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Show put a pint of commercial fertili.ers or a half bushei of stable manure and mix j well with sui face soil. In the of the-- e chip iminuie, bones or old boots may be put iu the bottom of the hoh-s- . Tb- A Correspondent's Idea of Steam Plowing. materials gradually decay raid f.,d tl9 A Contraction of Farming Cattle tr.e for years to (on e. bet the tice, m Novel Japanese Ra'ne. up the hoe, treading the c.ut'i lirinlj meanwhile, and leaving the tier no i!covr in the ground than It was in th- - li RUSSIA. THE WOOL PRODUCTION OF SOUTHERN The cut re giouud may be pi.aited to n.j high. j limit, eilhir sti awl dries alone or Naturally enough, M. Eiffel, the lurries and Ida. kberiio. If ir.iwl.ei!v of Method Budd.ng. New Peach Orchard eminent French engineer, who built Planting a set a row in a tiee row, ieav.ng out ;i , , Cultivate the Flowers, Evener the tower, but. w ho is better known j feet spare for tacli tree, ami t. nr mg, n Eigs Sold by Weight to fame on this continent as thej each middle, making the row- - four fmt man who invented the system of' apart. If blackberries or :ire added, set them four feet in A correspondent to the Dural New t0 iron locks for the Panama Hanal, is proud of his tall enterprise. Yorker says: I have never usel rnF a row in the tree row and one m dw iy be- hut a neighbor tweoll making tho rows ten fret apart Speaking of it lately, he said steam plowing maehineiy, I employed him to ph.nt a row of strawberries midway Inand a road has engine m" its Consider with enthusiasm: break up some land for me. lie used the ,wt,m the blarkbriries, and tlm enmmt portance from a meteorological point and to plow and wjjj pt, as closely planted as it ought to to run a thra-he- r engine of view. It is not everv day that engine ani rajse trees. Keep the tree gantri a that stationary to do anything meteorologists can get up a thou- will da It will travel over any ordinary cjear aluj tret s will he well cultivated. sand l(et above the soil. This tower country a easily as a wagon, and haul Ground in tiiis way made to carry doube, will enable them to study the decrease almost anything that is hitched to it. In should be well fed. 1opular GinJei.ing. of temperature at different heights, plowing for me be used six plows, cuttinv Tlie links. .lapane.e to observe the variations of the about 14 inches each in width and about One of the most elaborate of Japanese winds, tint! our the quantity of rain 10 inches in depth. The plow s are f a- and that falls at difierent heiglitsand ttie cut everything and turn it under. Icon- - implements is the rake. It is labmimnly density of the cloud. Indeed, in all s'der the woik done much better than any and ingeniously instructed, but rnu-- t be that relates to temperature, liygro-metrThe head a clumsy thin j to work w.tli. air currents ami the compo- that can be (lone by In s. in it breaksasany in Ms a large piece of wood, some two or three well as rolling works and fiord will a tower soil, sition of the air, the hill - Meet long, about three inches thick ai d six opportunities for study and research level land, but will not work if the mnnvot which have hitherto been sides are very steep. The owner charged inches broad. On this are lnidtuuity impossible. It will be equally useful nie $2 per acre for breaking land, an 1 1 be- - more or less, according to sie of head Here experi- - iieve jie broke at out fiftwn acres per day. long, light, straight steel prongs. These to astronomers. at the the cnees with spectroscope The speed is about equal to that of a goon nearly touch cadi other, exi-can he carried on with great for wliiili, run being to sharpened made ends, he pointed could it hut of horses, lacility; the laws of refraction pair if desired. The great Double with about au inch and a half, give a toleub'y faster and the physical aspect of the room, this engine is the difficulty of keeping it wide space bet worn points; they aie fated with water, as it does not (arry much timed to the wood by spikes. The handle water and requites an extra team and fie- - is mortised into the head. In examining tins one woud think that if the Japanese quent stoppages to obtain a fiesh supply. rake, It can work wherever horses can, if the insist on working with such an imp'emeiit laud is not too steep, but it requires can- - it might be cheaply made out of worn-ou- t ful a'tention and several hands to keep it files; but it would seein ttiat, with their ex- - evident disposition to adopt new and supplied with water. It is entirely too to ever come into general use proved methods and devices, they would so crude and provide costing about $:;5l)0 except upon large throw aside tools farms whete there are large quantities of themselves with those of better and moie convenient form, as unquestionably they land to be broken up, grain to he thru-liewill in due time. to be and to he pressed. cut, hay silage, etc., It is not adapted to the cultivating of crops FgffS Sold by Weight. after they are planted. Two ITere U a scene in a grocery: Contraction of Farming Cattle. farmers brought in some egg to sell. The There is a constant fresh accession of one was evidently proud of his egg-alabor anil land to the producing capacity proud of the birds that laid them. He of each year's planting, but there is an ob- - had a flock of fine Ilymouth llo ks and stinate reduction in yield in proportion the eggs they laid were beauties. A both to the land emp'ojed and also to the dozen of them weighed 3'J ounces, an for average of tlueo ami a quarter ounces labor. This is readily (lemon-hate- d the both for each. The other farmer b. ought in his and coton, wheat, hay coin, averages of compirative period of three eggs without saving a wor t, had no'Iiing years and five years. The explanation of to say of them or the fowls that laid them, this unpleasant phenomenon, which means A dozen of his eggs weighed el ouiues, au most studied nebula in planets and ounces favorable conditions. Then there is a comparative waste both of capital and average of one and its utility lrom a military point of labor, is lo be found largely in the dis-- ( each. Both lots of eggs were carded to view. In the event of another seige tressing diminution of the i rolits on foim- - tho rear of the store by a eleik, counted of l'uris, see liovv important this or cultivation, whieh gives rise to the gen- - and each man got a cent apiece for his tower would be. Communications eral etlort to make up in quantity for the eggs. As ho of the small eg.s passed a could lie kept up by means of optic in going out he winked and deficiency in price. If, for instance, it re- telegraphy for a great distance quires one hundred biislies of wheat or said: man with the big eggs is a That around Baris; for from tho summit as eat a heap more than mine, cot:on hens the farmer to his bales of ten fool; bring you have a magnificent panorama or more as hales bushels six wheat no of much make eggs though they are big-kilomesixty to from 120 extendin'! strive-to he cotton he tres. Iaris by night, decorated and gets no mo.e for them.' formerly yielded, ger but illuminated as it has been (lurin'? the keep up liis income by employing the ad- - Mail and Express, Exhibition, is a sight which before ditiouat land and labor. He is driven to Cultivate Elo.vers, was only within the reach of aero- - j whieh increnses his expense nauts. In fact, the trover is the chief whne reducing his rate of production, It The vegetable garden should not tie withattraction of the Exhibition. In our is a consequence that both of these factors out flowers. In (lie neglected coiners construction of the tower we have be often grown enough of liowfers to calculated on the force of wind. We of cultivation neeessaiily suffer the laud may needlack and the of the brighten the household and make cheerhave calculated that the tower will by ful the table, morning, mum and night. ful and Libor reason the fertilization, wind a by withstand pressure normally f of three hundred kilogrammes per of the fact that an aggregate wage mil, And we are well satisfn d that flowers the counsquare metre, whieh amounts to especially if the aggregate be reduced, as, should never be looked upon in considered a total pressure of 2,2.10, 000 it has been, the rate that can be paid to the try as a luxury, they should be We have made hand is necessarily lowered. The general 0,1 of the necessities of life and should be kilogrammes. and most this calculation on the are, therefore, that laud and provided for the home as regularly favorable hypothesis possible. We consequences farm labor are being impoverished to-- 1 systematically as hay is provided for the have reckoned the trellis work as full to provide gether; that farming capital is being seri- - barn. That man who neglects walls and made other allowances. is country, in the his for flowers family And, as the strongest tempests ously contracted, and that wo are sufferhe leaves for at the man half best; a in from de most the befar only in been gradual ay ing never Baris have known and best yond a pressure of one hundred and important department in the nations sub- out of his calculations the highest no having human of elements tower the kilos nature, sistence and metre, wealth. fifty per square Exchange. things is perfectly secure. Should a wind beautiful thought for the love of TVool Production or Southern KusOrv and the fountain of happiness these beabearing a force of three hundred kilos arise little would be lelt standing in In referring to the wool production of utiful things will supply in his family. Baris except the tower. Southern Russia the British New Farm. He will run the tower during the at ( a says there are two piincl-pExposition and for twenty years kinds of wool produced Merino and Dlethott or Kuctdinjy. afterwards, at the end of which time dis Some liorticultuitist clams to have it. will become the property of the ltonskoi, and in less quantities zigal and buds, m.ilitch. The Merino she was intro covered a new method of setting p :ity. The tower cost a million dollars, of vvhieli the French Government duced from Spain in lbO.i, and was found which ho holds to he much better than Daid about three hundred thousand. to thrive iu a climate wheie, though there the old way. It consists in making the are extremes of heat and cold, the atmos- - cross cut on the stalk at the bottom g The phere is generally dry. It is to he met of the top of the vertical cut, and shoving Ship. Great and desirable is the reeord-breakin- g with in the governments of Taurida, Kher- - the laid iu upward under the hark instead son, I katerinosiay, and to a less extent in of downward, as on the old plan. This. ship, and the one we have Bessaiabia. The Molokanis, who inimi- - he says, ciuses the bark to better shelter now is bound to be still greater than grated to the Caucasus, have devoted them- - the bud front rain than in the old way. The city ot Baris has selves most she is now. for assiduously to the rearing of and heme largely increases in chmecs Just come over, though this is not these sheep, and have succeeded in im- sue ess. The thing appears entirely her first time of immigration, in the breed, the wool of which is sonabe; the cut for the bud would need nearly five hours under the six days longer in staple and better adapted for be a little difierent from the usual cut, w that were but lately the engine-mak-?r- s' combing purposes than the ordinaiy Meii-n- suppose, the Knife starting in sufficient T above Fleeces in grease will weigh from dream. above to leave more wood and bark nnist Y'et, vvlmt is that to her? Wait! as pounds to 14 pounds, while tho common than below. Of course the bud ease. the Hon. Jerry Black said to the Merino fleece will seldom ex eed nine set the same end up as in the other is fie,nently lighter. and pounds, Tho Mobile Register. Hhe has Electoral Hommission. more than 20,(100 good horse power Donskoi wool is the giowth of sheep found in her hold, ns t he indicator has near the liver Don. The zigal is a native made hown, whieh will some time pull wool of finer quality than the preceding, two by four themselves together for a prolonged whi'e the malitch is an infeiior staple effort ol unvarying combination from found iu tiie Crimea. Bradfoul still takes inches, of hickory, white oak, ehnor other feet shore to shore, instead of taking a laige quantity of Fouth a Mcihto tough, strong timber. It is lour partial rest occasional! v. When she wool, but since the enormous development with a half inch hole, one inch from ear does that her record will probably be air hole (m Sl and a bwd.ng on the I.a Plata and in en for a eleus-pnearer five clays Hum six Then' the wool t.ade of South Russia foot four inches from one end, will vearti for a boat to Autla!, TM lias diminished iu importance. feet eight Indies from tiie other. tfi beat live days, nml t lie mechanical-sreniuto double-tre- e is at: ached by its elt'vl9 of the world will be applied to i (ree IUvntlKg a roach Orchard. whi-ie tiie task of gratifying it. There is a and tiie ilioiteml, soil that will grew a fair Any anil two crop of to the theory abroad that tin expense is so com will long etui by a clevis grow a peach tree. After plowoihei two. great that there wont lie anymore tiie abreast it which bring very fast ships built, that tire busi- ing the gr .und, lay it off iu straight rows case it is desired to give the sui rirt bor t ness lias already been curried to too twenty feet apart, by miming a e c' Like plow twice hi a row and throwing the cliit an advantage, as when tiaining high a pitch ol extravagance. one inch ncaCfy bored is hole fourth we some other theories, n imagine that each way, as deep as the plow will run. clevis-short end, into which the this w ill not be supported by the facts. Mark it across in the same wav. a Dig shifted. At any rate, we may be pleased to hole three feet across at the n know ttiat one big ship, the City ot of the furrows, twelve asitin 9 inches deeper than Persons w Advertisement: tns. Baris, has a link to let out still, Hun. toe tree is to be set. In the bottom of this good bog would do well to call updt Thanks to a Burglar. dis-icv- re-th- s ns hr down untidily beyond the power combs a ml hairpins to restrain. Even the warm color that came and went in her cheeks ami the dimple in chin were hardly enough to redeem her from being hopelessly plain; and yet every man who approached her lecn me her abject slave in four or twenty-fou- r hours, and in twice that time had offered her his heart uml hand. But then, he could not tell w ht rein her facination lay. He only knew that she was. beyond all comparison, the most bewitching, lovable little damsel in the world. Last spring, when she married Mr. Thomas Fot terall, after a brief engagement, there was a nine days wonder. That pent Ionian, the most desirable pnrtyol the season, ol'irreproaeh-absocial position, ami with a mine of wealth in government bonds, had never been observed to pay her the slightest attention, llow, wtien and where their courtship was carried on was n problem over which society puzzled its small brains in vain, lor no one could reccolcct a single occasion when Mr. l'otterall could possibly liaveliad a chance to put the momentous question to his lovely bride. Indeed, that lady herself, on being rallied at the wedding breakfast, laughingly declared that Tommy had never proposed to her at all, a statement to which her lord und master assented with a demure enjoyment of everybody's surprise at such a singular revelation. Only Sally Gorham knew the whole mystery, and she, strange to say, was wise and discreet enough to hold her tongue and laugh with the dramatis persome at the general mystification of the world. Hut now that Sally and I have made it up, and decided to follow the good example set us by Madge and Tommy, there are no secrets between us. While we were wandering along the cliffs at Newport week before last, she told me the story, whieh proved so inter- esting that 1 am about to divulge to the public, providing the public will listen, learn and lorever alterwards bold its pence. It was at the. end of April. The Gorhams had gone out to their country seat, at Bonn lUiya much earlier in the season than usual, and as it was intolerably (lull, with nothing ia the world to do, they had asked a dozen people out to spend a week in nil sorts ot unconventional frolics. Sally had three or foureharming buds lor her guests, among them Madge lalliserjher brother Jack hit (1 brought several willing victims from tne club, and thoo.d Van Hoovers eamo to manse papa amt mamma Gorham and keep them out of mischief with an innocent rubber of whist in the chimney corner o nights. There were great goings on, as Trifle Moses, the gardener, said, with a discouraged shako of his woolly head. Tennis playing in the morning, riding parties in t lie afternoon, nnrl in the evening Virginia reels and AH the way to Boston in the long drawing room, with laughing, singingand not a little tlirting from dawn to darkness. Madge was tliebl it host of the blithe. All the men adored her openly, save and except Thomas Fot terall, Esq., who never worshipped publicly nther shrine, though lieottea watched her afar otf with ir lively from something more than ordinary t interest in his eyes. Her arch, ways merry, made their un'niliag impression upon his soul, and it was hardly to he imagined that Miss 1alliser was ignornnnt of t he havoc her charms were working in that manly breast. Outwardly, however, there was not t he slightest symptom of an affair. Madge rode, danced and coquetted with every cavalier hut one, and that one devoted himself with an fissioned interest, to Sally, who privately considered him n iii m turned upon burglars and bur.dary. nut w hen the lock s trick el. v II and bedtime approached, the tr.r.s in particular were in anything lair an agreeable state of mind. Mr. l'otterall hud been sitting beside Mad ire ia the group around the tire, but only Sallys quick eyes had detected the glume.-- , they had not infrequent iy exchanged. In l ho bustle nt ten hint upon separation tor the niirht nobod v not iced hoiv long the his gallant Tommy was in handingcanbedroom her charming neighbor dlestick, nor how the rich crimson not only duck, blit her throat and brows, as la r lingers lay not unwillingly in Ins strong grasp. Sail v t!eiv into the room they occupied together and was already nest led among the pillows when slowly in, her Madge sauntered eyes dancing and a new exface that caused Salpression on look to ly again with sill prise and wonder it she were really growing pretty alter all. Home to bed, ordered Miss Gorla-- r li.-- h lialf-shu- sweet-hearte- sharp-tongue- greater bore than thelloosaetunnel. One night, when the week of gayety at lenn Bvati was nearly over, the whole party was sitting about a great roaring tire in the hall, for the spring evenings were apt to be cool, jesting and making merry after their custom. Old Mr. Van Hoover, who liad been poring over that mildly journal, the lenn ltyau Gazette, suddenly astonished the assembly by a singular snort, which might have expressed any emotion from delight to horror, and casting away his new spa ior, cried in tones of dismay: Burglars there are burglars about in the village! They have already and the isited the Standi.-he- s and got awav with a quantity of plunder, and it'll bo our tarn next, Gorham, mark my words! I say, Mrs. Van Convey, you haven't brought the family emeralds along, Lave you? The amiable Mrs. Van Hoover shivered perceptibly, but soon recovered lierselt and replied tartly: James, you're .a fool! Don't you know that I loath nml detest those emeralds and never wear them except when you compel me by brute force? Emeralds, indeed! I wish the burg-Jarwould carry off the hateful old s. s -- . lrewil-deriu- r ham, sleepily. I'm coming, responded Madge, in an absent way. But she proceeded, nevertheless, to put on a wrapper, and let down lmr beautiful lmir preparatory to brushing it nut and put ting it up for the night. It was long and thick and n, nml it curly, of a warm hung about her like a veil softening her harsh features untilshe said to herself in a whisper of pardonable pride, 'I am almost pretty with my hair down! How I wish It She never finished t ho sentence. died away in a smile which lingered about her lips us she wound the plentiful waves and ripples intoaeureless knot oil the top of her head, and sat down oil t lie edge of the bed, lost in meditation ns pleusunt as it was profound. At last she looked up. Hally was sleeping the sleep of the just, w it h one dimpled ham! under her cheek, the other lying idly on the coverlet. The old Dutch clock oil t he landing of the stairs below chimed out a melodious midnight, and Madge began to think seriously of red-bro- bed. As she glanced up, however, her eyes beheld a sight which caused every dri.p of blood to stand still in her veins. In the mirror opposite her she saw the door of a closet, oil the other side of the bed open slowly, and the face of a man pop slyly out a bad, lace, with bloodbrutal, shot eyes that scanned thes cue with . vil tin slumaccuracy. They sabering and uneonseioii- - ally, the motionless figure of Main, .evidently about to follow her friend's example nml retire for the night and the little heap of rings and pins that glittered on a tinv table near by. Mitli a grin of hideous satisfaction the face was noiselessly withdrawn, nml the door shut softly again, while poor Madge laid a hand upon herheart and tried to still its wild beatscar-seame- j d rr , What should she do? Wake Hally, who would be certain to cry out in a frenzy of fright, and give the wretch a chance to annihilate them before they could escape? Fly down stairs to the smoking room, where she could hear some of the men still talk- ing over their cigars, and abandon fate? Hhe raised her Hally to head once more in despair, when lo! an ideal Lightly, trembling, she rose to her loot, lightly crossed the room, and suddenly! Heaven! how the floor cracked; suddenly she turned the key in the lock, and had her prisoner la-- sa te r ! How lie swore anil stormed nml beat against the door, while Sally woke streaming, nml the household, in n state of d.renlnrm, appeared upon the scone! The men rushed up from the smoking room and proceeded to extract the offender from his impromptu dnngeon, and to deliver him over to tht' officers of the pence, who were summoned by a watchman's rattle, wielded vigorously out of the window by Mrs. Van Hoover in a paroxism ot fear. There was an immense Amount of gable and explanation going on, unstinted praise of Madges courage and presence of mind, and then a general rendezvous in the hall below for sleep was felt to bo impossible after all that had occurred. But on the way down stairs, on the dusky landing, where the old Dutch clock had stood for years and told no talcs, Mr. Tom lol terall and Miss Madge Iulliser were detained a moment the rest, quite by chance of course, and unnoticed by day. The reel brown looks were in a sad state of tumble, but the pretty pink wrapper was very becoming nevertheless, and for once in her life its wearer was really lonely, with happy tears in her eyes and the dearest blush in tho world mantling her cheek as somebody's fender arms went about her neck, and somebody said softly: At Trinity, t he last of May! And that was all. A very brief moment of bliss, butthenext Sunday a paragraph appeared in several gossipy journals, which electrified society at large. 1c said: The engagement is announced of Mr. Thomas Trquhart Fotterall. who is the only scion of the oldest and most aristocratic family in Virginia, and Miss "Margaret Ephro be-lii- ab-eii- t ivers, la-- hole AGRICULTURAL. M. EIFFEL, belle ol you would syne Talliser, the reigning things, and then season. be the I bliouldn t get me something the HUht MrHur ! th Horlfl Balder to be seen ini Mr. un exthe was Monument is uoo WuMiinirton Tii he Hoover sentenced immediately forgot As for the burglar, Nobody hal over been able to t l.e robbing in of Miss in and term fine subject citing rival in stature to no has jail, a and feet long high, exactly why Madge Iniiser tions upon his spouse s want of Madge Iulliser might have realized a i.- t Due Iarisians are but was so irresistaLe. Her eyes were reverence present, for the family emeralds, handsome fortune had she accented was a most undenia- which had adorned the persons of offers of the various dime museum, priding themselves or. the fact that small, her an Hoover since the that longed to exhibit ble puir, ami the thick mas-e- s of her every teminine as the they have, standing on the ("amp de were But the oleyoung tfop'e of a heroine daring explo.t. Irovi-deiic- e Mars, a a iron tower one thousand curly hair were always tumbling year ( OlJournal. of not so e.asil v diverted, and their s A ,0i) Selfishness of Dog Owners. farmer who tries to keep 400 tc sheep, this being his only means ot living anaing these rough lulls, j exposes in a letter to the National , sfoi kninn the native selfishness ol dog owners, and tells of his efforts in Dire necessity compels us to kil all tin dogs we can, and it is not from a desire to destroy other mens property, hut only to protect our own. If the dogs were kept off our premises they would he sale. sometimes threaten private injury in return for t ho deatli of a worthless cur, hut it is best to take such a risk, as the owner might as well killstock as for the dog to do it. We have have no choice, as there is no law to protect our flocks, and we must protect them ourselves. Sheep are taxed to protect other property, hut have no protection trout worthless dogs. It raises a terrible howl and more mourning among some people to have a dog killed than to hear of a loss of a hundred sheep killed bv dogs. It is a great cruelty to kill a (log, but therein no cruelty in a dog tearing and mangling a whole flock Dog-owner- s of sheep. Swindling a Bank. A Iiank Teller in . It is the rule with most hanks to do no business with absolute strangers, and to require identifications or at least refferenees. .Sometimes when a man wants to open an account he resents very bitterly tiie demand for an introduction. If lie would only consider the matter he would see how very important, the rule is. There nre many reasons for it, but the chief is to prevent a scheme which has frequently proved successful. A member of the gang will open an an account and pay in and draw cheeks in a most regular manner for several months. Then one day he will happen to be present when a stranger presents a large check, the two w ill recognize each other as old friends, and the rogue with an account will identify the rogue with a chech, which may turn out to be a forgery. With all precautions as to introduction and identifications, frauds are possible, and without them frauds would he simple and easy, and, as a natural result, frequent. An Editors Duties. Wp apologize for mistakes made m all former issues and say they were inexcusable, as nil an editor has to do is to hunt news, and clean the rollers, and set the type, nml sweep the floor, and pen short items, and fold papers, and write wrappers, and make the paste, and mail the papers, and distribute the type, and talk to visitors, and carry water, and saw wood, and read the proofs, and correct mistakes, and hunt shears to write editorials, and dodge the hills, s and dim delinquents, and take from the whole force, and tell our subscribers that we need money. We say that we have no business to make mistakes while attending to these little matters and getting our living on gopher-tai- l soup flavored with imagination, and wearing old shoes and no collar, an. I a patch on our mints, und oblige to turn a smiling countenance to the man who tells us that our paper isn't worth $1 anyhow, and that he could make a better one with his eyes shut. Sauk ltapids Sentinel. euss-ing- Not Square. The Teuton is often n long time in learning the American idioms. One who had been here for a year or more, and who could speak some English betore his arrival, a very short and coipulent man, by the way, went to his grocer's and paid a bill which had been standing for several weeks. Now yon are square, Hans.' I vas vat? You nre square, I said. I vas square? Yes you nre all square now. Hans was silent for a moment, then with reddening face and dashing ryes he brought his plump fist down upon the counter and said: See here, mine front, 1 vil haf no more peezness mit you. I treat you like a gentleman, I pay my pill, and you make a shoke of me you snv I vas s pi an von I know I vas round ns a jmirel. 1 dondlike such shakes. M.v poorness mit you vas done! Youth's Horn Three-Hors- e panion. -t ' pt ' three-quart- consul-gener- de-s- al Record-Breakin- o. n 1) j . -- j Rn-si- ! 1 iiiirf-'inatio- Venom in a Horses Teeth. Isaiah Bentley, formerly of Hartford City find.,) a few weeks ago was attacked by bis Arabian stallion and his arm so badly mangled by the teeth of the infuriated uuimal that amputation was necessary. Word has just been received from Sabina, O., that Bentley died a since Irom the effects of the poison of the stallion s teeth. t iucainatiCnquirer, few-day- s I one-hors- two-hors- P inter-sectio- 1 |