University of South Carolina Libraries
...V THE GREEITILLE ENTEKPRISE. f 1 . i , . . .1 , . . i! DtooJfir Jo lUtoo, Politics, 3nJcUigmcf, otkr . i\)t 3m;pt:o?cmcnt of t\)c State ontr Country JOHN C. & FDWAKD BAILEY, PB0'B8. , . GBfiENYILlg.'SOUTH CAROLINA, Fl BRUARY 22, 1871. . .. VOLUME XVIf-NO. i\r Hoancnirriox Two Doltara per annum. Adtbrmkkmkntr inierted at (be ratal af one dollar per aquare bf twelve Minion lineal (tbla aiaeJ type) or leaa for the flrat inaertion, i | flftjr eenta each for the aecond and third tniortiona, and twenty-fire eenta for auhaequent ' Inaertiona. Yearly eontraota will be made. J AM adrertiaementa muat bare the number fi.aertion* marked on them, or they will be inverted till ordered out, and charged for. f Unlea* ordered otherwiae, Advertlaemcnta Will Invariably be " diaplayed." Obituary notlcea, and all mattera inuring to to the benefit of any one, are regardod aa ! A Jvcrtiaetnenta. < ^ rlrrtrii ^ottrq. ; Nothing Good shall ever Perish. Nothing good slutll ever perish, Only the corrupt rhall din ; Truth, which men and ange!a cherlrh, Flourishes eternally. None ?r? wholl) Old forsaken ; AM hie sacred Image wear; None m lost but should awaken In our hearte e brother# earn Not a mind hut he* it* mlreinn? Power oI working wo? or weal; Bo degraded none*e condition, But the world hie Wright may feel. Worda of kindlier#, word# of warning, Deem not ihou may's apeak in vain; Even those thy counsel aeo<?liig, Oft rliall they return again. Though the mind. absortod in pleasure, Hold* the Voice of nouneel light. Yet doth laithrul memory trearuie, What at firet it irrmed lo right. Word# of kindneaa we have spoken, May, when we have paared away, Ileal, perliapa, aome epirit broken, Guide a brother led aetray. I Tlrti our very thoughte ?rr living, Even when we ere not here; Joy end connotation giving To lite frronda who hold ue deer. ( Not en ect but la recorded, Not e word hut hee lie weight; Every virtue la recorded, , Outrage puntahrd, won or late. J Let oo being, then, be nrU-d Aa e thing of liule worth ; Every toul th t ia created lien .ta part to (day on earth. Stunonraa. Sleeping Flowers Almost all flowers sleep during the night. The marigold goes to bed with t >e sun, and with him , rises weeping. Mhii^ plants are So sensitive that their leaves close irinriiwr tli?? nojDitnn ?t' ? *"B WI'V |/?roiii^ \?1 ?% Vsll'llVl The dandelion <?|>ciik at five or six in the morning, and shuts at nine in tho evening. The goat's beard wakes at three in the morning, , and shuts at five or six in the , evening. The coinnion daisy shuts up its blossom in the even- , ing, ami opens its "day's eye " to | meet the early beam of the inorn Trig sun. The croses, tulip, and many others close their blossoms at different hours toward evening. '4 lie ivy leafed lettuce opens at eight in the morning ami closes forever at four in the afternoon.? Tho night flowering cereua turns , night into day. It begins to expand its magnifHcent, sweet scent ed blossom in the twilight, and is full blown at midnight and closes, never to ooen amain with the dawn of day. In a clover field , not a leaf opens til! after sunrise. So says a celebrated English author, who has devoted much time to the study of plants, and often watched them during their quiet eluiubers. Those plants which seem to be awake all nitfht he styles " the bats and owls of the , vegetable kingdom." ClIILDKKV TliAlNKD UP FOR God. i It is pleasing to God that our children shall be given Ilim,amJ no be trained up. that through His i blessing, they will early know him. | W hen we come into a' garden, we < I jvc to pluck thrf young bud, and I smell it, that we may be delighted i with its fragrance. And so God loves the heart in its bud. Iietoro its fragrance is all scattered upon the world and sfn. Ot all the , trees made choice of in prophetical vision, it waa the a'lnoud tree ' which God selected, the tree that blossoms among the first trees.? Such an alinond tree is an fcarly < convert, a young heart given to its I Maker. At a social gathering, a young I to/tw aalra<4 utlial n wnvM n(l?V U VY?'lllf?l> O B|?1I13I13 I I meant. Answer?Woman's sphere I is bounded on the north by a hue- t band; on the south by a baby ; ; and on the east by a mother-inlaw ; and on the west by nn old i maid sister. Within this sphere i any womAn may find enough to do to keep her nsetully employed all the days of her life; and, should she prove faithful to her < duties, she will bo certain of reaching heaven at last, which after all, is the chief end of life. Drath?A lcnifo by which the ties of earth are riven. A Talk with Long?tre?t. "Qath," of the Chicago Tribune, ' ia? recently had a talk with the < -econstruoted Con fed rate General i Longstreet. lie says: i 1 met General Longstrect a few i jvenings ago, and had a good op- 1 portuniiy to determine what man- 1 ner of man he is, so far at, least as < !iis conversation and appearance 1 went Longstreet is one of the i most perfect types of a profession i al soldier. He was born in South i Carolina, but is of Georgia extrac tion, and he says that his family i name is German. He is a nephew 1 of the celebrated Judge Longit root, author of the u Georgia ? Scenes,'* which, in their day, w??re < considered to be an unique eon- I tribution to our periodical liter ature. He wear* plain drew, and his whole presence has a nameless 1 jelf expression and self respect which is not (infrequent amongst Southern men. tie told rue that lie never cast a vote in his life until last year. Longstreet' discusses with calmness and good judg- 1 fiient the military ability of his jld associates, and it is not palpable that he has lost any of the zest find heartiness which used to dis Linguish Iiitri as a member of the 11 Lost Cause " lie eave nothing i which indicates his regret at the part he too^ but on the contrary, Rcetned to nave a docile sort of fondness tor his military lite and Imnninunce during the rebellion. Ju evidently considers Joe Johnston's to be the first military repu iAtion ot the South, and he speaks i?f all the Federal Qenerals with respect,accounting oven tor McCloIan sfailure in the Peninsula. 1 asked him if it were true, as had been related, that at Gettysburg he advised the turning of the Federal position on Cemetery Ridge. He said "yes;" that on the third day tic tiavl I'l O|;oco*1 to O OIIOl'ul Loo to extend hit* line so as to cover the roads leading back toward Marylaud, and this would compel an evacuation of the Federal position. "No," replied l.ee, "the enemy is right there, and we must fight him." Longstr* et says that he sal upon a fence and watched with a field glass. Picket's Division making that celebrated but fatal charge, and that be felt satisfied that the Cemetery Ridge could n t bo carried. I asked him what he would have done had Lee permitted liim to turn Itonnd Top to the right, and he replied that he should have moved by forced inarches directly III - -I-: ? upon ??uMiimgioii v/iiy. i^ougstreet says that both sides ill the civil war committed mistakes, when they put engineer officers at Lhe head of large armies, and that the properties which make a Field Marshal are not those required in an active General. Lie does not believe that if Mead had pursued Lee's army after Gettysburg, Lee would have been beaten, but says he wanted to stand ut llagerstown aid make a tight. He always Bp.-aksof the Federals in discussing these war matters as the enemy. He ?toes not believe that McClellan could have got into Richmond if lie had been bolder in his Peninsular campaign, but Bays that at a later .period of the war there were several occasions when the city might have been easily captured, lie thinks Gettysburg was, on the whole, the best fight of the war; thinks it foi tituate that Mead had replaced Hooker in command of tiie federal army there. Ho spoke of a number of instances where the Federal troops had behaved as well as 1 Anybody could expect soldiers to behave, and that his own troops, which were collected from nearly all of the States, were as good as lie wanted. He has not a particle ?f biterness for anybody in tho South or North; seems to admire General Grant, and talks over the whole subject philosophically. ? Indioknous Lkmonadk.?A correspondent sends us the following Account of a remarkable spring in rexas: , & " Afr*ut sixty utiles north of Gfcfona, near tbp town'of EHl^y, 1 fcero ta s *F*lhg, tUe ry*fef of winch Is quite acid*, resembling < femonade, and $ese who tasted like it so muoli.that they d/iuk it i Almost immoderately. When you < foell hot, it is quite delicious; and ! under any circumstances, whether you are hot or cold, the drink of it produces perspiration, with no i unpleasant effects afterward. The l spring has no apparent outlet or i inlet. It is prubablv sixty feet I wide, and is covered with a white i a a I. ? C..? ikI.IaK Itli/itl /a1/U)A 1 mill ur lunill, n iiiv?| iiiivii vium examination, appears like ereain of tarter on a winecaalc It kills ,j insects, worms, and otbor small < animals that come near and use I it. No fish or other evidence of I life is seen within its watore." [Boston Journal of Chomis&ry. < - " ; .1 ' 'i' } . "> ' The Chinaman, m i A common Chinaman hf,s no >tber idea oi life than to work slead ly, do bis own cooking, washing roning and mending, and spend i great deal less thanlie cams. His father and all his ancestors, as far1 back as to the time of Aaron or rf Abraham, had no othei- tdca of life. A hut, a few yards of 'cl??th, & dMblo handful of rice and wheat, i slice of pork, a frying-pan, and a strip of rush matt ipg, for a bed ?theso are what,.be is born to, Mid wiili these, mi his own land, lie expeots to die, and die content. When he comes to America, his simple aim is to lay tip a small snm cf money on which ho can live at ease when he goes back. I saw a 'minor, fifty-two years old ; lie looked thin and worn, as though ho had never kyown anything but Btead v toil and rough fare. lie has been here five years, and has.three hundred dollars in gold. Last Monday ha tools ilia utonmer to Canton. lie will go home to bis wite and be a man in easy circumstances the rest ot his days. They make no eight hour protests ; they have ho striken! tlinv otinni.t m? - - r? 1 7"~~J dcrstaud what a trade union means. They will work for fifty ceuts till they hear of some man who gives Bixty. Then they go to work for him till they know of a chance to make seventy five. Tney have no bar-rooms; they drink no strong drink ; they do not tight, or curse, or break things. But they love to smoke in the evening, nnd it atnuses them greatly to throw a pile of little brass coin, ten of which makes a cent, on the middle of a table, and bet that, when the heap is counted off, it will turn out odd. &M110 bet a dime that it will count out1 odd, ns twenty-one. Others Ixit twenty five cents that the count will bo even.' I did not Bee anvbodv bet oyer in'enfy fivo t/citio, Out I was toWi (hat lute at night tliey grow reckless and,,bet their pipes and their clothes, ull their tobacco, and at 1 tat a wife. But the class of gamesters is not large. Most of them, after work, cuddle down by a little tire, where l ice and tho legs and head of a lien arc boiling, and chatter about the day's work, about what some other minor or laborer lias found ; about what some wicked uMelican iiiuii " has done, about home, and having their ashes carried back to China to 6leep beside the hones of their ancestors and under the grim sini'6 of 6otnc ancient wooden god. Presently tho chatter lulls away, the little rush beds arc spread, and Chang Ty, in drains, is far away in the Howry Laud. But, with day light, lib ties up the little roll of rash carpeting, lays it on a shelf, eats a cup ot boiled wheat and 6iicks a chicken wincr. and anon the nick, with blow hut unceasing swing, Is hacking into tho bfuiK; the harrows are tiled, the planks are handled, the rails are spiked, and the work goes on as last us though pushed by Irish muscle or Amciicau nerve. Blind Staggers In Horses. A corrcsj>ondent in tho Kings t<?n East Tennessecati writes as follows : " I have understood that a nnin her o( horses have recently died in the neighborhood of Knoxville with a peculiar disease, and somev;hat similar to blind staggers.? Several horses have recently died in this county. Uavi< g had some experience in the treatment of the disease, I thought I would ask sufficient space in your paper to tell it, so that those having horses affected might profit by it. If the I'Atiii'ilv dm>a nut rtnrn. it will p<?r? - J ?? ?- " tuiuly do no harm. " Several years ago, I lost three or four horses with the disease referred to. I tried every remedy I could hear of. Not long afterwards another horso being affectcd, I concluded I would try a remedy I hud often used successfully with hogs, as follows:? With a sharp knife I split the skin on the forehead to the bone, making an incision of alxmt three inches in length, immediately beteen the eyes, then pressing into the wound as much salt as 1 well could get in. In twenty-four hours the horse was well. I have never nad a case since, but would ever resort to the above remedy. It is simple and effectual/' The South has another now agriculture topic besides the cultivation of tea: the cultivation of the |>"ppy- The experiment which lias net Southern farmers to arguing that tho raising of this plant would be extremely profitable, was lately tried by a Louisiana farmer, who raised poppies enough on seven acres of ground to ytild him one hundrod and forK pounds of marketable* opium, lis lie sold at an average of ten dollars per ponud. " M t Sweet Potatoes Editoks South el: m Cultivatou. Mr. Gauso in the December No. I of the Cultivator, asks * do potatoes need any manure and what soft?" While I may no' he able satisfactorily to solve the question, I propo.-e to submit a few remarks upon the subject. I mhy promise by saying in agriculture, as in morals aud religion we need line, upon liue, and precept upon., precept?hero a little and there a litI tie. If the tiles ot your journal I for a tow ycara past, ware ucoessi ble t? your enquirer, bo would no doulit tind muuy ot his questions, satisfactorily answered. Land upon which potatoes arc attempt ad to be grown, may bo eitbor too looee^or Uk> close, too rich or, too ]H>or, to produce them to advantage. i I believe it is generally conceded that light land with a good measure ot vegetable matter, eith er naturally present or furnished, is best for potatoes. Stimulating fertilizers,-beyond a certain point, will dctelopo rank vines on the sit* luce, and strings, instond of roots, lielow. Cow dung, in combination with straw and ^leaves, makes good potatoes. Grass the enemy of most crops, is especially the baneot this one. In one corner of iny potatoe patch this year, there is a little strip of land .just taken in, alter having received, the droppings of stock, and then pressed by constant tramping for years. After breaking it up two ways as well as I could, with u scooter drawn by a single mule, 1 laid it off tour feet with same plow, tilled the trenches with halt rotted straw, and bedded with four coul I ter iurrowB. 1 Oiu not consider the ground sufficiently pulverized, And whs tho more coniirmed in that opinion, when I heard the roaring sound of the plow in o my surprise the two, three, and four pound p iatocs rolled out in quick succession, and the yield oil -that strip was decidedly hotter than on tho bqtter pulverized, and as I considered the hotter munurcd field adjoining. I'crhaps the secret of tho difference lies in the fact, that tliiere wu3 no crah grass seed to interfere with the first, ami it was Consequently u laid by " clean, while tlie other was snflered to make a crop of potatoes and grass jointly, Break the ground thoroughly and deeply, ana cultivate so as not to allow a spear of grass to run to seed. Don't stop cultivating because the vines lap across the rows, hut turn them hy hand into every alternate row until those rows are plowed?then turn them into tho freshed plowed row, rUid plow tho other. Never pick out the small potatoes?as some do, fiotn tlio general crop?for Blunting, or you will surely muky small potatoes, and they will grow beautifully le?-b till you will have something like humcs-strings instead of potatoes. Either lied yon r best potatoes to obtain 44 draws *' lor planting or plant vines in sumiuer to make slips. Some recommend the cheaper plan ot stripping the beds just before frost, and bunking the vines as you would potatoes, for planting. Some people think they can't raise potatoes without making high beds with the hoe, tltis is a mistake. A bed is no more needed Ibr potatoes than for corn or cotton. The vines must not be allowed to take root ex* cept in the bed. Gather before frost, and put up in bunks of twenty-five or thirty bushels, on a thick bed of pine, wheat, or oat straw, and cover heavily, with the same, and add a good coat of earth from a circular ditch one or two feet around the hank. Then shelter from rain or enow if you please? if not, be sure to pile on straw and earth enough to keep them dry. X. P. L. Darlington, S. C. < ? ITow to Uaisk Good Ciiickkns. 1. ISet the hen in a place where abo will nut ho disturbed. 2. Give a largo lion twelve or tliirtoou eggs, medium sized, one ten or twelve, and a biiiu.11 one, eight or nine. 3. Don't let the hen come out of the sitting-room until she lias hatched, but keep hor supplied with gravel, fowl and water. 4. When chicks are hatched, leave them in the nest for eight or .ten hours. 5. Don't ineddle with the eggs during incubation : turning them once a day, and all such foolishness, is apt to proveut the eggs from hatching. All of this is good advice from the Bout horn Farmer. ? ? A lit!lk boy, whose mother had promised him a present, was ovjuitf iim |iiuvuih preparatory to going to bod, but his mind running on a horse, he began as follows: 44 Our Fathor, who art in hcavcu -?ma, won't von give mo a horse ?thy kingdom come?with a .string on iti" After the Funeral. Of all the returning home, the return from the grave after the funorul, is the most intensely Bad. Who that lias ever followed ono dearly beloved to his last rest will not agree that it is even so ? While the lost one was sick, wo went in and out anxious, sorrowing. fearful.. The solicitude to reliove and care for Itiin cngroosed us?the appreheusipn of loosing him excited and agnoized us, but there was no room nor timo fur loneliness or a sense of proscut des ola'ion. While he lqy dead beneath the home rooft there was hurry and bustle in preparation for the final rites. Friends must be apprised and invited?the funeral arrange merits definitely made ? the mourning procured and fitted? the hospitalities of the house innst befit the occasion ; all is excitement and tension?the logs is not yet felti0 JJnt when the conch drops us at our d or, 44 after the funeral," then it is that 'he work Of the des troycr begins to be apparent?the very house a. ems lone, and still, nnd sepulchral, though it be in the heart of tho town, and though its threshold be thronged with friond Iv feet, it seems empty nnd void I The apartments, oh, how deserted ?cspecinllj' the room where lie fought and surrendered in the awful conflict 1 Ilcte, there, everywhere arc memorials of hiin ! How they make tho tears start, now, though wo have often contemplated them calmly ever Rincc he died. Those are his clotheshow painfully distinct is our recollection of how he looked in evrv one of thorn, and when and wl ore ho last wore them. These are his books?tlio one ho last read, with the leaf turned down where Imp place wim. There is hi* chair in the fireside corner, '.whore ho loved to pit. There his ever' vacant peat at the family l?oard.? During the sickness, wo had not so much notic-d these; we hoped that he might use or occupy them again ; now we kn?*w it cannot he, and thr3 phowrt us the dreadful vacuity everywhere. Oh, how dark and dismal came the lirst night shadows " after the funeral !" No night was ever so dreary or so long?the ticking of the clock reverberated like bell strokes?such deep silence?no loot-stej? now on the stairs or overhead -in the sick chamber?no nurse or watchers to cumo and sav, " ho is not so well, nnd asks for you"?no, indeed?you may sleep on now, and take your rest, it' you can 1 l'oor, bereaved heart! it will be long before the sweet root you ?>nco knew will revisit your couch. Stum her will bring again the scenes through which you have just " wakened and wept," and yon will start from it hut to find all tor real. God pity the mourners " aftei the funeral." Toasts and Sentiments. May the honest heart neaver know distress. May care be a stanger where virtue resides. May hemp bind those whom honor cannot. May our prudence secure ug friends, hut enable us to live with out their assistance. May sentiment never he sacri ficcd by the tongue of deceit. May our happiness bo sincere, and our joys lasting. May the smiles of conjugal felicity compensate the frowns ol fortune. May the tear of sensibility never cense to flow. May the road of preferment be found by none but tiioeo who deserve it. May the liberal linnd find free access to tho purse ot plenty. May the impulse ot generosity never be checked by tho power ol necessity. May wo always forgot when we forgive an injury. May tho ieeSing heart possess the fortune the miser abuses. May we draw upon content for the deficiencies of fortune. amy nope I Mi thy pliy bicnn when calamity ie the (list*kmc. May the single be married, and married happy. Dealers iw 8tktcunink, fusil oil, forty-rod and other popular wliis kys will give Kansas a wide berth in future, as the Senate of that State y eater day passed a hill giving any toper the right to sue any person who sells him lifpior. To make the law effective, it should l>o amended by specify ing the value of headaches, broken noses and other like luxuries usually contained in western fluids. ? ? Fiur ksoai-ks are to ho placed on every hotel in New York. A Heart Untouched. * A friend of mine, an eminent New Yoik philanthropist, relates the following iatorview with a condemned criminal. The crime from which .this wretched man was hung ia still irosh in opr memories. . One morning at breakfast his tripe didn't suit him and he immediately,' brained his wife and children and set the house on fire, varying the monotony of scene by pithching his mother in law down the well, having, previously, with greater tonsideration. touched her heart with a J cheese-knito. 1 I wilt not quote my friend's own words: 44 lie was pronounced a hard case, manifesting no sorrow for his act, and utterly -indifferent to his approaching doom. A score of good people had visited him with tho kindest intentions, but without making the smallest impression iffton him. <4 Without boastifig, I wish to say that I knew 1 could touch this man's heart. X saw a piny once in which the most blood-thinly and brutal rufilan that ever existed was melted to tears at the mention of hie mother's name, and childhood's happy hours, and everybody bnoto's what happens on the stage happens just the same in real lite. 441 naturally congratulated my self on having seen this play, for it gave me now or to cone with this relentless disposition. " lie resisted all attempts at i conversation, however, in the most dogged manner, merely returning surly monoeylahles to my anxious - wishes for his well being. I "At last,' laying my hand on s hie shoulder, and throwing consid ' ernble pathos into my voice, J said : u My friend, it was not always i thus with ycu. There was a time when you eat upon your mothers' knee, and gathered buttercupB and daises ?*' "Ab! I had touched the right chord at last. II is brow contract, cd and his lips twisted convulsive " And whon that mother put 1 you in your little hed," I coin inn 1 ed, "she kissed you, and hoped you would grow up a " " You lie," said lie, 4t slie didn't. The old woman was six feet tinder the ground afore I could chaw.? Now look a here, you're the ' fourth chap that tried the moth er dodgo on mo. W hy don't you 1 fellers," he added, " go hack on the mother business and give the old man a chance, jo6t for a change !" it A f?? *1 * j\ uur mo uuove scurvy treat mcut I was naturally anxious to witness the man's funeral, which 1 understood was to be a gorgeous ' aflfair, six respectably attired fe 1 mules having been sworn in to 1 kiss the body, amid the historic ' weeps of three more in the back groud. To Prevent Lamp Chimneys from Breaklnq.?Every housewife, who uses kerosene oil, knows ' that it affords the best and cheapest light of all illuminating oils. 1 But she also knows that the ..constant expense and annoyance from the breakage of lamp chimneys, almost, if not quite, con titer-bal' ances the advantages of its use. ' Put the glass chimney in lukewarm water, heat it to the boiling point, and boil it one hour, atter which leave it in the water till it cools, i The chimney will be le66 liable to crack by sudden change of tetnper aturc. A Gkokoia editor is in luck. Twenty-four heathen Chinese walked into his sanctum the other day. > and through the medium of an interpreter, paid cosh down for twen by.four subscriptions to his paper. xijvj euuor wonueren greatly what they wanted of an English paper, not being able to read it, and was ' informed that they took it for the 44 pictures " in it, the pAper having i a rat cut, a guano trade mark and an umbrella 44 picture." Still another way of killing a cat has been found. One died recently in New York from licking the face of a lady who hud just drowsed hereelf for the street, and had improved her complexion. Mr. Oarvkr, doing tlie honors of the table, said to one of his guosU, a fashionably dressed girl of the period, 441 see that you have plenty ot breast. Mi s, but do have a little more dressing 1" An old, dilapidated bank-note is going round with a niece of yellow paper pasted on the hack of if, on which in written in a < bold, Irco hand, "Go it, Bill, 111 hack you." Timk is a traveling thcif, ever Mealing, no man can catch hirn. i Tii? TLorough-brsd Horss?ifchy He it Superior to Inferior StockThe Dotcli'cs Farmer, in an articte on tlie thorough bred horse, very tersely shows tip his points, of superiority as follows : 1. They are more intelligent, possessing more bruin and nervous matter. 2. They arc, frqm their intelligence, more tractable and kind in their disposition nnd temper. 3. They are less liable to disease, from a superior organization. ? 4. They are more elegant in carriage and appearance. 6. They are superior in action. 6. They endure the vicissitudes of heat and cold better. 7. They li\ovfo a much grater age, maintaiiuu^ their usefi luces. 8. They are superior in fleetness, durability, bravery and breathing powers. 9. They always lmvo, and always Will command a higher price in the market than any other breed. if you w ill examine the thoroughbred you will, on investigation, tind a superior animal organization?his bones are more solid, his tendons stronger and much better deflud, his musctae more firm and elastic ? in fact his form and quality are so much superior iu results that he is lunch more active, much more fleet and powerful than any other variety of the horse tribe. Tie will Vinrf'.? **? more labor in a given time, and repeat the task oftener coming round much quicker from over wpi k than any unimal of the inferior blood. When the cold blooded horse is over worked his spir its sink and his recovery is slow, and sometimes never complete.? A square inch ot bone Iroiii a thorough-bred horse is much heavier than a square inch from a cart horse, resembling a pnmic stone, while the former is solid, partaking more of the closed grained nature of ivory. The sumo remark will apply to the tendon* and inusclea. Consequently a thorough-bred horse will he stronger than a cart horse in a little more than half the compass.? It is asserted and is doubtless true ?that tho thorough bred horse can support a greater weight on iii6 uuc.k mail me couimon liorte. ? + The Printer. The following beautiful tiibuto to tbo followers of the "stick and rule," is from the pen of Henjiman F. Taylor, formerly of Hie Chicago Journal: 44 The printer is the adjutant of thought and this explains the niys tcry of the wondeiful word that can kindle a hope as no song can ; that, wojd 44 we" with a hand inhand warmth in it?for the author and printer are engineers togoth er. Engineers indeed ! What the Corsiean bom hard ed Cadiz, at a distance of five miles, it was deemed the very triumph of engineering. I3ut what is the range to this, whereby they bombard tho ages to be? 44 There at the caso he stands, and maj-shals into lino the forces armed with tinth, clothed with immortnllity and English. And what can he nobler titan the e<jipago of thought in sterling S?xon?Saxon with a spear or shield therein and that commissioned, when wo arc dead, to move gi andly on to 44 the hitler sellable corded time." This is to vein a victory from death, for this hns no dying in it. "The printer is called a laborer. nnd the office he performs is toil. Oh ! it is not work, but a subblnne life ho is performing, when ho thus cite s the engine that is to fling a worded truth in grander curve than missils e'er before described ; fling it Into the bossom of ago.? lie throws off his coat, indeed, but wo wonder the rather he does not put his shoes from off his feet, for the place whereon ho Blades is holy ground. "A little song was uttered somewhere long-ago ; it wandered tlirough the twilight, feebler than a star ; it died upon the ear. Hut the printer taken it where it was lying there in silence, like u woni'doa bird, ho sen- s it forth from the ark that had preset veil it, and flies on into the futuie with the olivo branch of peace, arut around the world with melody like tlie dawning ot a taring iium .. ing." A MlNlHTklt OIIC0 W O Lord, wo tliaiik Thee tor llie g<n?dly.number here tonight, and ' nt Thou also art hero, not withal and ing the inclemency ot tho wenth. ?r," __ A ouarmino Indian girl la* broken off an engagement lucnuae her lover wouldnT hinij nattlm tunes.