The state Republican. (Eugene City, Or.) 1862-1863, July 19, 1862, Image 1

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STATE
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(HAN
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1 NO
DEVOTED TO THE POLITICAL AND GENERAL INTERESTS OP THE PEOPLE
VOL. I.
EUGENE CITY, OPvEGON, JULY 19, 1SG2.
NO. 27;
V-1 AL
i
1'
THE STATE REPUBLICAN.
Published every Saturday by
H. SHAW & CO.
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Ho papers discuutiuucd until all arrearages are
Rates of Advertising.
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Kacli additional insertion, ..... 60
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six months, per square, 7 00
. " three months, " 5 00
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latin., in .titntm of deceased Dersons. which
bare to be sworn. M, one square, four insertions, 5 00
All communications to this office should be addressed to
11. S11AW uo., iutfene L-uy, uri-gou
To Advertisers. Business men throughout Oregon and
California will lind it greatly to their advantage to adver
tise in the Stats IUi-lulicax.
For the RHtsucAX.
ODE TO WASHINGTON.
t is unto that power great,
Vhose will i destiny and fate
Whose every whject must succeed
Thouge cfties IjIhzc and nations bleed,
Ve meekly bow with humble heart,
And ewi-ii event view as a part
Of Unit endless, wondrous plan,
Oar i'uther, God, ordained for num.
Hut when we peer back on the past.
Full through the gloom that time bus cast,
The mui key shadows but disclose
A Held where man 'gainst man arose.
Oil wrath and vengeance had the sway,
And force and evil gaiued the day ;
And justice, freedom and the right
lias sunk in blood and hopeless night.
And many heroes in the cause
Of so orduiniug human laws
That they should rest upon the right,
Instead of only force or might ;
We see have suffered all the paius
Of dungeous, death, or gulling chains,
Because the truth they dared proclaim
The stolid taught, a sense of shame,
But why imposed is such a task!
None should dare, distrusting, ask.;
lint nobly, like our champion,
The peerless hero Washington
Should hare the arm unto that foe,
Aud let each traitor villain know
" lriiat still he lives, and in thecuusa
(Of 'equal justice, equal laws.
For suchlike brave example given,
.Man owes a greater debt to heaven,
Which does an obligation make
'(That none but vilest traitors break;
Itccause the rights for which he fought,
JCadh roan of reason on earth ought,
Aud every good man will defend,
JLnd at all hazards, to the end.
Each patriot now should take his stand,
It need be, with his sword in hand.
It is as victorious now to fight
For justice, freedom and fur right,
As when our fathers' blood was spilt,
.And freedom's noble temple built,
And flag of liberty unfurled
A hope snd beacon to the world.
Kv'n resolution God upholds
Vhcn'er their progresV plain unfolds
Those sacred fcuturosof his plan
The rights that nature gives toman,
As when our fathers bravely fought,
And on through bKod and freedom sought ;
And so 'tis now, each patriot son
.Defends the cause of Washington.
And sure as treason, nnw arrayed,
Does dare to draw the battle blade,
A revolution back to force,
The friends of freedom to eoerce;
Is vilely wrong not God nor man
Will justiry such fiendish clan:
But freedom's csus. it will succeed.
Though cities blaie and natious bleed.
Feb. S2d, 1861.
m
TUB HOMESTEAD BILL.
The following is a correct copy of tha Home
Mead Bill as passed by both Houses ot Congress,
and signed by the President :
Ah Act to Secure Homesteads to Actual Settlers
on the Public Domain, and to Provide a Boun
ty for Soldiers in lieu of Grants of the Pub
lic Lands.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of
Represents ives of the United States of Ameri
ca, in Congress assembled: That any person
who is the head of a family, or who has arrived
at the age of twenty-one years, and is a citizen
of the United Stales, or who shall have filed his
declaration of intention to become such, as re
quired by thu naturalization laws of the United
States, and who has never borne arms against
the United States Government, or given aid and
comfort to its enemies, shall, from and after the
l.t of January, 1803, bo entitled to one quarter
section, or a less quantity, of unappropriated
public lands, upon which said person may have
filed a pre-emption claim, or which may, at the
time the application is made, be subject to pre
emption at 1 25, or less, per acre; or eighty
acres or less of such unappropriated lands, at
12 50, per acre, to be located in a body, in con
formity to the legal subdivisions of the public
lands, and after the same shall have been sur
veyed ; provided, that any person owning and
residing on land may, undur the provision of
this Act, enter other land lying contiguous to his
er her said land, which shall not, witn the land
so owned and occupied, exceed in the aggregate
160 acres.
Sec? 2. And be it further enacted, That the
persou pr'ying for the benefit of this At shall,
upon application to the Register of the Land Of
(ice in which she or he is about to make such en
try, make ufHJavit before the said Register or
Receiver that he or she is the head of a family,
or is twenty-one or more years of age, or shall
have performed service in the army of the Uni
ted States, and that he has never borne arms
against the Government of the United Stales or
given aid and comfort to its enemies, and that
such application is made for his or her exclusive
use and benefit, and that said entry is made for
the purpose of actual settlement and cultivation,
and not either directly or indirectly for .the. use
or benefit of and other person or persons whom
soever ; and upon filing the said nffidavit with
the Register or Receiver, and on payment! f $10
ho or she shall thereupon be permitted to enter
the quantity of land specified ; provided, howev
er, that no certificate shall he given or pntent
issued therefor until the, expiration of five years
from the date of such entry ; and if, nt the expi
ration of such time, or at any time, within two
years thereafter, the person making such entry,
or it he be dead, his widow ; or in caso of her
death, hiu heirs or devisee ; or in case of a will
ow making such entry, her heirs or devisee, in
caso of her death shall prove by two credible
witnesses that he, she, or they, have resided upon
or cultivated the same for the term of five years
immediately succeeding the time of films; the nf
fidavit aforesaid, aud shall make nffidavit that no
part of said hind has been alienated, ami that he
has borne true allegiance to the Government of
the United States ; then, in such case, he, he or
they, if at that time a citizen of the tinted
States, shall imj entitled to n patent, ns in other
cases provided for by law : And provided, fur
ther, That in caso of tho death of both father and
mother, leaving nn infant child, or children un
der twenty one years of age, the right and fee
shall enure to the benefit of said infant child or
children ; and the executor, administrator, or
guardian may, at any tune within two years after
the dcatii of the surviving parent, and in accord
ance with the laws of the Stato in which such
children for the time being havo their domieil.
sell said lands for the benefit of said infant, but
for n -other purpose; and the purchaser shall
acqnrre the absolute title by the purchase, and
be entitled to a patent from the United States,
on payment of the office fees and sum of money
herein specified.
Sec. 3. And bo it further enacted, That the
Register of tho Land Oflice shall noto nil such
applications on the tract books and plats of his
office, and keep a register of all such entries,
and make a return thereof to the General Land
Office, together with the pro-'f upon which they
have been founded.
See. 4. And be it further enacted, That no
lands acquired under the provisions of this Act
shall iff any event become liable to tho satisfac
tion of any debt or debts contracted prior to
tho issuing of tho patent therefor.
See. 5. And bo it further enacted, That if, at
any time nfler the filing of the affidavit, as re
qured in tho section of this Act, nnd before the
expiration of the five years aforesaid, it shall be
proven, niter due notice to the settler, to the sat
isfaction of the Register of the Land Office, thai
the person having tiled such nffidavit shall h ive
actually changed his or Hr residence, or nban
doned the said land, shall have ceased to occupy
said land more than six months at any time, then
and in that event tho land so entered shall revert
to the Government.
Sec. 6. And be it further enacted, that no In
dividual shall bo allowed to acquire title to
more than one quarter section under the provis
ions of this act ; nnd that the Commissioner tf
tho General Land Office is hcrebv required to
prepare nnd issue such rules nnd regulations,
consistent with this Act, as shall bo necessary
and proper to carry its provisions into ellect ;
and that tho Registers and Receivers of the sev
eral land offices shall be entitled to receive the
same compenstion for miy lands entered under
the provisions of this Act that they are now en
titled to receive when tho same quantity of land
is entered with money, one half to bo paid by
the person making the application nt the time of
so. doing, nnd tho other half on tho issue of the
certificate by tho person to whom it may be is
sued ; but this shall not be construed to enlarge
the maximum of compensation now prescribed
by law for any Register or Receiver, provided,
that nothing contained in this Act shall be so
construed as to impair or interfere in any man
tier whatever with existing pr-emption rights.
Arid provided further, that nil persons who may
have filed their applications for a pre emt o i
right prior to the passage of this Act, shall be
entitled to all (he privileges of this Act. Pro
vided further, thnt no porson who has served, or
may hereafter serve, lor a period of not less than
fourteen days in the army or navy of the United
States, either regular or volunteer, under tl e
laws thereof, during the existence of an actual
war, domestic or foreign, shall be deprived of
the benefit of this Act on account of not having
at'ained the age of twenty -one years.
Sec. 7. And be it further enacted, That the
fifth section of the Act entilled : " Am Act in ud
dition to Act more effectually to provide for the
punishment of certain crimes nait. st the Unit-d
Slates, and for other purposes," approved the 31
of March, in the year 1857, shall extend to all
oaths, affirmations and affidavits required or au
thorized by this Act.
Sec 8. And be it further enacted, That nothing
in this Act shall be so construed as to prevent
any person who has availed him or herself of the
benefit of the first section of this Act from pay
inir the minimun price, or the price to which the
same may have graduated, for' the quantity of
land so entered at any time before the expiration
of the five years, and obtaining a patent therefor
from the Government, as in other cases provided
by law, on making proof of settlement and cut
tivation as provided by existing laws granting
pre emption right.
A Party thut Keeps its Pledges
Tho telegraph informs us that tho President
has signed the bill prohibiting slavery in the
Territoties. Ho has doubtless, nlso, tro this,
signed the Puiilio Railroad bill. These two
measures nro the last of tho Series which thu
Republican party pledged itself nt Chicago to
carry into effect. This is probably the first in
stance in American history wherein a declaration
of party intentions was mado to be kept, inste id
of to serve the deceitful purposes of demagogues.
Tho Chicago platform pledged tho previa N'a
tional Administration to the following- proposi
tious ; 1st. The Federal Constitution, fights of
the States, must and bhall bo preserved. 21.
The National Government must no longer be
administered in tho interest of a sectional and
local establishment. 3J. Tho Territories must
bo kept free forever. 4th. Tho AfViean slave
trade must be met with more vigorous efforts
for its final nnd total suppression. 5th. Kansas
must be admitted as a State into the Union, tit h.
Tho industrial interests of tho country should be
encouraged by a judicious protective taritF. 7tl).
The public lands should be donated without cost
to actual settlers. 8th. The perfect equality of
naturalized citizens with native citizens must be
recognized and maintained. 0th. Congress
should make appropriation for such river ami
harbor improvements of national character as
are immediately nnd tir.ently needed to ac
commodate, secure and protect the commercial
interests, properly and lives of the people. lOlh.
A Railroad should be built to the Pjcilio Ocean,
and, us preliminary thereto, a daily Overland
Mail should be promptly established. The parly
that udobted this wise, comprehensive mid lia
tional platform has been in power only fifteen
months, yet every one cf these propositions have
been enacted into law. Y lieu 1 resident Lincoln
took his seat he found the Federal Constitution and
the Union of the States assailed by armed rebels,
and he has nearly completed tho work' of crush
ing out and saving thu integrity of tho Uepvbiic.
Martso'tlle Appeal.
A Productive Kaxciio. Jenny Lind, in Cal
averas county, California, is chiefly known as a
small mining town. But at tho western end is
tho Dennis Katiolio, a tine estate, which a corre
sponderit of tho Stockton Republican thus do
scribes :
Everything is in order here, and in 'i few years
this gentleman will have a firm that will be hard
to purchase. lie has two hundred acre' inclosed
with a high stone fence, in which ho has his orch
ard, vineyard and fields of grain. 1 went over
his orchard and had pointed out to mo the dilfo
reut varieties of fruit, both of tho tree and vine.
Ho has nine hundred trees, embracing every
variety of fruit except the orange and olive that
are grown iu California. Tho nectarine, apple
aid pe ir appeared to bo his hardiest trees, tho'
all his fruit looked extremely fine. Several al
mond tieos were shown me, winch ho says will
d wo!l in this climate. Ho has six thousand
grape vines which will bear fi uit this year, all
looking remarkably healthy. I was shown I lie
Catawba, the White Muscat of Alexandria, St.
Peters, Frankendale, White Sweet Water, Black
Hamburg, Muscadine, Ciiasselas, Australian and
California!! grape. lie lost five thousand vines
during tho floods, but will soon have new vines
in their place, and in a few years will Lo able to
make his own wine.
Arkansas Items. By tho recent arrival of
two men from Helena, Arkansas, a point on the
Mississippi ninety miles above tho mouth of the
Arkar.sas river, we learn that great suffering
must soon exist among the people of that part ol
the State, and that they will reqiro food from the
United states authorities, or else many must
starve. All tlio beef cattle had been driven oil
to the rebel army, nnd tho water had been so
high that it stood three feet deep on ninny of the
first floors of tho stores und dwelling in Helena.
1 lie cotton had all been burned by order of the
rebel authorities at that place, included in which
was some lo,0(H) worth belonging to a gentle
man now in this city. Tho Conscription act was
being rigidly enforced, and our informants left iu
tho night, not daring to let a soul know of their
departure. They suffered a great many hardships
on their journey here, and lire now ut work at
their trade in this city, shocmaking. They tsay
their farmer employer had a contract from the
rebels for shoes, common enough, nt $3 oOn pair.
ilio water was all over the country for many
miles, all tho plantations being thoroughly
drowned out, with tho June riso still to coim-.
Ilio people, many of them, were looking for the
approach of tho Union troops with hardly con
ccaled joy. St. Louin Demvcrat, JuneAth.
A Lm wkll Stuck To. The ami Government
press continues to repeat the falsehood that the
present National Administration has run up a
debt of nearly twelve hundred millions, and that
t ie public expenses generally nro greater than
btf.re. ouch Democrats its ulluiidiglium and
V'oorhees rise iu Coimres and make such mis
statement for the most infamous ends, and
every pro-slavery, anti-war joiirral reiterates
them, in tho face ot ollui.il contradictions. As
late us may 2lih, Congressman D.iws, presented
a scmi-olliclal financial statement of the expenses
of tho Government since Mr. Lincoln's accession,
w hich showed that ttie entire national debt up to
May amounted to less than five- hundred
. . ... i ii. e . - . . -i
million, including an o:a Ueol oi se-eiuy mil
lions w hich was bequeathed by Buchanan. He
diso showed that tho civil expends of tho Gov-
eminent have been less by ove.- eight millions
than the average per annum in the quiet days ol
the last Administration. And as to the matter
of fraudulent contracts, itis known that us many
Democrat as Itepublicaus have had a share iu
making money out of the necessities of tha na
tion, with the benefit of a larger experience. Ex.
The rebel army thinks it bead is the weakest
plae from the way it turns tail.
A Gkkat Medicixs. The following certificate
was given to tho proprietor of a gerat " salvo "
remedy, by a persou who had used that remark
able medicine :
Deaii DoCron : I will bo ono humlrel and
seventy five years old next October. For ninety-five
years I have been an iiwalid, unable to
move except when stirred with it lever. But a
year ngo I heard of tho Grainacuhir Syrup. I
bought n bottle, smelt of tho cork, and found
myself n new man. 1 can now run twelve and
a half ii. ill's an hour, and throw nineteen and a
half double soineraets, without (stopping.
P. S. A little of your Ailicumstono Salvo,
applied on a wooden leg, reduced a compound
fracture in nineteen minutes, nnd is now cover
ing the limb with a fresh cuticle of white gum
bark.
A good story is told of a Connecticut parson.
His country parish raised his salary from three
to four hundred dollars. Tho good man objected
for three reasons :
First," said ho " because vou can't afford to
;ive more than three hundred.
. . ....
" Second, because my preaching isn t worth
more than that.
"Third, because I have to collect my salary,
which, heretofore, has been tho hardest part of
my labors among you. If I have to collect an
additional hundred it will kill me."
How Slavrky Affects tiis Wiutk Max.
The following remarks nro from Rev. J. Bal telle,
a Virginian and ''conservative." They occur in
a calm, well considered ml Iress to th-i Constitu
tional Convention of Western Virginia, of
wh eh Battcll" is i leading member i
The injuries which slavery inflicts upon our
own people nro manifold and obvious. It practi
cully aims to enslave not merely another race,
but our own race. It inserts in iti bill of rights
some very high so'liiding phrases, securing the
freedom of speech, and then practically mid in
detail puts a lock on every man's mouth and a
seal on every man's Ii s who will not shout for
and swear by tho Divinity of tho system. It
amuses the popular fancy with a few glittering
generalities, in tlio fundamental law about the
liberty of tlio press, and forthwith usurps uu
thority, even iu times of peace, to send out its
edicts to every Postmaster, whether in tho vil
lago or at tho cross roads, clothing him with n
despotic nnd atisoluto censorship over ono of the
dearest rights of tho citizen. It degrades labor
by giving it the badge of servility, nnd it im
pedes enterprise by withholding its proper re
wards. Jt nlono has claimed exemption from the
rule of uniform taxation, and then demanded and
received the largest share of the proceeds of that
taxation. Is it any wonder, iu such a state of
facts, that Ihero lire this day, of thoso who
havo been driven from Virginia mainly by this
system, men enough with their descendants, and
means and energy, scattered through thu West,
of themselves to nuiko no mean Stato
It has been in a ftllow observer, mid 1 will
add as u fellow sufferer, with the members of the
Convention, that my judgment of tho system of
shivery among us his been formed. Wo have
seen it seeking to i nugurate, in many instances
all too successfully, a reign if terror, in times of
profound peace, of which Austria might be
ashamed. We havo seen it year by year driv
ing out from our gen nl climate, nnd fruitful soil,
and exhaustions natural resources some of thu
moil of tho very best energy, talent mid bkill
among our population. Wo have seen also,
iu times of peace, tho liberty of speech taken
away, tho freedom of thu press abolished, and
the willing millions of this system, iu hunting
d irtn their victims, spare from degradation und
insult neither the young nor the gray hairo I vet
eran of seventy Winters, whose every thought
was in free from olfoiiso against society as is that
of tho infant ot days. And last, but not least,
wo havo seen its own chosen und favored inter
preters standing iu the very sanctuaries of our
political Zioti throughout tho land, blaspheming
the holy principles of popular liberty to which
tho very daces where they stood had been con
secrated by dooming my child and every man's
child that must live by labor to A virtual and
lulpless slavery. And as tho natural outgrowth
of nil this, we havo seen this huge barbario raid
against popular rights nnd agaiu.st tho world a I ,st
hope. It has been the merit ot other utteinpted
revolutions that their motive ut least whs reach
ing upward and forward tiller libeity ; it is the
inl.imy of this th.it it is reaching backward und
dovv nward nfler despotism. It would put bark
the hand on thu world's dial a thousand years.
It would put out tho world slight in the darkness
of utter und dreary despair. Surely, to tho ex
tent that we have suffered from theso ills, our
very manhood calls upon u to guard, by all
reasonable preventatives, against their return.
Prenticiuna.
A Coriuth correspondent says I hat Beauregard
criticises severely tho policy of thu Confederate
Government. Beau can hardly be more critical
than his position is.
The Yankees ran no longer be charged wilh
meanness. Seu how liberally they "shelled out"
at Fort Jackson.
Men, like the rebel Generals, who cxh'bit
such extraordinary performances " upon the
turf," should be rewarded by having it placed
above them.
It is a pity for Floyd that he can't show a
clean pair of hands when he so often shows a
clean pair of heels.
Let no ono say that New Orleans has fallen
It h is risen from its fall.
Beauregard calls the recent battlefield " Shi
loh." We presume that his SecreUry of Stale,
Judah P. Benjamin, will abdicate now, for the
prophecy of the patriarch Jacob was that u the
scepter shall not depart from Judah until Shiloh
com."
Wi clip tho following from tho Washington
Statesman of July 5th :
Mr. Toohill, Lieut. Mullen's Expressman,
has ki idly furnished us his journal ot a trip to
Bitter Root Valley :
1 reached the llellg.ito Round, (Iliggin's
store,) on tho 20th of June. Capt. 1 Muihin,
together with an escort of IS soldiers aud it
small party of employees left the lleilgate on
the 23J of .May for Fort Benton. Tho steamers
were expected at that leaco tbout tho first of
iuly. Mouiro. il.ile, Itoleclii nnd a few others
arc bound east J tho balance of tho Captain's
party, undef the guidance of Mr." Williamson,
have started back, repairing und completing the
road. Capt. Marsh, quartermaster, with hi
eoniinnnd, left tho Bitter Root Valley on the
l'JJi ult., reached tho Coe ir d Alean Mission on
the 2."tli and will reach Walla Wullu on or about
ilio 4;ii of July, and Lieut. Mullen iu a few
days niter. , ,
Tho crops nM through the valley look well.'
Using tho language of tho Hon, I. 1. Stevens,
'The beautiful St. Mary's valley, tho garden
of Washington Territory," looks brilliantly.
T! is Territory had a father in that truly g'eat.
man. It was ho who first laid tho foundation of
her building, and she is now being built upon
that foundation. Yet sho has n son who has
just oponed the way, with untiring zjh, fir tho
advancement ot her improvement and for tho
benefit ot her prosperity. He nlso deserves tho
highest honors of his profession.
There was some cheering news received hero
to-day from tho Deer Lodge valley, which says
there tiro thirty-five men prospecting there who
are making from $10 to $12 per day to the man
and that w ith ilio poorest kind of tools. Tho
gold found there is coarse and scaly, und look
rich. It is believed that it will assay $13 or 420.
:
Hay and ltoots Comparative Value.
A correspondent of the New England runner
remarks, that hay is tho chief article of food for
stock during the Winter season; und, generully
speaking, if u sufficiency of good hay is proper,
ly fed lo stock, they will thrive upon it, and
increase in weight und value. But it is not al
ways, nor even usually the ciisc,' that farmers
have u sufficiency of tho best quality of hay to
feed to their stock, with no exceptions iu the way
ot coarse fodder; damaged hay, straw, etc., nnd
in caso tho latter is fed, or when the usual yield
of hay has been ledueed, by reason of drouth of
other causes, root crops alford u valuable uuxil
iury, whether used iu connection with tho former
or us u substitute for the latter. Hence it ofien
becomes necessary to know the comparative val
ue of potatoes, uirrots und rula bagas, that
farmers may be uble to tuibslituto in part; these
root for hay.'
It is becoming more and moro the practice of
our best farmer to feed out, not only their car
rots, turnips, etc., but their potatoes, instead nf
selling them from tho farm, iu tho belief that the
good of their farm's demand it," nnd that their
purses in tho end will not bo the losers thereby
and tho more it 'a practiced, the more convinced
tiro they of the economy Uud profit of such u
course of feeding. Not only is tho profit derived
from tho roots, as stich, but tlio relative value
of the hay, us well us that of the roots, is increas
ed when fod together.
Potash A Manure!. No vines enn produce
fruit without potash. Dyewoods, and all color
giving plants, owe their vivid dyes to patash.
Without it wo cannot havo a mess of peas.
Where it exists iti a natural ktatu in the soil,
there we find liguminous plants growing wild,
and in such places only we find wild grapes.
All tho cereals require potash, phosphate of mag.
tiesiit, and silicea, which is dissolvable in a solu
tion of potash. It is this dissolved sand that
forms tho hard coat of stalks, und gives them the
strength to stand up against tho blasts of vi In J
aud ruin while ripening. It is this substance that
gives bamboos their strength, and beards of
grain and bludes of grass their cutting sharpness.
No cereal ever came to perfection in a soil do
void of potash, silicia, phosphate of lime, cur
bouie. acid u id nitrogen. if, 8. Journal.
Effects of Duu.nkexnkss o.v Offspring.
At a recent Mieetimr of I h. A ..,i.l..,nu ..( i..;
ut jiaris, M. Dcinaux road n jmpcr exhibiting in
'w ol,"'"ii m. mini iitu U i it'll Vlljf lO O I SOUSO
itui I .iiMtf ti WriiMr.'it uli.i.i. f.r i... .
j-.w..., ...,v.,v.,a i ttiin i mtj IIIIUXII'U-
icJut ihc moment of fecundation. PuruftsiV
L'jiitM, insrtiiiiv. ny.siLTiu, an J a Jong, suJ cut
iiioi'uti of Jitf)rttUr4 nf thi iuiiiiiiis ut,.... i......
O ' " v "J 'JIVMI, uu tj
ueou cUnscJ among tlio maladies o communim-
ltd to C'lnltlrul). Mom I I..l.ililv nnd ;.... 1 1..,. f
- - j (vi ill ici I CUM ilt
obliquity, aro also said lo bo not seldom com
muuieated in a similar way. This is ono of tha
numerous instances in whicn our Maker to re
claim w rong doers and vindicate His broken laws
erects before our eyes a living, life-long monu
ment, commemorative o lolly, shamo uud sin.
How to Pkeervb Hfaltii. Medicine will
never remedy bad habit. It is utterly futile to
think of living in gluttony, intemperance, nnd
every excess, mid keeping the body in health by
medicine, ledulgence of the appetite, indiscrini.
innte dosing and drugging, have ruined the health
and dcstioved the lives of more ptrson than
Limine nnd pestilence. If you will take advicp,'
)ou will become regular in your habits, eat uud
drink only wholesome things, sleep on mat
tress, and retire nnd riso very regularly. Make
tree use of water to purify the skin, mid when
sick eat nothing till your nppetite demand if,
eschew drug and follow nature. U. S. Journal.
Bakon Hotiisciiild complained bitterly to
Lord Brougham of the hardship of not being si
lowed to take his seat in Purliameiit. You
know," he added, I was the choice of the peo
ple." To which his Lordship replied: So was
iiarrshs."