OCR Text |
Show . answer to his own wch. Those who account for bhi absence) on the Indisposition hypothesis, ny that i the trochee Henator Conkllng gave him during his celebrated ellort . wr too strong fw any but ft pugll- ltio physhfne, like that of the , rellosaal Conkling. The tempest i raised by Howe as still bowling, and will,' lets thought, soon break out with redoubled fury. During this rellffloua rest of Lent, when tba belle haa eeme-. eeme-. rd from wattring, and has ceaeed the toot hrn ioht( yoor corTespond-etil, corTespond-etil, no longer harried with balls, receptions and fetee, Indulgea In rviitinfocenoee, and the grateful phHosophie quiet of pasloral( boarding board-ing house) life. The population I f Wsshingtou la divided Into two I elssaes, (otnewbat analsguus to1 the division of humanity Into1 blasts of burden and beast of prey) boarding honse keepers and boarding board-ing house lodgers; and the great end and aim of each ta to get the better r the other. If any akep-iU akep-iU I m the word In Hs etymological, etymolo-gical, not Its theological sense, want to study human nature na-ture and ran - afford) to - loose sseuey for his labor, tot him start a hoarding honse In Washingto. These ara many historic boarding huassra here, no matter how grand and palatini a Washington mansion may have been, "or how distinguished distinguish-ed the men, cr lovely the wnsnen, thst may Imiv posed and 'plotted, waltzed, scintillated, and flirted, In its nice brilliant saloons to the boarding hoae favor must It come at lank The eld time house where Itoverly Tucker onee entertained ia his Virginian style, was, during the w ar, and la now a bearding bouse. The house In which Howard lived, and lu which his duughter ee he-ioJljr he-ioJljr dskded -be- stbest and lolled Uie aasasHtn, on tlie nlgbf lhat JJnooln was killed, has fallen into Hue, and the coat cf arms over tba dixw bears tills legend, "Kuomi to Ist with Hoard." The old Com-modem Com-modem Wllke's snansion has been I feryearsaboardiiig hoaee.Her Hel-j Hel-j kimp lived in Hm early days of bis ; StCMitaryship, and here his band-lady band-lady sued him fur hia gas bill. The common fata ba also tiealien tlie handsome mansion of Chief J u at ice Chase, afterwards the home of bis rtou-in-law, eieuator Kprsgue, and i tha house where we all liked to go I ta sea the kindly old man, and attend at-tend the super!) reeepttuna of his daughUr, this too has become a j boarding menagerie, and lat win i ter bad the gns turuei oil in dt-! dt-! fault of ptymeut of gas bill. The house Jbllorson Davis lived in was converted nut king since Into a restaurant. Huch is politico-social , life here, one day resplendent with ; horse, carriage, music, flowers, beautiful woman acd ga.'liant men; the next a bursting of lb bubble, debt, disgrace, house for rent, furniture fur-niture fur sale; the red flag Hie at lbs door, idle i abort but It is very fuunv, . C. A. H. a M fraaa (a. Jwaia law. Balt Laki City, April II, 17S. FA.tvrt Detent Jfew.-1 Jfew.-1 It Is salil, on irowl anthorlty, that th. brathren ralfwtl on Kay.vlll. rangs, wlthoal Jwatr or fmic, between be-tween fifty and seventy trmutaml busbsls of grain durlitc tb. pant season, and thai a still gneatr quantity will be raised tills summer, as th. brethren nav. ' much more laud under cultivation; this being the ease, would it not be advimtiie to plaoe the entire Jordan raDge at onoe under th. no-fenclaw so that almllar results can be realised la this quarter. Ka harm can accrue from aueh a law. II does not rre-vaut rre-vaut any ou. from fvnclng, whan he hi ready lo fanea, but 11 Is a pro-tectiou pro-tectiou .van to those who haw fences. Not .that I advocate, by any means, that a man should spend a hieilnie on a farm with no fence around it. My motive la to give the poor man free aocea. to th.itoll and mas. bis feace out of hi. farm. And while doing so, raise the stalf of life fur himself and family. If we oumpel tha poor man to exuaud a thousand dollar. In fencing before o. can mrgiu w cultivate hii quarter quar-ter seotlou of land, he will alay poor aa loug aa he Uvea, and hi. landa will paxe Into the baud, of the rich. The Jordan rang. I. no lonirera publlo domain, but the firivale property of indi.iduala who iav. taken It up according lo laa; hence htock.ralaera muii MwK other localities for grazing purposes. Tof.no I u this range aa It ha. been taken up, In 40, bu and loo acre lots, as the fence law require, wouldcoat.over two million uuIUr, Ten If the fencing materials were in the country. Much a thing hi not lo be found hare, neither have we th. means to import it from the east or tlie west. It Is evident to me, If any class of people are urged to fence, It should be tboie who bav. stack running at larg. and destroying de-stroying av.ryUilug they com. lu contact with. Th. poor man', grain will not leave th premises of 11. owner, will do no harm to any oua, h.ace It needs ao fenoe lo keep it within bouuis. Tbe stock which l.!now runuluii at large 1. principally plug horses. They ale virtually a curte to the country. Huch a law would compel sheep-herders sheep-herders t taks their Hocks Into the mountains lu.tead of staying arenud the erUlera, destroying very particle of pasture the people have for tbelr milch ows, av they are now doing around Pleasant Ureen aud other location The only aure remedy fur this evil is for the ople to luru out, camuw, and eatehliah the no-fence law, then stock of any kind fuuning at large during certain seasons of the year can b. lak.u up fur tre.pae. The ouly partiea objecting u auch a law are Ihoe. living around the point In the direction of Black Kock. And they, with the a il of a boy on horsstieck, can keep their stock back, with very little trouble aud expense, to those Jwho, I niunt say, depeud prluciply on stock raising. rais-ing. OV'uurtB It will be neceatary for them to eorrall their stock at night In thl. wsy their stock will be In safe keeping, day and night, which will b. a great benettt to them in a pecuniary point of view. Another word, aud 1 oka. I tliluk that the bretliren should dealst from cutting those saplings for fencing purposes; they are destroy lug au element that would oa . sou re. of weallli, lu tbe near future. A sapling feuos does not atuouut to muck either. On who ia IniKRKirrKD. |