guard, who fought | r. The Maharajah, | on the 2ud of | inthe hands of the |* 1 : Sad ched on Gwa- | iis den: thirteen of it is true 5 | went to the Island, he licked me and kicked me with his boots . : | Inthe face ; | have not asked him to let me leave the the house SIS SNIN ISIN NAIR IS LEIS AS LN LN LOL ELL AL ALLL LLM te tre te | since coming fromthe Island. for | knew what I would get ; it is not long since he made me sleep with a black man: he told me |* Any man is good enough so long as you get the money ;’ it is /not long ago since I tried to get out of the front d bar-keepers watched me and would not let me 20; _ Vatur or Suave Trees.—Very few owners of real estate In country towns seem to have any idea even of the commercial value of shade trees. One piece of ground, perhaps not very ‘eligibly located, commands a high price, while another, in a far better position, is not wanted scarcely at any rate, especially oor, but the | by those who have the means to make a considerable investinen’, Dawson took Simply because there are no attractive shade trees—nothing to [ want to go back to my | make a home pleasant out of doors. Suppose every inland town father and mother, and not to stay ; [ have said that [ did not| in the United States should appropriate the smal! sum of one ) Want to go away ; so that [ would not get a licking.’ | | the frethow very litle can be done hundred dollars annually, to be invested in this way—in beau- Among other lessons which this terrible outrage teaches, is tifying and enriching the place—what a change ten or twenty even in this Christian land | years would produce! ‘fake away the magnificent elins and of liberfy for those who have not the energy and intelligence to other beautiful shade trees from New Haven, Norwich and Protect themselves, Nearly all the work to be effective must| other New England towne, and you would reduce the value of be done by the individual alone, lhe New York Express saye:— ‘ Hundreds of just such slave-pens are crowded withina radius (of halfa mile of the City Hall. } i | } | real estate, at once, at least 25 per cent. We call attention now to the subject, because shade trees are now appreciated. Those, therefore, who realize how much pleasure they are de- Hows Ceni ats nsel » : ol sa - ne ¥ ° Hari of Big + cane aft aieeia edad ' y ard and Cenire streets, | nving themselves, will please remember at the proper time, in esuite. The United States steam-ship Mississippi, with his|- prison-houses of wretched women are known to, and | the fall or spring, to give this matter their prompt at'ention. | protected by the police; and yet we wonder at the increase of | Reader, man or oman (we say woman, for we have recently /crime, pauperism, and disease. We wonder that, last night, | police force in seventh avenue; we marvel thata band of negro } burglars should have been discovered, at the same time, ina | Thomas street rookery ; that jewellery and rich clothing were ‘there seized, and that a young white girl of seventeen was | found to be the paramour of the chief robber of the gang. Well! /by and by there will be an awakening of the good public ?’ | Bayard Taylor is writing letters from Greece to the New | York Tribune. In arecent letter from Athens, he concludes with the following beautiful passage :— ‘* Mnough of dry statement. Let me not lose the pensive sweetness and sadness of this last evening in Athens. The sun is siuking in clear saffron light beyond the pass of Daphne, and a purple flash plays all along the high, barren sides of Hymettus, Before me rises the Acropolis, with its erown of beauiy, the Parthenon on whose snowy fronts the sunsets of two tOusand years have left their golden stain. In the listance is the musical AY scan, dancing with light-whispering |waves to “fill the rock-hewn sarcophagus of Themistocles, Piato’s olives send a silver shimmer through the dusk that is creeping’ over the Attic plain. Many an evening have | melodious wave in the long ou line of the immortal mountains —every scarred marb'e in the auzust piles of ruin—every blood-red anemone on the banks of the Llissus, and every asphodel that blossoms on the hill of Colonos—I know them and they know me, Not as a curious stranger shall I leave Athens ; uet as a traveller, eager for new scenes; but with the regret of one who knows and loves the sacred soil, to whom it has been at once a sanctuary and a home,” { —_——-- $$$ —_-____-- —— Rerorntres — \n exchange thus describes that verv-useful, Pontmuch dirred portion of the communtty —withont whose ard i} any a Pilic man would have been compelled to © tarry at Jericho till ges beard was growg’’—the reporters :— |. Saar Metay a creat man ‘s now basking in the sunshine of rane uP ne FOR y bestowed on him by the prolific genins of some | reporter? How many stuprd orations have been wade brilliant = ilow manyuwatd: ring, pointhes, objectiess speeches put in form and rendered at least readable by the unknown reporter ? riow many a disheartened speaker, who was conscious the night befo-e of a failure, before a tain, cold, and spiriidess audience. awakes delightediy to learn that ne addressed an overwhelning issenblage of his enthusiastic appreciating fellow eitizens—to tind his speech sparking with ‘cheers, bre king out into ‘immense spplause,’ and concluding amid-t the ¢ wildest s* excitement? ds et cas Srvogedt @asx oF Drvoxce.—A suit for divorce is now ‘in the Ohio Mourts between a man and his wile, who are | said to have lived tozether very happily for a year at the i close of whigh a child was born, and beeame the cause of do- | Ity that will end ia their separation, the dissen- mestic di sion being a about an innoceat name given to an innocent infamt. The wife intimated to the bus!and that she would like to @ali the child Athol. At this the liege lord objected, f her flames before marriage ; she urged ; ept; he grew obstinate, and said she need his resolution by her tears—he was marbie asinvolved. She intimated that there was 1 she would not object; he comprehended hence an application for divorce. A Ber perwoen Frexciven.—On Saturday, a great din- ner w8 given in one of the French ‘hotels of our city to celebrae thé vietory of a lucky Frenchman, who had suc- ceeded in eating thirty pigeons in thirty successe days, [t seems, although many persons are not aware of it, that this is a great feat, and that it wants-an ostrich stomach to perform it, as pigeon meat is very indigestible. Whatever |may be the case, the victor’ says he is ready to take up the | same bet again fof any amount.—lV. Y. Herald, llow to stop Bioop.—Take the fine dust of tea, or the | scrapings of the insid: of tanned leath r, and bind it close lupon the wowed, and the blood will soon cease to flow. These articles are at all times aeces-ible and easy to be ob- ‘tained. After théblood has eeased to flow, laudanum may be advantageously applied to the wound, Due regard to lthese instructious will save agitation of the mind, and run- ining for the gurgeon, who would probably make no better to prescription, i present. —_—_—_—_-_——_——_---— - ¢ Boeo@m >— | | To curs tus Apepetire ror Tosacco.—A clergyman who ‘for many years was addicted to the chewing and smoking of |tubacco, but who has entirely abstai lover thirty years, communicates to the Independént the ‘method of cure which he adopted. We copy it, hoping it | will prove effectual in many other cases : | evil appetite craved indulgence, I resorted immediately to fresh-drawn water. Of this I drank what I desired, and ‘then continued to hold water in my mouth, throwing out ang (taking in successive mouthfuls, until the craving ceased. By a faithful adherence to this practice for about a month, [ ‘was cured; and from that time to this 1 have been as free | from any appetite for tobacco as a nursing infant. I loath ‘the use of the weed in every form, far more than I did before | the | | contracted habits of indulgence.” |house is shut up at 12 o’clock ; the girls don’t get drunk, but | @— Ses | the people that come in are furnished at two bars ; had newt fichting there two or three times; there are 13 bedrooms besides | > . 1 . ” = 6 ie ees ee > . } — id: | don’t know heir NEW ? TON wi ady ] Dawson and his wife's; he has only one chi'd, he EW } at TRYON will be ready for Dyeing, Fulling Daws j | _ their NEW MILLat TRYO? J . how I came to go there, [ had no home ; I previously lived at black : Wee 7" vy five cirla whe Duich Henry’s, 94 Cherry street; he had only five girls when the best possible I was there; | was never ina place like that before. Cross-examined by ex-Judge Philips —{ asked Dawson las t,to ran) @WaVy A Verdant Youth went to church, on Sunday night, in Boston. Coming out, a young lady —mourning dress—Grecian face— eyes &c.—drodped ber handkerehief, which verd re- turned. She thanked hin, and said the sermon had aiiccted her so that she did not know what she was about. ‘They then k a sentimental walk,aad he lefi her at the door of a fasthion- able residence. Next morsing verdant found himself minus his pocket-book and $27. Savs the sermon aud adventure will do d.—New Bedford Mercury. } | outemplated this illustrious landscape, but it was never so! rick that may be one living 1 1 . ’ . ~ 5 lovely as now, when I look upon it for the last time. Every | moans uncommon) nei : ‘ seen three of the finest elms that we ever beheld, which were | thieves and robbers were s8 bold as to unite in attacking a | planted by a noble woman nearly one hundred years ago,) who- ever you are, we mean you—N Y. Independent. Wacxine ayo Pure Atr.—Anaximines taught that air ia mind. Some one else says air is the hidden food of life. Plu- tarch seems to incline to Ansximines’ opinion, remarking that perhaps the reason why there is a sympathy of feeling on various subjects arises from breathing the same air. Airis an exaltation of all the minerals of the globe ; the most elaborately finished of all the works of the Creator—the rock of ages disin- trigated and fitted for the life of man. All classes of men affirm this. Sydney Smith says to the public speakers thaf if they would walk twelve miles before speaking, they would never break down. In English universities, boat races, horseback rides, and ten mile walks, are a part of the educational meals for physical developement. Plato says a walk in the open eir will almost cure a guilty conscience.— Emerson. +e Rats Everywarre.—Rats feed and labour in the dark, they shun the approach of man. If we enter a barn or granary, where hundreds are living, we shall not observe any unless we distur) them in their hiding places. If we go to mass within (a thing by no we shall not see one; or if we dive intoa cellar that may be perfecily infested, the result is the same— unless, perchance, a strange one may scud across for a more safe retreat. Hence it is that men seldom think of rats, he. cause they rarely see them ; but if rats could be made by any means to live on the surface of the earth instead of in holes and corners, and feed and run about the streets and fields in the open day, like dogs and sheep, the whole nation would be horror-stricken ; and ultimately there would vot be a man. woman, or child but would have a dog, stick, or gun to effect their destruction wherever they met with them, + Poe es Tareravtan Venss.—The Paris correspondent of Porter's Spirit is responsitle for the following :— “ It is astonishing how foreigners are imposed on by some of our wags. The other day L weit to see a little French- man just arrived, who had baen taking English lessons, as he informed me, on the voyage, from a yellow passenger. He complained much of the diffi-altics of cur grammar, especially the Irregular verbs. ‘ For instance,’ said he, ‘ ze verb to ge. Did you ever see such verb?’ And with the utmost gravity he read froin a sheet of paper, ‘ L zo, thoa clearest, he cuts stick, we make tracks, ye or you absquatalate, they vamose the ranch,’ ” er GD OH —— Ir Johnson, in the fullness of his yearsand knowledge, was heard to say, ‘*! never take upa vewspaper without finding something | would have deemed it a loss not to have seen ; never without deriving from it inst) action and amusement.” ———_—_ — + 20m - —————-——- Tue Paintixna Orrice.—An observing and discriminating writer says the printing office bas proved a better college to inany a boy, has graduated more useful and consmenons mem- bers of society, bas brought more intellect oul end turned it mto practical, useful channel, awakened more minds, genera‘ed more active and elevated thought, than many of the colleges of the country. A boy who commences in such a school as the printing office will have bis talents and ideas brought out ; and if he is a careful observer, experience in his profession wil! cor - tribute more toward an edacation than can be obtained in almost ny other manner. Conceited papas and aristocratic mamas should, however, never think of placing their promising youthe at the printing business. [t is a tmiserable dusiness for such, and, besides, members of the profession are very frequently obliged to work. ‘—-eo +--— ‘ Nary Pract.”—Tell me, ye winged winds that round my | | | | | } | pathway roar, do you not know sone qmet epet where hoops are worn no more? Some lone and silent dell, some isiand or some cave, where women can walk three abreast upon the vi'- lage pave? The loud wind hissed around my face, and answered, ‘ nary place.” ~~~. « wom eo —--——_ -——__ —- Berecranty. Woirrmewasu.—Take half a bushel of nice ur- siacked lime, slack it with boiling water, cevering it duting the process to keep inthe steam Strain the liquid through a fine seive or strainer, and add to it a peck of clean salt, previously wel] dissolved in warm wester; three pounds of ground rice, boiled to a thin pasie, and stirred in boiling het; haifa pound of powdered Spanish whiting; and a pound of clean glue, which has been previously dissolved by first sounking it well, and let it stand fora few days, covered from the dirt. It should be put on quite hot ; for this purpose it can be kept in a kettle (ona portable furnece. It 18 said that about one pint of this mixture will cover a square yard upon the outside of a house, tained from the weed for! if properly applied. Brushes more or less small may be used, according to the neatness of the job required, —--—-— - « w»e@e- - Tue Raney Famity.—The “ Rarey family” consists of | {had a deep well of very cool water, and whenever the | four brothers, who have been raised from boyhood in Frank- lin county, Ohio. ‘Their father was of German descent, a ‘farmer and raiser of stock, end al! the boys were brought up on the farm, and they have followed that pursuit more or less to the present time. They are all, however, in the pos- session of the art of “ horse-taming,” as many a redeemed horse in this and the adjoining States would testify, if they were to meet in class meeting and give their experieuce. The oldest is William H., who made the first discovery of ithe principles in the nature of the horse that led to the per - ‘fection of the system which is now astonishing the world. 'The second is Charles W., who is now teaching the syste: in the western part of this State. The third is Frederick, who now lives on his farm, about two miles from this place. The fourth and youngest is John S,, who, together with his oldest brother, Wm. H., bas devoted his life to the study of mental philosophy of the horse, and is now teaching the nobility of Europe the results of bis life-long experience,— | Cincinnati Commercial. Sn sles Ca has PO | | j ‘