If. • lave, if we ahanld tame ta feal The heart no mare ia gladness Host, tthan at the door we hear, aa itaw. The tread of dear familiar feet If we, who now though tire and Mood Would rnah tan touch baft finger tips, ShotiM come to coldly meet and greet With careless clasp and loveless lips— If we, who in each other 1 * life, Live doubly every joy and pain, HbonM oeme to coldly drift apart And walk in self-wrapt way* again If morn should lose her res* and gold, And night the glory of her skies. And all thing* pale and fade, heennae We look no mora with love's deep eyee— If down the dreary, beaten way. Where other hearts, that loved, do treaJ With and indifference—we, too, Should come to find oar passion dead - O od : Fd wish that we to-day Had said farewell, and In a breath. While yet onr hearts were fond and true Had acrcely cruahetl enr love to death. lEMtf# H. Jfeore. Farm, Warden and Household. EARLT LAVIRS for tho butcher must have warm, dry quarters, and tho ewe* must be well fed. Nothing is better than clover hay and bran, with say half a pound of grain par day. Roots, of course, would be a great help. Water regularly. The lambs should have a place, into which they can run through a small opening, separate front the ewes, aud be fed in a small trough all the corn meal and bran they will eat. OTUFTTRO PEARS OR OAKS.—W. O. Burke, (Hen Mills, IV, grafted scum of pear on the root of an oak. and it grew vigorously, and bore fruit very early. Did the root sustain the cion "uutil "it formed roots of its own, or did it unite with it ? A. S. Fuller said very likely the cion threw out roots of its own ; he doubted if any union was formed be tween the oak root and the cion. BORR-MRAL FOR COWS.—HOB. Harris Lewis of the Farmers' Club to whom was referred the inquiry made a few weeks ago about cows eating rubbish, replies! by letter, saving that bone-meal wa* needed. It might be fed to them in small quantities, like (tilt, or if two hundred pounds per acre should be spread on the pasture, it would furnish the cows with bono material for a lifetime. On sandy land, gypsnnj would have a similar effect: one hundred pounds per acre was the right quantity. TIN-MILKING PAILS.— The old wooden milk-pail is very properly being alto together discarded by wise dairymen. Tin pails are easily kept perfectly "clean, and this is now recognized as the chief requisite to snores* in making good cheese or batter. As soon as the milk is poured from the pail a thorough scalding and trashing should IN? given to it. and a sweet and airy plmae should be set apart, not only for milk-paila, Unt for all uten sils used in the dairy. Any fonl odor or mold will affect, to a certain extent, even tin, while wood will very readilv absorb it. How TO PRESERVE MEAOOWS.—D. F. Eiston asked the Clnb if bone dust, ashes, lime, and gnauo would keep a meadow fertile without barn-yard man ure. Ex-Senator Geddes said if meadows were dressed occasionally with bone dust, and each alternate crop allowed to grow without cutting, and fall down and rot on the ground, they will remain in good order for many years ; when they became sod-bonnd they should bo well harrowed in the spring, and some fresh seed sown. J. Crane recommended ashes and plaster or lime oocaaionally with the bone dnst, Mr. Smith had seen meadows in England which had been said to have been mown for centuries, which had no manure, bat of late years a dressing of guano was applied. THE FARMERS' CLEB. —Moles, accord ing to Mr. Smith, might be destroyed by placing piece* of apple* in their 'holes, on which arsenic had been sprinkled. Hams had been kept from flics, by the Ch ?irman, by packing them in bar rels with pine shavings between them. Mr. Geddes kept hams from the flies in dark smoke-house, in which the fire was placed beneath an arch of brick perfora ted with holes for the smoke to pass through. Essay on bees : the Chair man announced that the Secretary, Mr. Chambers, bad been preparing a paper on bee culture for two years, and it was not yet nearly ready.——Pumpkin seeds were declared, by Mr. J. Crane, to be bad for everything but hogs ; they caus ed poultry to be weak in the legs, the hens could not become roosters, and docks could Dot even waddle if allowed to eat them.—Water-pipes, according to Thomas Hogue, of Pa, should not be less than an inch and a half in diameter. TKAVRUXG BOXES FOB FOWLS.—Ship ping poultry in coops, is dangerous to the health, limbs, and life of the in mates. To avoid this danger, the American Agriculturist gives an excellent plan for a box or cage, from which we gather the following : The box shonld lie of light lumber, planed on the inside, and well put together. Size 18 to 20 inches each way. Instead of lattice on one side, cut a hole in the box five or six inches square, cover this with woven wire nailed on the outside. The whole side may be used as a door, aud fastened to the box by nails, screws, hinges and hasp, as the shipper may think best. On one side of the window, inside, fas ten the feed-cup, and on the other, the water-cup. A hand-hole should be made in the center of the top of the box suffi ciently large to admit the fingers of a large hand; grain may be dropped through tiria hole, in case the package should be delayed along the route. The water-holder may be a common jnnk bottle, inverted in a small tin cup and securely fastened, the bottle with wire, and the cup with nails, to the side of the door. Fowls thns shipped, it is said, will go from one part of the coun trv to another with but little risk of in jury. A SAVAGE BEXCOXTS*.— One of those tragic rencontres has occurred at Mon tieello, Georgia, that calls to mind the dark and bloody days of wild frontier life, where human passions rage unregu lated by law,'and personal difficulties find more ready settlement by tho fierce arbitrament of arms than before the slow and circuitous tribunals of justice. The dispute had previously originated about the hire of a man. The parties were Clington Digby and brother on the one side, and Seaborn Kelley and two brothers oa the other —'all farmers. They met in Monticello on the 7th inst., at the election of ordinary. The dis pnte revived between Clinton Digbv's brother and the three Kelleys. Young Digby drew his pistol, but, before he could use it, one of the Kelleys seized his arm and held it np while the other two Kelleys pounded away, in sledge hammer fashion, on Digby. At this juncture Clinton Digby came up to the assistance of his overpowered brother. As he approached one of the Kelleys shot him in the leg. Nothing daunted, he fired, killed the Kelley who held his brother; then, wheeling quickly, he shot down another of the Kelleys, who died in about an hour. Then, mounting a horse, he rode furiously over fences and through the woods, and made his escape. It was a quick sudden, desper ate rencontwy as tragic in its results as fierce in its character. BRIDES.—A correspondent at Vienna writes: VI always calculate the number of strangers bj the number of brides which cross one's path. Your female readers ask how I know a bride when I see one. But I reply, my dear ladies, I can tell in "an instant—and, so to say, with half EffCTC—any travelling 'young married woman.' I have no need to look at the luggage, which is new; nor at the husband, who looks as if he was not quite sure that he has not been hasty: nor even at the dresf Jfo; a bride walks into a room as a thing apart. Brides are divided into two classes—the serious and the smiling. The first enters with a queenly etep.afid seems to say, 'Don't look at ml. Don't you see I'm married, ! and tiiat-4Ww days are over?' The other cornea up smiling, as much as to j say. 'l've landed him. Is it pot a good tin?*" | Item* of Intercut. A rum-ft was born in a London theatre, during the performance. JOHN CHINAMAN i now the ntiiveml domestic servant in Rati Francisco, HI-KSIA IS to have a fleet of twenty-five war vessels in the Black Sea next sum mer. THK average depth of the Atlantic ocean ia S miles; that of tho Pacific, 4 mild. THREE hundred million letters .rear!? pass through the post-offices of the world. THE aggregate circulation of all the Boston dailr papers ia Mid to be alnrnt 160.000. * CAP* Con t* the moat prolific eran- Wrrv producing region iu the whole United States. SIR CHARLES MoKDACTrr has applied for an examination into the sanity of his wife, Lady Moniannt. A CANADIAN (taperaaya that the MeNab surveying (tartv, returned missing, are now all safe at V'ort William. MR. JAMES GOCLD, of A litany, claims to have made the first railroad ears in this conn try, at Albany iu IS3I. TMR last twelve months have been j terriblv disastrous to life and shipping I upon ua tteean, all over the world. •• I HAD rather have newspaper* with out government," said Jefferson, "than I government without newspapers." TURK* are alwiut 1,300 cheese factories iu the United States, from the product lof which vast quantities are exported. BVRINEW is so dull in Paris that it is | said if it were not for the Americans a large number of the store# would be i dosed. THERE are only about 50 Indiana left in the whole State of lowa. It is not long since they numbered thousands in that State. IR the Massachusetts House, a bill to take from-cities aud towns the right to authorize the sale of malt liquors was re jected—72 to 77. FrrL manufactured from peat is justly engaging considerable attention, and must further economize at (mints distant froui coal mines. THK population of Boston within a radius of sit mile* frotu the State Houae, is 400,000, and has doubled every 17 vears since 1800. BALTTUOUK has four thousand person* employed in several extensive shoe man ufactories, and their sales amount an nually to 86,000,000. EVROVK has. as nearly as can lie cal' cnlated, 500,000 miles of railroad, and America, 200,000, India has 14,000 miles and Australia 10,000. ALTHoran the fourth half milliard of indemnity ha* just been (aid there re mains in. the French treasury a balance of 450,000,000 francs. IR the Wisconsin Assembly, a eonsti tntional amendment* was passed ri strid ing municipal indebtedness to five per cent, of assessed valuation. IT ia nmlerstoixl in England that the decision of the Emperor William, arbi trator in the San Juan difficulty, will be unfavorable to Great Britain. EXOHTKES hundred vessels are em ployed, irrespective of railroads, in con veying 5,250,000 tons of coal annually to warm up the city of London. INFORMATION has been received of the loss at sea of the French lark Alix. Tlie disaster was attended with $ sad loss of life, nine persons having perished. THE prohibitionists of Michigan have called a State Convention to nominate candidates for State officers. tD be held in Lansing on Wednesday, June 11 A BILL passed the Wisconsin Senate prohibiting the purchase or receipt ot groin by any other weight or measure than at the standard provided by law. NEARLY two thousand farms were taken aud improved in Washington Ter ritory, last year, by actual settlers. In crease of taxable property $2,000,000. JOHNXT DEYIR, alias " the Chicken,' convicted at San Francisco of the mur der of August Kamp. has l>een seuten ced to be hanged on the 26th of April. THE shoe and leather interest in the United States is asserted to be one-third larger than that of cotton and wool com bined, ar.d comes next to agriculture. PRINCE FREDERIC CHARLES of Prussia, while in Rome recently, is said to have declared that Germany would side with Italy in the event of an attack by France. ALEXAVDFR MOSLRT, editor of the Richmond and James C. South hall, editor of the Enquirer, were arrest ed to prevent an anticipated hostile meet ing. A MAX in Xewbnrg, X. C., cut his hand in opening a box of sardines the other clsy, and the result was that his hand ana arm began to swell and he finally died. MART WorxEß, of York, Penn., is a little girl who preserved a railroad train from destruction the other day by swing ing her apron for the engineer to stop after she had discovered a broken rail. REV. DB. L. D. Hrsro.v, late of Balti more, has published another card pro testing his guiltlessness. He ssvs: "By every form of oath or imprecation that is solemn and awful. I again declare that the girl's statement is false." A MAX in Illinois has patented an iron shingle roof. Tho shingles are about six by thirteen inches, lap each other so as to insure a water-proof, and are fast ened by headless nails. The patent is said to be less expensive than slate. RI-CEST advices from Mexico state that Mazatlan is still held by the rebels. The Federal force sent from Colima, via San Bias, having been unable to cooperate with that of Gen. Pesquiera from Sonora, was compelled to retreat again to San Bias A RTBAXOE murder ia reported from Bnfialo. A woman was found beaten to death in her room, her husband lying drunk in the hallway. She had evi dently been dead some time. The scene of the tragedy is but one square from the police headquarters. A WOOD-CHOFFER, named Head, at work near Ponghkeepsie, built a fire under an overhanging rock, and, while eating his dinner, the heat thawed the frost around the bowlder and it fell on the man, breaking both legs and one arm, and burning his body in a terrible man ner! MB. JOHX BRIGHT has written a letter to the Anti-Income Tax Association in London in favor of a reduction ef the government expenditures. He advises the with-holding of confidence from s government which cannot govern with out taking seventy millions annually from the nation's industry. OXE Henry Joyce, of Dc troit, recently became convinced that he was a great and very profitless bother to his wife, and aceorningly drew up and signed a paper which reads: "This is too Acre that if mi wife paze me 10 dolrs i won't Xever bother Her anny mor as tren as I liv if i doo she kan sind the pleese after me." A WXT,D-DRESWEP and lady-like individ ual, who wan detected in stealing a pair of silk hoee in a Boston store, burst into tears when approached by one of the proprietors, and oflered" him twenty dollars. Magnanimously, after quietly censuring her, he charged her only the regular price of the hose, and handed back the change. Too lata he diacovered that the 820 bill was counterfeit. FBOXES TO DEATH. —At an early hour during the cold snap in New York, a policeman, in Forty-fifth street, saw n milk wagon passing along, and observing that the horse seemed to be going his own way, he had the curiosity to stop him. On looking into the wagon he saw the driver sitting there, but totally un conscious. A closer examination reveal ed the fact that the man was dead— frozen to death while performing his customary rounds.— N". Y Paper. Mamma (to Naughty Boy) You should always behave the same, whether you are in company or not. Naughty feoy—Well, ma, why don't you behave the same as you do in conjpaqy, and press us to have another tart? * The Contrast* of a 1.1 fe. In a recent speeds at (Jreat Falls, N. IT., Senator Henry Wilson, referring to some experiences in his earlv lite, said : 1 feci that 1 have the right to apeak for toiling men to toiling men. I as born hew In your county of Stafford. I wa* born in poverty ; want sat by my cradle. I know what it is to a*k a mother for bread when she has none to give. 1 left my houie at ten years of age and served an apprenticeship ol eleven years, receiv ing a month's schooling each year, and at the end of chven years of hard work, a yoke of oxen and six sheep which Iroiight "me eighty-four dollars. A dollar would cover every penny I spent from the time I was Urn until 1 wa* twenty-one years of ago. I know what it is to travel weary miles and ask my fellow-men to give ine leave to toil. I reme;uler that In September, 1833, I walked into your village front' my native town, atni went tlnough your mills, seeking employment. If anybody had ottered me £8 i r s<> a month, I should have accepted it gladly. I went down to Salmon Falls, I went to Hover, I went to Newmarket, and tried to get work, with out auiveas, and I returned home weary but not discouraged, and I JHI! my pack on my hack and walked to tho town where I now live and learned a mechanic's trade. I know the hard lot that toiling men have to endure in this world, and eveiy puis*- ! (ion of my heart, every conviction of my ! iiidgiueut, puts me on the side of the toil nig men of my country—eye, of all coun tries. 1 am glad the workingn en in Europe are getting discoi touted and want better wages. 1 thank God that a man m the l'uited States to day can cam Ironi three J to four dollars, iu ten hour's work, easier I than ho could forty year* ago cam one dol lar, working from twelve to fifteen hours. The tirst month 1 worked after 1 wa* twenty-one years of age, I went into the wooitsj droio team, cut mill-logs, wood, t\*e in the morning before daylight and worked hard until after dark at night, and I received for it the magnificent sum of six dollars! And when 1 got the, money, those dollar* looked a* large to mc aa the moon looked to night, tin the farm on which 1 served an apprenticeship, I have seen the best men who ever put scythe in grass working tor from fifty cents to four shilling* a day, in the longest days in Summer. Yesterday 1 visited that farm, 1 asked the men who were there what they paid men iu haying tune lat Summer, and they said, from $2 to 92 50 a day. This wa* paid on the same ground where men worked forty yeai* ago for from fifty cent* to four shillings, and took their pay in tarui product*, not money. I have seen some of the brightest women go into the farm houses and work (or from fifty cent* to four ahilhngs a week, milk ing the cows, making butter and cheese, [ washing, spuming and weaving, doing all kinds of hard work. I wa* told yester day that many young women were earn ing, in the shop*, SI a day, and that those who worked in houses were getting from $2.60 to $3.50 a week. To-day the laboring men and women of our country are earning from three to four times a* much in a day as they rtiuld earn forty years ago, and a day's work is shorter now than it was then. After I had learn ed a trade in the place where I live I work ed fourteen and fifteen hour* a day, month after month, to earn about 840 a month. A DESERTED TOWN. —A few days AGO the editor of a Western paper visited Meadow Lake City. This city was once i one of the most famous of the mining towns. He went up on snow-shoos and took a look at the deserted and suow covefed place. The houses which were oulv one story in height wi re covered to their roofs with snow. The two-story houses were surrounded with snow to the second story. Not a living being was to lie seen by him. He was monarch of that snowy desolation. Signs swung in the cold wind, and just grazed in their swing the surface of the snow. Promi nent among the signs was that of a bro ker's office, jost opposite the old hall of the Board of Broker*. The large hotel there was yet furnished, and beds and bedding remained there. Our friend, standing in his snow-shoes, gazed into the hotel while he stood on the snow sur face, level with the second story, and he saw clean linen on the deserted bdls. He wanted to take a rest in the conifortabh looking quarters, but there wa* no fuel or food iu sight, aud he had to go down lower to a ditch tender's cabin to get fire j 1 and appease his hunger. Many of the ; houses have this Winter been broken down by the weight of snow on their roofs, but many more remain just a they were when their owners left. The prop erty deserted is safe, as cold aud snow have locked all against the depredation* j. of burglars. Mtadow Lake is a Winter 1 residence no more. STEEL MADE MOW PEUXSTLVAXIA OBE. —A scries of experiments have liecn made at the steel-works near llarrisburjr. Pa.. in the manufacture of st<-el exclu sively from Pennsylvania ores. The result is saiil to have been so satisfactory as to justify the expectations that the country mav eventually export ores or pig metal to the European manufactories. The chemist employed at Raldwin makes an artificial feiro-miuigenese which is claimed to be even better than the imj ported spiegeleiscn, and the product of the Bessemer converter* is said to be of such remarkable tenacity that it may soon be expected to supersede wrought iron entirely. The Pennsylvania itailroad Company is rapidly relaying its main track with steel rail", the greater portion of which are made at Ihddwin. The rails have Wen subjected, together with the liest foreign steel rails, to very severe comparative testa, and those mnnufsctur ed at the Pennsylvania Steel Works have proved to be the best in regard to safety, tenacity, durability and economy. FOBCED TO IT. —Matrimony Is not only the source of joys innumerable, but the occasion of many jokes. A particularly funny wedding occurred lately in Mary land. The bridegroom at the last mo ment, lost courage, and appeared not, bnt he was soon hunted and dragged to the sacrifice. The bride then took a no tion to be offended st liis apparent reluc tance, and refused to be joined in the holy bonds with snch a coward. There upon he became all eagerness, and the inflnence of the minister and threats of the sheriff were brought into requisition to induce the lady to come to terms. She finally anhmittcd and the twe were made one. They will get used to each other in time. BEATEX AT IT.—A gang of hnrglnrs met with a singular mishap in Manchester, Ohio, a few nights since. Eleven in number they went at midnight to rob the First Xational Bunk. Entering the building with a false key they proceeded to open the door of the safe with powder. While lighting the fuse a spark fell upon a keg of powder which they had brought and an explosion of unexpected propor tions speenily followed. Two men were killed outright, and another bail a leg fearfully mangled. The others escaped, but all except two of them have since been captured. With one exception the burglarn were residents of the county, where for seven years they have been committing depredations. TJTE END. —The crisis in the great Tichborne rase in England has been reached at last. The claimant was non suited by the presiding Judge, and his at torney gave up the case. The action of the claimant's counsel having l>een made known to the jmy, they, after a short deliberation brought in a verdict against the claimant, who has been arrested and lodged in Newgate Prison. He is now generally believed to be Arthur Orton. A GRAND MOVE. —A bill has been in troduced in the New York Assembly for the suppression of the uniqnitous lottery business. The provisions of the measure aro very stringent; the punishment for the selling of tickets as policies being imprisonment for from thirty days to twoyears, and a fine of from fCOto 81,000. It prohibits newspapers from advertising lotteries, and also punishes anyone who persuades another to visit any place to purchase lottery tickets. California is going into the tree busi ness in earnest. It has hired a State tree planter at a cost of fifteen thousand dol lars a year an*} expenses. The Prrlla of the (tea, A aoaman of the hark Pila d'Oracn, which tonehed at fiahle Island, off the Nova Kant is ecaat, for water, hring* a painful atory of the wreek f the l.illy Parker, (.'apt Fletcher, of Bwauiej, England, ou Sable Island. 'Hie watch men on duty at the "left bar" that night were attmeted by the whining of a dog, ami on attaching a lantern to hia neck were able to follow him, and were brought to the 1 teach, where they found a woman and her child, a little girl two i years old, lyiug slmoM drowned. They removed her to the Sailors' Hospital, I atiout half a mile distant, where she lev insensible for a day or two. The child ■ died the follow tug morning from the 1 expamre. When the mother became ' conscious she asked where she waa . Her appearance was refined and hand* some. On Ix-ittg told that she had l>een , saved from some wreck, and was then in I the hands of those who would take care I of her, she earnestly expressed her grati • 'tilde. Memory returning she suddenly ' askttl: "Where ia Robert? Where is ■ ("apt, ' Fletcher?" Nobody could tell. The surgeon could only recpoud that ss 1 nothiug hud yet beeu learned of the wreck, ('apt. Fletcher might be safe. The poor lady wept bitterl* for some ' 1 momenta, ami again suddenly turning toward the surgeon, asked for her child lis death wa* not announced to her then, but the following night found the lady so far recovered as to lie aide to narrate the incidents of her untoward fate, and hear the harrowing news that her hiis- I.and, ('apt. Fletcher, had not been heard of, and that her child hod died. Her story is sulmtautiallv as follows: Ou the JUI of Jauuary the hark Lilly Parker left Swansea, England ; bound to Halifax, Nova Scotia, with merchan dise aiul salt After beiug out five ikiys, the fort-topmast aud fore top- gollantmaM were earned away in a severe gale, which lasted over forty-eight hour*. Jurv-intuit* were promptly supplied, and the Lilly Parker proceeded on her voy age favored b.v good winds for alnuit ten days, atter which she agaiu experienced foul weather, iu which a large quantity of canvas and the foretop gwllantmast were lost After being tfiirtv days at M-a, she encountered a violent hurricane nud hmt nearly alt of her foremast and, the mizxenmaat was literallv split in two by a tremendous sea, wbicfi also mode a large breach iu the bulwarks, and forere. Negroe bad enough in Cuba, but Chinaman is worse. Some chance qf negroes lwing free,but none for Chinaman. Heautifnl country; bad government. Suppose you say, * No. I will not go to plantation.' You do foolish thing. Then they pat you on government work, and yon get nothing at all but blows with a stick and nothing to cat. China men kill themselves all the time in Cuba So many Chinamen there that there are many bad ones; wicked people in all conntries. You want story about planta tion I You write it for newspaper I Wei I tell you. It is true —if yon think not true, ask people who know, and they say what I say. On a plantation a bad over seer was innrdered. Macbette most cut his head off. Some bad Chinaman did it, no mistake there. Nobody but Chinaman work there. One Chinaman we all know do it, and Spanish man who owr. plantation know it too. This Chinaman was a big, strong man f good worker, cut more cane in one day than other man cut in two, three days. Yon think they punish this man ? No, sir. He too good hand. When cane season come, work behind hand, if you kill him, what they do? Someliody must be killed because oTersoer had his throat cut. They look around and pick out one, two sick Chinaman, so weak they sure to die soon. ' Yon are bad fellows,' they say, ' you kill overseer, you come and get gar rotted.' and they twist the necks of these two sick men, who not good to cut cane, and the big, strong man got off. That true atory, yon write Kin say so," Su>snnf' ABOUT.— During n certain " conrt time.'' in Pike county, Alabama, there was a trial for a general row. and a witness testified that one, Blantonstall, ♦•jest kept sloshin' about." As this remark about the chivalrous Slantonstall was fre ouently repeated, said the lawyer for the defense: "Come, witness, say over again what it was that Mr. Blantonstall had tc do with the affair." "Slantonstall t Why, I've told you several times; the rest of 'em clinched and paired off, but Slanton stall, he jeat kept aloahin' about." "Ah, my good fillow," exclaimed Nat, quiet testily, " we want to know what that is. It isn't exactly legal evidence in the shape you put it. Tell us what yon mean by sloshing about." "Well," answered the witness, very deliberately, "yon see John Brewer and Sykea, they clinched and font. That'a jn a legai form, ain't it!" "Oh, rea," said Nat, "go on." " Abney and Blackman then pitched into one another, and Blackman bit off a piece of Abney'a lip—that'a legal, too, ain't it! Simpson and Bill Stokes and Murray waa altogether on the ground, a bitin* and kickin' one another—that's legal, too, ain't it f" "Yes, but what about Slantonstallt" "And Slantonstall made it his business to walk backward and forward through the crowd with a big stick in his hand, and knocked down every loose man in the crowd as fast as he come to 'em. That's what I call sloshin' about." EXTRAT AO ANT.— During the Duke's stay in Memphis, he invested a little more than 8100 in cigars, and about 64,000 in hotel expenses, not quite SI,OOO per day. While in the city he received just twenty lettero asking donations to various charities. THE Kansas House of Representstivee passed a bill abolishing capital punish ment. UNITED NTATKN CONURBM. SEUTS The Awprapriatioa bill was taken np, (he pending qnestisa being the appro priation of ISO,(KM for (lie oarrying ont of the civil servise reform measure, which, after a long debate, was adopted by a vote of 25 to 21. The amendment repealing the law for the publication of the laws in uewnpapets was taken up. and a resolution to lay the amendment on the table was lost by a vote of 21 to 22. A bill giving the right of way to the (i rent Hontliem Railroad in Florida, was passed, after wliieh the I/cgtaLtive Ap propriation bill waa taken up, the pend ing question being ail amendment clis eontinuing the priutiug of Uie laws of the United States in newspaper*. A motion te lay it ou the table was carried by a vote of 22 to 21, which wus followed ! by an amendment appropriating 850,000 | for printing of laws, which waa carried. An amendmeut raising the salaries of ; certain officer* of tlie goveruuieut elici ted some talk. The bill granting half of Verba Burns I Island, ui the Bay of Kan Francisco, to the Central Pacific Railroad was taken | up, a motion made to lay it ou the table I beiug defeated by 04 uaya to 7o yen*. It wa* recommitted to the committee. The Legislative Appropriation bill was taken up and a number of amendments lucrcasiug the |>ay of certain officer* wa* adopted. Mr. Sumner presented a petition from ritizenaof New Bedford, Mass., asking measures for the protection of the wal rus in the Arctic seas. The Senate adopted the resolution in- 1 creasing the salaries of U. K. District Judges and Judgis of Courts of Claims to 86,000. The Chicago Relief bill came up, but several amendments being pro] toned it went over. Tue CI nirm&n of the Senate Finance Committee dsclai* d himself in favor of a r-dilution of 821,000,000 and that it he taken off textile fabrics. BOUSE. A resolution waa introduced and adopted without drtiate, to investigate the affair* of the Naval Department dur ing the ineurobency of the present Sec retary of the Navy. Mr. Brooks's reso lution asking for a joint committee " to devise the wisest and bent policy to be pursued in relaUuu to Mexico fur the rt>- tabliishmeut of law and order on our borders," wm rejected. The resolution declaring it to be unconstitutional and a tyrannical usurpation of power for Con gress to attempt to force mixed schools on the people of the United KtaU-s, or to ias* any law interfering with church es, public carrier*, or innkeepers, was rjctej. Mr. Garfield introduced an amendment to the Post-office bill which prohibits all persous who have held of fice in any department of the govern ment which required the confirmation of the Senate from acting as agents or attorneyw for the prosecution of claims i before "such deimrtment for two year* sfler having left the government em ployment. A motion to suspend tin rule# aud ia>a the bill dinccliug the Sec- ] rvtary of the Treaaury to collect and receive after the Ist of April, 1872, oue- IhirJ of the amount of customs duties ou import* in I'm ted Stales leg si -tender uote* was rejected. The contested election caac of Cessna ! against B. P. Myers, the Bitting ructn !er from the Sixteenth District of Pennsylvania, was called up, and a reso lution confirming Mr. Myera in the scat ! was adopted. Much time was ajwnt in debate while iu committee of the whole on the Post office Appropriation lull, the chief ques tion being the amendment increasing the subsidy to the Pacific Mad Steam ship Com]-anv for China and Japan hue j to ti.ooo.tea Jn the House a bill was passed paying ! the SUte of Kansas £137,000 for expanses iucurred during the war. The Senate bill to extend the time for the State of Wisconsin to complete a ! railroad from Lake St. Croix to Lake Su perior, with the amendments reported by the Commit!# • on Public Lands, was d - ! fated. Mr. Garfield, from the Conference Committee on the bill for the St. Louis , Custom House, made a report appropria ting f1.750,000 for the building. The ' report was agreed to. Iu the H. ue a resolution was ndoj t cd inquiring into the alleged combi nation of rai'road interests known aa the Southern Improvement Com|>any. and designed to control the tratiS|Kirtalion of oil from the oil regions to the sea board. Debate was contiuned on the bill to extend the time to the State of Wisconsin ;to complete a rond from Isike St. Croix jto Lake Superior, and resulted in the adoption of an amendment forfeiting to the United States all lands granted to the State of Wisconsin for the construction of the road, and their reservation to ac tual setttlers, under the Homestead Law, bv a vote of 04 to 85. ____________ Texas flattie Tralai. They have a novel way of making up a j i wagon-train in Texas. The follow ing ' show * how it is done : One great heavy wagon will be laden 1 with eight or nine tons of freight. A I smaller wagon, wilt a short tongue, i* hitched to the great wagon, to trail. This is laden with fire or six tone. Then a smaller wagon trails behind the second DEVELOPMENT OF F.oas. —On leaving the ovarium, the egg to he ex truded a week hence is not much larger than a pea in a common pullet. In its passage through a tube hardly eight inchea long, it imbibes fluids from the wall to increase ite sixe. On its transit through the four inches the growth is atill more rapid, while it also ia coated over with lime, mixed like paint with mucous, winch hardens quickly. That ia the finishing proeeaabeiore being laid. In twenty days the egga of one hen would exceed the weight of her body. So of any bird. Yet the whole of that mass of albumen ia drawn directly from her blood. If stinted in food, of course it would limit the number as well. In ths laying season, if domestic fowls can not range for insects and worms, which furnish albumen for their eggs, they must be fed with animal food to meet the demand upon their systems for that material. A BTBIAIT convert to Christianity, as the story goes, was urged by his employer to work on Bnndays, but he declined. " Bat," said the master, "does not your Bible say that if a man has an ox or an aas that falls into a pit oh the Sabbath day, he may pull him out!" "Yea," answered Hayoh ; " but if the ass has a habit of fall ing into the pit every Sabbath day, then the man ahould fill up the pit or sell that ana." The atory has a sort of swivel mor al which will fit a great many disputed points in these days. Bitten by a Mad Bog. Jnlia Connolly, ag 11, of Brooklyn, N. Y„ was hittfn in the faee by a small hlaek and tan dog. Foaming at the mouth and howling piteoualy. the dog sprang upon the girl and succeeded in fastening ita teeth in her upper lip. a portion of which it tore away. Fhe child ran bleeding to ker borne and re lated the occurrence to bar parents, who did their liest to alleviate her pain. It was ascertained Uiat the dog was mad, and had bitten several other children. Two boys followed the doc and beat it to (loath. On Monday following, the child waa auddcuiy anted with hydro phobia, aiul aince that time has grown rspully worse. Hhe refuses to take the medicine* proscribed by her physician, ia violent in her actioua, refuse* all final aud nourishment, and at inteivala ia seised with paroxysms of pain, accom panied by foaming at the mouth and griuding of the teeth. The Bight of water throws her into hysterica during which her contortions are terrible. A rejMirter visited the child's home. The child was seated in a rocking chair, and was prevented from rising by her father. Her mother was in an adjoining room nursing an infant that wna appar ently dying from congestion of the lungs. The mother states that Julia went to school up to the day the was taken ill, aud exhibited no symptoms of hydro phobia until late in the evtuing, wheu she haoinU of the compass. The President site iu the central seat (not in the seat of the teornM) with hi* hack to the north, aud Mr*. Grant sit* exactly opposite. Die places of honor fur the ladies are on the right and left of the President, and on the right and left of Mr*. Grant for gentle men. Koine eighteen or twenty course* hav* been known to be served at these dinners, and at every plate are eight glasses for different kinds of wine. A TAI* or Wot.—Hero's a true tale of woo—all about a twautifnl and abandoned wife in New York city. Sho married a w retch who loved her money not wisely but too well. When he got the money he loved somebody else, and departed for the "rolling prairies of the mighty Wast." His earthly possessions were burnt up in the Chicago tire, and then he went back to New York, and put up at the Aster House, without a rent in hit pocket. Re morse seized him (it must have been re morse h and ascertaining the address of his lawful partner, he thus wrote to her: "1 ant here and pennilees. Forgive the past, and corns to my arms again." This is what rhe wrots back: "Ell come as soon as 1 can. Excuse delay. I've gone to have a charge of powder and a bullet put in tli# pistol you left" He didn't wait! Remorse seised him again, and carried him off. SRLLIXO JA* ELS TO PAT THE FBRXCH WAH POT. —The subscription for the deliverance of the national Icrritorr is progressing with extrsoraiuary rapidity in 1- ranee. AU aorta of ways of making money are proposed by the journals which advocate the patriotic movement A correspondent of the JMtmilntr ( wiser *O/ suggests an ingenious plan. Slit pro | HMOS to add to voluntary gifts of jewels the earrings of the whole female popula tion of France. "Let as put a stop," NITS she, "to this savage fashion, let blood bo ahed for country, hut let not wounds lie inflicted in order to place a jewel therein. Let all be given, from the enamelled gold button of the workwoman to the clusters of rubiea, of jwarla, of bril liants. Seeing a woman without ear rings will then elicit the rwqwetfnl re mark, "That is a woman of France." ERIE HAILROAD. -The viee-prerident of the Erie road, Mr. O. H. I*. Archer, and a number of the other directors of the company, succeeded in obtaining poMaeMiion of the office of the company and proceeded to elect General J. A. Dix president, and a number of prominent capitalists as directors. Messrs Sherman k Field were dismissed from the position o'counsel; Mr Barlow was elected coun sel. The auditor and general superin tendent of the Erie road recognize the new directors. Jay Gould protests, and threatens to fight the mattar out to the last.—A'. Y. pcqxr. JorRXALtSM IX THE UXITRD HTATRS. — The number of newspapers and periodi cals published in the United States is as follows: Daily, 574 ; Tri-weakly, 107 ; Scmi-wfHfkly, ils ; Weekly, 4,'J70; Scrni inontblv. ; Monthly* o*2l ; Bi-month ly, 13 ; Quarterly, 40 ; Total. 5.846. The Oneidaa. one tf the six nations located by treaty at Green Bay, Wiscon sin, hsTc" so dwindled in number* that but SBOO is required to pay the annuities assigned them. Straw fringe and leaves are to be very much used this season for trimming bonnets, dresses, snd parasols frkjyRAILROAD BONDS —Whether ▼on wish to buy or sell, write to ("HARLE* W. HASRLER, NO. 7 Street, N. Y. • The Market*. jrrw roms. Bur Oimi-Prim* io Ex. BuUnaka 9.11 V* -19 Kiret qualilr It a .llv Medium *r fair quel. .11 a .11V Ordinary thin Cattle.. .I0v, .11 Infr or Iwwrat *rde. . a.!• Morn Cow* SO.OO M.M BOH-LI .SBV* .*, l>iT#eed.... .*#!*• .01 Jf • 'J* 1 ! Corm*—Middling.... US' ■"'l ruci—Extr* Wrrtcrn 6M • 0.10 HUtr n*lr* 6.88 lIN *iT-IW Weetrrn 1.67 • 10* ■< Htalc LIB ■ I T* H. t Sprln* 1.00 *I.OO BA*I.XT- Stale M *IOO (V.**—Mixed Wnrtarn TO a .79 OAT* —Wee torn .08 * .0* Hon •71a, .00 * 60—'Tta. .10 • 0* Pobb-M*** "00 .10 00 l-..a .0 a .10 PXTBOIBWM —Crude 1S lUimdj* lIt'TTXB —Stale 80 a .HI Ohio W. R. 10 a .18 Fanay SO a .S* Weetcrn Ordinary 11 a .10 Pr limy Irani* 6n* ......... .SI a .3* Oar***—siot* r*ariali of liurton, formerly of Han gars |>arish on the Eastern Shore of Virginia and County of Northampton, aged seventy-one years, and yet lived but seven years, which was the apace of time be kept a bachelor's home at Ar lington, on the Eartem Hhore of Vir ginia." Ir ia aaid Uiat every extensive adver tiser has to nay a very large sum for rxperu-nee before be learns bow to invest hia money judiciously. It would be bet ter to intrust the business to a responsi ble Advertising Agency like that of Geo. I*. Howell A Co., No. 41 Park Row, New York, and thus gain the benefit of expe rience without cost. Contracts can be made with them as low sa with publishers direct— Com. An Irishman called at a drug store to get a bottle of Johnson's Anodyne Lini ment for the Rheumatism; the druggist asked him in what part of the Ixaly it troubled him most, "Be me sou I," aaid he, "I have it in ivery houl aud corner er me."— Com. For loss of cud, horn ail, red water in cows, loaa of appetite, rot, or murrain in alieep; thick wind, broken wind, awl roaring, and for all obstructions of the kidueya in horses, use Bhekwan's Cab Aiair (Condition Powdes* —Co**. (Yjuueanoo. —Price Reduced. Being assured of an ample supply of the Cnn duraugo bark hereafter, Messrs. Bliss, Keene A Co., have greatly reduced the price of their Fluid Extract Bee Ad vertisement — Corn. Tested MR Time. — Fob Thboat Dis bars*, Colds, and Coughs, " Brotn'i ItmncJtiai JVocAet" have pruroii their efficacy by a teat of many years.— Com. fcxTlh a-1 the Advertisement beaded "Homes in Colorado."— Com. The "Domestic" ia the moat durable aewiug machine.— Com. EDITORIAL NOTICES are so common that it in almost impossible for an editor to rxpmts his holiest opinion of the mrrito of any article without being suspected of inte rested motives. This fact, however, shall not •ictei us from saving what we think of a new addition to the Materia Medic* to which our attention has been recently directed We refer to Pa. J WuAtti CausoaaiA Viss ues liirtßjM, a remedy whirl is making its way iute more families just now than all tli* other advertised medicine* put lifetlief It* popularity, as far as we can judge, is not listed on snipty pretention There seems to be no question about the potency of its tonic and alterative properties, while it possesses the great negative r.commendation of con taining neither alcohol nor mineral ncboo That it is a spedhc for Indigestion, nilious uea. rtmslination, and many complaints of nervous origin, we have reason to know ; sod w% si* assured on good authority that as s general inrigorant. regulating and puriflng medicine, it has no equal It is state! that iu ingredients, tobtained from ths wilds of thlifornia,) ate ne to the tncdissi world, and its extraordinary effects certainly warrant the conclusion that it is a compound of agents hitherto unknwn. If popularity is any cri irrtcm, bare can be no doubt of the efhewneev of the VISROAB lirrrxaa, for the aaia of ths art tela • tnimeuae and ounUnaally inersaaing. -ttan. For Dyspepsia, indigestion, depression at spirits ssil general Sibliq In their virions forms ; also, am a preventive aga-nst tsvsr and ague, and other intermittent fsvers.th* " Feme rWpbotaied Elixir ofCaiisaya," mad* by Oas well, llaxard A Co, K*w York, and sold by aO druggists, is the best lonic, and as a tonic for patients recovering from fever or other sick ness, it has 110 equal.—Oom. •V The Surtliaf. lkMitc Itadonm of the Utnriun •* UUKI in Lhe auUwauc Book, ontitW, " Xm>iM op tii D. K. Sm an Kcm rua," is a thrilling BecorA, ie* hair to whitm or bis .rat hum th* sraip IRISH LIXEXK.— Wb*a MI arltclaaaoupu arapataUaa at *urb luu*|taM aaarit aa ID aaauaaed tha aafear aal raramnd*tau of tba **llar and nmair. tbar* wax b* xoaMhtax that n I- I "hie* eoaip*l* a*eb forr*i .mir*iior of aeeb a fabric ta lha flA*l ea**D op U*l* I* U HA* pa sweater*. wbwb I* rrooißf mora lata public tana at lata year* Utaa aay rood, of Ih triad irai—rt*d The, an mraidad aa tba raort rniiabla aad aaaaimuaal Lew now aaad. 800 FIORSE D>TS will T* given to the t*S wbe apply. Xa rwanctma. Otuaal ta *n>ara* emiarmuaa. Pitaßlad IB lutmi Taws*. VtlUaca aad 'IV* "'J** •"**• " f **•* For fell va-X.Xir. 11* Broadway. X T . or >*bra*a LeedlX.Oeaba. Xeb. Tbnaaaada bat* b*aa> * bytb* aaa of tba riruciaa Syrup a prat..i id* of Iroa from vaab. alckty. •affi-nn* rmalnrra. o traa. baaHhy. sad happy an *at *l>M aad mnlA caaaal icaanaali * baaitat* la '• itatnai. Fa* Dy*pnaaad Dabtlity ItwaapmSc. Sppeial Xotleoai. Toom Maim M relitoraie mtllioaa of children am eeonop SILVER TIPPED ftboaa-Why M tbe, an (fee cheap** and nam WW throoph tl Uwto. Tq hhem. UHllad* and BtMlllT. The ralaaataoa of imnai energy wbieh rrealat aa m dttpoaitiea ta phyak-al or maul rPocl. *o Mnm ae almoei la- amount U paßttiee inability. of ahirh aa lorn ltww>. |PMod> I ram a rarMp of The priori pal of three am maautehloaal debility. boat of the • imoopkrni. eon pled with humidity. elimaOe rhaapee. "<1 t-e phrneal proet'atioa rmaeqoaat a poo a loop illncaa. Dal ehateeer tbe MOM. I* BUM be perfectly eloar UMI if Uio norma. ayeteia i. andaty rotated. Bar thing M mqaimd to brace it op. That anaoUiiap la IleateUer'e Btirra. ahirh it aaimraally reoopniaed aa lhe anal complete aad apeedy mrapanuit of the phyai oal force. la eiteaeece tl ha* heao a* tberaagbly aad widely daaonatralod a* to be a matter of peeittee aar- Uintp aad familiar kaowtadpa. that the BiUare will aot orlr rehabilitate the phy-eiqae. whea ah a I lor ad aad waatrd by dtaaaee. bat will alto, if talma ayatematraalty. aotaaUy roapaoaat* the cooatitaUoaally feeble tram* for Iti drScraaap of atreapth. aad hp to fan. a* mam life tolo a woah ay atom, aadow M with the baahh aad rlpor wbieh Mature baa denied it. The Bitter, aha enable lb# body to reent the lairiatinp ladaaaaaa af heat, hamidi y. aad obaacoa km a temperate tea hot eit taate. ft I* aa thaae aeoaaata epeeial'y te he reooaa m ended to trerelera aad raatdaaM la the torrid ana*, and pereooa rubyerted to ahrapt traaolttoaa ia tempor al are. M*ey Is threw* Aw*/ ty *ll wb* 6* at* bay the OA BLR SCREW WIRE faetemed SAM* Tbay ere the •••"! an* pliable and **r*te**bl*. Leek eel Sir Uai- UUWHk Tocosrir M rrivST The adrarttrar, herin* been permanently fared ef that Oread dtete. I tonramptton. bp a Maple rertmlj I* (ax iom le make known to hie fellow ralferera the m***> S ran. To all who detor* tv be will aond a copy *8 the preeertpMon mod. if re# of ehr*ei. with the dtrwotioaa for pteparlna tad uemt the #*niiTa.oa rArtie# Within* the preemption will plaoac addiaa See EDWARD A. WII.SON, d k* l ** Eattn* Cored (tend tump for book end per " llciilar# to !>- Squire A Rowwr, Wortl infton lad At * I*7B. A ts#rioe# Bay*'jni*al.Sl*ar.tSa. s W * peer, EPEE intra for rtamp. lit * BOTH. Chtoag*. f * SAMrLGX, whieh eall iradllp for $U . *t tl ft £££ A*ent SSajnjter tPlU I'IUNTIB Mve r s On., 14 Kilhj St.. So# ton SKIN DI8EA8E8: Tetter, itch, hire#, epoU. niraplee, Ac. ; book with SO recipe# lor ure, with fall direct lOOA, nulled far SS eto JOHN O. SOCttT mi North NiatTst.. Phil*. P*. 1,000,1)00 ROM J Green Hoae# PUnte I—low before April tot OHAVRH. BELOVER. WILL4RD SCO.. QARAECVW A GREAT OFFERS! Horace Water*. *Ol Dnmdwai.X. T.,8 will dupora of OMB HrSPRXP PIASOO, Mr.unDri.Me, end OBOAM* of Ml ft ret rIM aaku*. ipetndlne Water#'#, *> mtrraeto fafa Sii aead . or will take from 0 to 038 montbbr BB}o paid : the earn# tg let. And m*d*. now on exhJbfteoo at 481 BreadwAp New York HAVE YOU ACOLB7 HAVE YOU A COUGH 7 HAVE YOU BRONCHITIS 7 HAVE YOU THE ASTHMA 7 HAVE YOU ANY LUNG DIFFICULTY OR WEAKNESS IN YOUR THROAT 7 lUal llm Mleataf aal tor* to talis f ALLEN'S LUNGBALSAI! What tha Doctor* say. Or Uon. I Qtafo. Sr*oa la to Amy larto to w fraai -.atrartal awwaaipttaa Hsaaya; TtoMliiMw> Is Ma*ia tot tt aaa by to aaa af . Ursa BAIAAM tot I%m aaa tai a*4 mi fima Or riannaa #f Muwatt. • s "I tarowaaaai yaat Batata la |halaraaa. la aay ator aaalwiaytaf Caaeba. aal tlstraa aauataatiaa " A1.1.1N • M!V. RAIAAM la to raatoy la aara alt laat aal Tbraat d.lfo-aidaa It AnU batoraaabtr totoTjmaa aaia* aay otor htltaar 11 will aara abaa Again What tha Doctors gay. Anna Wort ja? M D . tl Ea.naakr Caaata, laIt •W.MM Ta Umw ran |l t laa UM iIUWI I.radfwuua xiawnli la a>y pratooa, aal ! aaa aai i.Ml tot* M aa taw atalMaa for ian rliaaaaaa is luir A. IVrtif. M 0 . a* toa Caaata, Otat an t iijii'a I '•* RiUia aut aalr aalla tafaMa, to sfoaa uarfoat stafolMa it waj eaaa a.ilia wa Aawatoa*. Hariaa aaaSArnar M It, tad kmtmimM it.al tl pammtm rjaaala awAial |nf* a a It M any 4*t|y pra.-t.oa aad auk .:•>•- aaoaawi Aaaa Nwaa raal Hlt mat aarlaial tl.aatl afaay praparatua I baaa aaar yt kaaaa." MamaaMl Haaaia, M D ,af Mtotoaw. Tiranal. SMteMSSS.IS | Iti■ aaktaJTabaa, aad to Laasa" Phyataiaaa la sat raawaataal • aarltaiaa "Aw* kaa I aa taariw : auat (Say aay aba at ALLEN'S LUNO BALSAM, i i *a tat uAaa aa a tea*. all aWtaaad Uta M at aaaa. PKllltY DAVIM A HON, ProWtlsnos, K, X. Qassral Amti fcr V*w Zgl*at MatM. For gal* by J. T. HENRYi Nav T*iu OSO. O. OOODWIK * 00., Bostow. lOlWfll. HOLLOW AT A COWPCT. FMII NOTHINGT 11KB a-is?isstSis I P • aal foil parttaalara aa aaaaiy* 11, I at. Wi.y-laa aaa la. W.A.foEWD^H^OW.^ AO Niiiciri ICT. WyartAfttwaa al ataaat l.suu ra ipaa fo naassr. aaaa. larfawaty akiit lata, patata. pattr aaaltay-vaa. to |i** atailMil ■Aoaaa. la k. klaaktaf. aaatakaa, nlnaaa. y'd aal tan; 1 tauaa. |MU parto wiismii 4a., aaaa ka ibtwtal S5Sm , g?4ri^5 I=7 TRUSS 1 gHSa^a^ lllULlUt aeasarw . iwaeurotpwueeuietaete '••■•ajr A NERVOUS INVALID llaa paMwital for liw laatal I tar art aai attaon ako aalar fraat >atnaaaaaa. IMto. kj MMtjaa aappiyias to aa*> . T. pfis BURNHAM'B sva*^ ! nana, ato by toGnraraaatat , Waabiaatae. MJT iy|S. ~* I af" D. CT Ila pupioit> ta anataror HSVE ' * ttaa aal taa t wtar § taaaawtu HtoMattat • Wg> M ~3r "R '""BI"!] VU I ta^Yatinra CTSDUBAMGO^ •f 4 iwr toikfmn {K T JRrt X a Jtaa Caaaar. SwlaU Sr 9 aßv ylilbr Sainnalna^tJb CL'-Gayw .Aa, fou by all t^|AW. I*' faiaa $S *•* bat Ala a. Homes in Colorado. ■SiCTfia'aiantw&afc: ! f. $m : to torar IIM al to wajay taartaal bato i wraatal IB htoMOM A l-ab'.t B tlaa ' Boal> aarl rat., mml •>, aal prolaram ttuaaa attaaa -'. a '.r*r and ytail ftaajtanaaaaal hick |ta, zzvs: iswSa.-S afontoaMptaa.totato.toaiwt bnck. day. a Saana* raiU. to at A Uaaaufo. Ruciy Muaataja :.n neaaad baal. kitawai Ittiap WitoaW ( aulra tbwa art taa aaa *i!ta aal patatua aa ranfo : si!-xziz.z?rj?'Jr~;~&z S¥ ; aortd Aatoaataa raaaaar raptlky- StaaawaOraa ta to •arly Mrt yawtl* *at aail Ac** aal tu ktalral ! iawa art aafcaoaa. Fall taforuwt. a rant foaa. WW. R. PABOK, ►rrrrlarr, taolnrarla Nprlaft, (alarala. HAY PRESS MAUFACTO*r. AISASY. A Y., UUCI AT HONTMAL, P. 0. | Tbt P. A Daa—m fUMk( Prac—a■** Uw rmw nlamm^mx ik#k—Pan— .aWatokaJ u ■- ii tM tow* *wml to ito mwHir*. * ; *l£wmw * ■—. -<-< IT—JW*s tor Wlto Nil. rut*. OWN. >!■■■ Ctory. Ban*. to— I """ ""***' **** !!(. U. gsKt fa tfatMClitHtiSntySfttts fetfift •r. |lyib| a report Ml tfcw •> n*M r*MT •toVliMnM (toiiy •*"•■ r*w *■ *■< BM | otWr utonutotto-MWUK tontoi Ptoatat. , Pack** h4 Mujfar. M4iw T. E. DEDSUCKACO.. Alkaar. - Y. Cheap Farms! Free Homee! na m u*a '- ■TCAD or ltoto ACin. Pra* Pat— la ParrAawo if LaaA. RaaAtortk*B*toac*irto*a|<—sklt.ilkaa*atork. pahU*bd IB Kn*Vh. iWin. Naadsab AND Daatok. 50rW7 " ; " r * A >m ,m< ■— v b sviirNk Hart no lan tte Brat to lutrodvco to tte pahUc At Hubbard Aqoaat., Aawtiww T ban (SRttoah. llW --bateMammoth < •*'.)*.. Mamma wl Ooaw. Ptaaw- M|t Wurr Ma'oo. tranl Now Dwarf Marrowfat Pat, Bail ma OauM LaUwa. ud otter New and Valuable Vegetablcs, wHh tte roawro of iMbaraaam J am ania twawtate to owtuiir tte rob'.r with VocwtoMa ate rfewwr Boob of tte paaroM atelH|. Mr Annual Ctlowr It tow awoAr, ate will bo root te to >ll. II teo not wolf oil •oatnaaa tea tte aaoadord rtwwtobwa of tte fkraud canton iwror oao hnndrte which art of Him rrowtow.l ate a aanhlv awelad Hat of IWtr Rtet Oat tte rorot of mt rifa lllMto JM. 1 J: EttZ&sz SXJTJj£E&M3* JEtt %^3S=r£S "f L |hla Mwum, Etagtoi. TfW. •>• SSg. ar l.taralif *tf *H> —■ *y*■£!_ 3-3 iS^ v ~^ ,f>A.n *V Al l. I>troOI*T I**4M HS. A^ssgsagffi mmrnsrim I STHMA. 8* A s^sHSSSffir 5 """'• t. y*r A w c*~ Thrilling. AAtoundj^^j|*£!^*i|ll**i jvsrew raaggaag* 80ETBIIG IEW r AGOT!. w *" | ! , "> w ""—*** Aigy* J ■ r• •* ■■—* w *?t* ?; s3 u JSJ^tT3 sr-i s£rgg|gfofSs '" "w*THI*TO*. 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