Love's Farewell. Bines there's as help, tome let us kiss and part, Nay, I have done, you get no more of me ; And I sm glsd, yes gl*iirw F.itmcr, afford great nourishment for weak animals. It tell* of a colt which to sllamtcantiices was ndaily dead, the breath of life being barely perceptible, which almost instant ly revived by giving it one or two freali eggs. The same result* htve attended the administering of eggs so weak cattle, and to feeble, chilled lambs. The remedy is a simp's one, and farmers would do well to bear it in mind. HORSB OOXXABS.— How to fit a new collar to the shoulder of a horse ia thns told by Tkt Fabry Former; The collar should be of the proper siee; just before putting it on the first time, immerse it in water, letting it remain about a min ute, and immediately put it on the horse, being careful to have the hames so ad justed at the top and bottom so as to fit the shoulder, and then put the horse to work. The collar by being wet, will adapt itself to the shoulder, and should dry on the horse. When taken off it should be left in the same shape it oc cupied on the hoes*. and ever aftar yon will Lave a snag-fit ting collar aud no wounds. HENS. —W. H. White describee in the following paragraph his sn -cessful treat ment of hens tmured with ronp in itt worst form: I took, them and made corn meal and red popper iat-> pills PA large as I could well in. their mouth and forced down l* reW-log on the tbt*>at. after shutting the month and holding; gave three or four at a dose. Tlte pro portion of pepper ws sufficient to give quite a tinge to thh meal,*-all wet up with hot W4FER- IHE DISEASED fowls were shut up m ft dry, comfortable t\>op in the barn, w'ntra iti 1" !f* dure thev recovered. I fed theso earn meat d >;tgh with red pepper during the time they were shut up. liiaome casya I found it necessary to stT' Og otees, Iwft taken in its eatty OBc go - 1 large dose was sufficient foenectacure, where soft food witte#AMe peppor was given af er, and tht fowls kept couune-l in dry, c 'tuforttbte yittis A SEW EN-KMT TO TH CORN PUANT.— We notice thdtia many places, this sew- j son, the corn plant is attacked by a nun- j nto insect, v -ry similar to wfaat garden ders who have graperies called the 1 "thrip." ItiteomaaDthatitonhrcanbe seen dLstinctbrder a pocket lens, when it, appears as a small whitfih brown thread, about a line in length. It is, however. ; very active. When disturbed, it jumps like the eabblge flea. It feeds on the green matteahf the leaves, usually eat iu straight hoes up and down between ! the ribs, It .ivwg an appearance oi deli cate, thread-like linos where they have fed. That they are sezioas injury is evideut from nie fact that the corn so attached is not, so thrifty and vigorous ! as that free from the visitations of in sect, Indeed, as the effect is to prevent j the nse of half tba lsaf surface to the plant, it must bo an injury. It is the same as plucking off half the leaves, the consequence of which we all know very well. Whether it has come to stay, Or is only a e-rstia! visitor, remains to be seen GermuntoimTtltfmph. WOCJCD*.— \ correspondent desires as , to give him 6ne cf the best remedies 1 that we know of for wounds. We know of none superior to the fotlowing sne, which appeared not long since in the Country Oudkwaw. Take a pan or j shovel with burning coals, and sprinkle ' npon them sommon brown sugar, and bold the wounded pact in Umsteoke. Iu a few minutes the pain will be allayed, and lecoverj proceed rapidly. In my cwn case, a rusty nail hail made a bad wound in the bottom of my foofc. Hie Kin and nervoua irritation waa severe, lis was all removed by holding it iu the smoke for fiftee* minute*, and I waa! able to readme mv reading in comfort We have of tan r.-commended it toothers, with like result*. Lately, one of my 1 men hod a ftager-nwil torn out by a pair ; of ice-tongs. It became very painful, as was to bate l>cen expected. Held in sugar sraufce for same twenty minutes. • the pain cgaaed, and it promises speedy recovery. As a good substitute for this, we will merely add that a tablespoon fu! of the tiirture of arnica, added to a I>int of cold water, will answer an exoel- < ent purpose. FATTEXJMO Hods,—in regard to the number of rimes per day hogs should be [ . fed, tvben pat up for fattening, my sx-. Serienco in ihe matter is this : When ; ogs are as old aa tbey should be, after putting them in the pen and feeding them somewhat plentifully for six or eight day & they will then bear full feed-1 ing, and (Jiey should have all that they ; can eat—wind I care not whether it is j given in oe feed or five. But about one day in easfli week I like to feed a little sparingly, KJ as to let them get a little hungTj. Turning hogs into a corn-field I consider a wasteful way of feeding. Still, I think I have never seen bogs ! fatten faafer than when they were feed ing themselves in this manner. Ido not think it best to give full feed to hogs at ! as early t an age as some do. Putting j them to 'pasture and giving them some grain to keep them thrifty, 1 regard as 1 the liesk plan until they are twelve to sixteen months old. By this time they have age and constitution to bear, being pnt np ami. fall fed. In this way they will take oh flesh and fat very fast. When hogs are penned up to be fatted, they frecently fail, I think, to get water .noagh. It is according to my exjwi i<-uie that we have to salt and water onr stock fat, a* well as to feed them fat. fCpr. Citj^pauite. ■* re WEECAHD BR A CUJUD Br EST.— On a late Suuflffy, a cloud burst on the npper waters m a branch of Lick Creek, a small slgamti near the pike in Carroll county, |jnd the waters came rushing down in a volume four or five feet deep, taking all the rails, logs, and rubbish In its way. •At the forks of Lisk Creek a strong frame B-'ptist meeting-house was filled wnM?dpTe to hear the Rev. James V. RileyJjgennh. Tha meeting was dis missed abgut 12 31., and part of the congreg*H*fi dispersed ; but as the rain was notirev aboiit fifty persotis remaiu- ' ed in IpP for several weeks an Invalid, When she become calmer she donned widow's weeds and devoted herself to the care of her child. It is not known whether Soloman had an idea that by making up with hi* wife he would come su for a share of the old people'* property, or whether he found the old affection for Auna reviv ing, but the fact remains that a fort night ago b# wrote her a letter from New Orleans full of inquiries about her aud her child aud requested her to write to him. Anna had Just returned from Detroit, where she hail made the ac quaintance of a young man who bad im pressed her favorably, and with whom she contracted an engagement of mar risge. The cruel newa from New Orb ass and lbs deception ou lle part of her pereut*. sod the mystery sur rounding ber busbaud's disanpeareuce, proved to*> much for her aud she in u few dare showed unmistakable signs of insanity. She was closely watched, but during' the temporary absence of her Brother she got a clothes-line, fasteueil it to a hook behind the basement door, aud stepped off a bed uear by into etcru ity.—iSns I*prA Paper. GERMAX COCRTESY. —No one can help sdmiriug the simplicity, kindliness, and honesty of the German*. The universal courtesy and friendliness of manner have a very different seeming from the polite ties* of the French. At the hotels in the country, the landlord, and his wife, and the servant join in hoping that you will deep well when yon go to bed. The little maid at Heidelberg who served onr meals always went to the extent of wish ing us a good appetite when she brough in tbe dinner, llere in Munich the peo pie we have occasion to address in the street are uniformly courteous. The shopkeeper* are obliging, and rarely ser vile, like the English, you are thanked, and punctiliously wished the good-day [whether you purchase anything or not. la shop* tended by women, geutlemen in variably remove their hats. If you buy ofy a kreuier's worth of fruit off an old womau, she says words that would be, literally translated, " I thank you beauti ftifly." with all thia, one looks kindly on the childish love the German* have for titles. It is, I believe, difficult for the German mind to comprehend that we can i be in good standing at home, unless , have some title prefixed to onr nstnea or some descriptive phrases aided. Our ' good landlord, who waits at the tables and answers onr bell, one of whose ten [ ants is a living baron, having no title to : pnt on his door plate under that of the i baron, most needs dub himself •' priva tiert'* and he in*i*ts upon prefixing the ' name of this unambitions writer with the enobling von : and at the least lis insists 1 in common with the tradespeople, that I am a 14 Herr Doctor." The bills of pur- I chase by madarae' come ont to 44 h ran ■ , well-born." At a hotel in Heidel j berg, where I had registered my name , with that distinctness of penmanship for which newspaper men are jnstlv COB ispicon*, and had added to my own name '.fewite,"! was not a little fiattered to appear in the reckoning a* 44 Herr Doctor Msmesweise."— " Saunteriage," by C. D. Warner, | HAS Wow HIS C ASE.— What has been known tor many years as 4 *the great ! Oregon land case " "has at last beeu de cided by a jury in favor of one Joseph Thomas, otherwise known as "Wrest ling Joe," a person now almost onr hundred years of age. It appears from the testimony given on the trial, that this Joe had married a Miss Elizabeth t'arnthers, in 1916, and that a son was th&onlv Issue of the union. A separa tion laving occnred, cither before or after his birth, Mrs Thomas emigrated j to Portland, Oregon, where she resided Inn til her death. The son grew to lie a | man, and engaged in land schemes which enabled him to acquire a hahd some estate. At his death, being with out heirs, the snthoritics seized every thing that belonged to him. aud were about to have a sale, when tber were stopped by a lawyer named Hannah, who had sncceeded in discovering sever al of the kinsmen of the late Mr. Thomas. Soon afterward, tlfe old man, •' Wrest ling Jae," was found in a condition of abject misery, and bis title to lie the heir of liia son was so satisfactorily prov ed that Ue was surrounded by sjecnla tors. and his claim purchased. Recent ly, a decision was given in favor of those person*, bat as the property is valued at upwards of a million dollars, the origin al claimants continne to fight, which will very shortly lie resumed iu the Su preme Court. Meanwhile poor old Joe has been provided with enough money to enable him to live in luxury for the remainder of his days. During the prn greab of the testimony a fact was de veloped which tells very well for Oregon The estate now valned at a million was only worth fortv thousand dollars in 18G0. SECRET MARUIAOES.— Every now and | then the public is startled by the ex j poeure of some domestic or social villany j based on a secret marriage. Some con fiding youne lady has been induced to i marry" ber lover secretly, and to keep i the marriage secret for months, and per haps for year*. In a recent rase tlie marriage had been kept secret for nearly seven years. Of eourse a man who wishes to keep his marriage a secret is always actuated by selfish," and usually by base motives. He is acting a part playing a game; and his confiding wife is pretty sure, in the end, to find herself the victim of his tre.icl.ery and base ness. A woman should never consent to any such arrangement. Her mairiage should be solemnized in the light of publicity, and not in the shallow of con cealment. She should distrust a men who has any reason for shrouding in darkness the fact which—ln liis estima tion at least—should lie the crowning glory of his lite. The man who always has some plot on hand—who naturally takes to trickery snd concealment, and is never ready to have his actions brought ont into the clear light of day, is apt to be so constitutionally base that he seldom, even by aecidcDt, deviates into the path of honor and virtue. No i woman who values her domestic htp j pirn "-a should ever listen to the sugges tions of such a man in favor of a secret marriage. Won,D NOT FEI.L.—A correspondent tells the following : 44 "We were driving," she says, * 4 through one of the prettiest and most picturesque of New England villages; it had about 900 inhabitants, nobody was poor, anil nobody was very rich. One saw mill was on the bank of the beautiful, foaming, shady river, and in front of it sat the millers—one reading a newspaper, one a book. Said one of the party, •' There is fall euough here to run A good many factories; I wonder that it is all unused.' Our driver laughed and said, 'They won't sell water-privilegss have. Some Boston men came here and tried to buy, but the people woaldn't hear to it; thev said tliey didn't want a manufacturing popuhtfU't' to come here and : spoil their society.'" So the Oon tocook flows for miles unchecked by dams, free from mill waste, with its "tall" unused, and its beauty unspoiled Ucrding in California. The ranehe from wnieh 1 write—the Tejon it is called—aeemato tue.n* 1 have said, the finest property in the United States in a single hand. It contains near ly 200,000 tiores.aud lies at the junction of tne Sierra Nevada with the ooast range, which Wild around toward each other in a vast sweep and form the bottom of the groat San Joa■*/ra. The i corral i.* to keep the sheep together st (night, and protect them iu a measure ' against the the attack* of wild boasts, which, curiously euough, srs too ow -1 ardly to venture after dark itlsids of even | a low fence. The topeatr* is to protect j ihe shepheril himself against the attacks , of griuly Wtirs, which are still abundant in the mauntains, especially iu the COM*: lt.iuge. The tepo*tn is a platform j about twelve feet high, built upou stout pol#a solidly setiuto the ground. Upon i this platform the shepherd sleeps, iu the > mountains, at the entrance of the corral; the griuly bear oinuot climb a pole. 1 though he can get up a tree large enough to give bis claw* a hold. It is I believe, not infrequent for a grizzly to stand up at the side cJ a tepestru at night, and try to rouse out the shepherd. But alt the men arc armed with guns, which they carry day and night. The grizzly de sup ' plied ut stated intervals with food. They I usually receive a week's ration*, which ; they cook for themselves. At the Tejon ' there arc two supply stations; and evert ! morning donkeys and mules were seut I out with food to some distant shepherd*. The ration-masters oount the sbeep a* they deliver the rations, and thusull the binds are counted once a week, and if 1 any sheep are missing they must be ac I counted for. The shepherd is allowed : to kill a sheep once in so many days, I but he must keep the pelt, which is vul j liable. Above the ration ■ masters are the i major domos. Each of these hus charge of a certain number of bands; on a smaller estate there is usually but cue major dome. It is his duty to set- that the shepherds are competent; that uew pasturage is ready when a band has netd for it; to see that the corral* are in good order; to provide extra bauds at lamb ing time; to examine the sheep to keep out scab, which is almost the only djs ease sheep are subject to in this State: aud to give out the- rations for distribu tion. On arch an estate as the Tejon there i*, finally, a geueral superintend ent and a bookkeeper and storekeeper — for here in the wilderness a supply of goods of various kinds must be kept up for the use of the people. A blacksmith, teamsters, plownieu, gardeners, and house servant! mske up the complement oftheTijons company. The garden ers and -crrants are Chinese, as they usually are in this State, and Tery good men they are—civil, obliging and com petent. Beside these numbers fed from the home place, there are on this estate about 300 Indians, who have been al lowed to fence in small tracts of laud, on which they raise barley and other provisions, and m some cases plant fruit trees and vine*. They form the peas antry and are a happv, tolerably thrifty, and very comfortable people. Their surplus produce is purebwed by the su perintendent; when their labor is u*ed they are paid; and they all have horses which pasture on the general fields. They hare learned how to plow, shear sheep, and perform some other useful labor. Henry Clay in the Konse. Henry Clay's control of the House, says a writer, was almost supreme. Al though there were many of the ablest men iu the country among the people's representatives, particularly daring the administration of Mr. Munroe. I re member to have heard a distinguished member of the Houso from Massachu setts, Mr.Gorbara of Boston, express the opinion that the power wielded by Mr. CJay as sjieaker would be dangerous to the liberties of the country, if exer cised by a man lacking in patriotism or integrity. His rulings were rarely dis puted and never set aside. Naturally arbitrary and overbearing,with unlimited confidence in himself,and a oornm inding presence to set one's self against him. He put the clock in the hall back an hour and a half on one occasion to pro long tli session, that a certain order of business might bo completed. On an other, when a bill providing for a series of internal improvements was under dis mission, an appropriation for the Cum berland road in which ho was much interested, being one of the principal items, he made a decision, or rather took u position, which startled all reflecting men, although it was silently aoquiesed in. The debate, which was an unusual ly animated one, had extended through several days, the opjmsitiou being strong and determined, when a North Carolina strict constructionist moved the indefi nite postponement of the bill. The motion was perfectly parliamentary snd not an uunsunl one. Bnt Mr. Clay regard ing it as a trick to kill the measure, thundered out in his most commanding tone*, "Tbe chair will uot entert on the motion of the ruemlier from North Caro lina. If be wishes to defeat this great measnre, let him undertake it in a fair and manly manner. Let him manifest his opposition in the proper form. Why not make a speech against it? The House will listen patiently to whatever ha may have to say." The gentleman was no taken aback that lie did not open his month, and the debate proceeded without further interruption. MORE OF THEM.—TWO more eases of aecidint from playing with firearms. Tin y are becoming so common that we shall cease to make a record of them soon. The first ease was where one Mrs. Mur ray, of San Ernncisco, playfully pointed a revolver at tho head of a little girl. Of course she thought it was not loaded. But it was. Moreover, it went of!'. Furthermore, the little girl was shot dead. Second case; a boy of thirteen, while in a shooting-gallery in New York eity, took a rifle (which, of course he thought unloaded) from the rock, and pointing it playfully at a little girl four years old, said, "I will shoot you." He did shoot her, and she died. Who wants to have an " nuloaded" pieee of fire-arms pointed at him iu jest ? A Bridgeport lady remained toe long on a tram to kiss a female friend, ami trying to get oil' HEO? it had started, was thrown violently on her face. "If ever I kiss any body again !" said she, vengefnlly, aa she arose, "anv woman, st least r ah* thoughtfully sddsd. hotter from Dr. Livingstone, The following ia T>r. Livingstone's letter to his brother in Canada: Urut, Nov. 1(1, 1871. Mr Dkau llnoritKn: I received your welcome letter iu February last, written when the cable news luauo you put off your suits of mournfuir. This wn*th< first iiitiuintion 1 had that n cable had Iwn successfully laid iu the deep Allan tie. Very few letter* have reached n for years, in consequence ol my friends speculating where I should come out on the west coast, dowu the Nile, U and 70 mile*, ltaugwolo, Moero, and Kamo aro looked on as a great riverine lake, auJ are one of Ptolemy's. The other is tho Tanganyika, which I found steadily flowing to the north. This geographer * predecessors rnu-t have gteuned their geography from men who visited this very region. The reason why liia genuine geography -va* rejected was the extreme modesty of modern map makers. One idle person in London published a pamphlet which, with killing modesty, he-entitled " Inner Africa Laid Op?n and in the news-papers, even in the Timu, rails ai any one who travels and dares to find the conutry different from that drawn Jin his twaddle. I am a great sinner in the poor fellow's opinion, and the Timti published his raving* even wheu I was most unwisely believed to lie dead. Nobodv bnt Lord Brougham and I know what people will soy after we are gone. The work of try ing to follow the central line of drainage down has taken me away from mails or postage. The Manycuia are undoubted ly cauuibaled, but it was long before I could get conclusive evidence thereon. 1 was sorely let aod hindered by having half-caste Moslem attendant*, unmitigat ed cowards, and false as their prophets, of whose religion they have only imbibed ihe fulsome pride. They forced me back when almost in sight of the end of my exploration a dis tance of between 400 and 500 miles under a blazing vertical sun, and I came here a mere ruckle of bo-re. terrible jaded in body and inind. The head man of my worthless Moslem* remained here, and as he had done from the coast, ran Hot with the goods sent to me; drunk for a mouth at a time. Ha then divined on a Koran and found that I was dead, sold off all the goods that remain ed for slaves and ivory for himself, and I arrived to find myself destitute of every thing except a few goods I left in ca*e of need. Goods arc currency here, and I have to wait now till other goods and other men come from Zanziliar. Wheu placed in charge of my supply of soap, brandy, opium and gunpowder from certain Bunion* (British subject*), he was fourteen mouths returning, nil ex- Ileuses being paid out of my *tock; three months were nmple; and then he re mained here and sold off all. You call this smart, do you? Some do. if you don't, I thing it is moral idiocy. Yours affectionately, DAVTD LIVINOSTONE. CHIONONB.—The fashion of wearing chignons first emanated from Puris, but lias been SO exaggerated, has grown so fearfully, that tho Parisians themselves laugh at tho absurdities wh.ch have sprung from their tasteful coiflures. Nowhere in Paris would lie seen such immense chignons or prodigiouspaniers as tb." English or American women wear. The difference between a Pari si AU und an American tournure is very nonr the difference between a peck measure and that which holds abu-thcl. Rome fashions are l iko fashionable gossip, which adds to itself something from every retailer of it, until it swells iuto a fearful scandal. So the fashion which started, a thing of grace, frorp Paris, as soon as it has crossed the sens is puffed into an absurd ity- FASHIONS. One of the most novel toilettes of the scusou, says a fashion journal, is made of ranroon silk and pale straw colored erepc do chine. The un derskirt, which lias a long train, has n wide plaited flonnse which is headed by a double row of scallops in straw colored silk. Tbe overskift is of straw colored crepe de chine ; it Is cut very deep and trimmed with lace ol the same tint. It is looped high nt the sides mid back. The eorsage is cnt with basques and opens in front over a vest made of straw colored maroon lace laid crosswise. This vest is low in the neck, the barque being trimmed all around with a box plairiug of straw eolored silk beneath which falls maroon inee ; Louis XV. sleeves elegant ly trimmed with a double ruffle and hew at the back. Nightmare nud Dreams, There in one curious and difficult in quiry to which m satisfactory reply I>m vet been given. It Uin regard to the horrible phenomena of nightmare. NVhy in it that our dreams, when we aleeu in an easy poiiitinii ami the mgwuistu io in heulthy action, are beautiful and agree able ; but when we sleep in a erwiuped, oppressive attitude, or are suffering from indigestion, they are invariably of a frightful character, full of deformity or • lunger, canning pain and terror V Of thia abstruse and interesting problem tile following solution is suggested a aolu lion which, it in Iwlieved, will be aooep table and conclusive to those familiar with the ultimate principle* of physiolo gical and psychological aoisuce. Ugly uud terribly out ward phenomena, report od in the brain, and these interpreted in relation to what the exigency requires of the organism, produce disturbiug and : violent reactions in various nerve centres, j These reactions, reporting themselves in j the brsin, sre there, by lh inverts u tiou of tlie law of association, taken to imply the prescuce, a* outwurd causes, ol ihe ugiy ami terrible phenomena of which thoy had liefore been consequen ces. If a piece of tough lieef in the! wtomarh causes from within just such a ■ ganglionic perturbation a wnuhl be 1 paused from without liy a murderous deed or a tall from a precipice, is it not quite natural that the iniud, deprived of it* usual verifying testa, should think it* subjective interpretation of the former j an objective ex|erienoe of the latter ? The commonest mistake in regard to' dream* is the belief that ther enter the j mind from abroad. With a flue fancy, ' but flctition* thought, a poet saya— j " •fleep Us traitor, Wbo fills ik* pour Jef*iio*!us .< wiUt blast- MM, Thsi hv may Ist lu ilreaiua." They are evoked, not introduced. j When the inuer play bxxvmea, m Uj sometimes docs, so rvciting and pftwr*j fill a* to strika tlia springs of volition,: and thus if>/ya the m'tclrfc ul We huvej taintin''ttl't**, h is s UMMpnthitol action. Are not some men sleep walkeiv all their day a. putting their dream* into action • The ead events which sre t*ly j ideally perceivad within tha mind are credited as having outward existence. And in th| innermost •-*<*>(* of Uia thing, in this outermost color of the phenomenon,, is not our whole life full of dream ? Pascal impressively aak* in una of those pregnant paragraph* which often fall from his pen. "If we were noiiterv when awake, bat dreamed it. company, and our dreams accorded with each mhji-r, who doubt# that we should believe inattera reversed.? In fine, as we frequently dreamed that we dream, piling otia dream upon another, it u> quite j-ossible that this life is only a dre un. on which others are grafted, from wlueh we awake at death, and during which we have the principles of the true and the good as little a# during natural ! sleep." | How many things, which for j the thug sway and shape us. are limited to our own souls, pure idealities destined never to he any part of the veritable world ! It is one of the deep utterances iof old Heraclitus that "they who are awake have a world iu common among them ; but they who sleep are retired each t© liisowu private world." Never theless, literal and large as the truth in this maxim still with reference to oar moral experience au inverse. daUuuent ; for the former sim*. [New Tork Irj Roods Market. Though o|tetiing dull, the dry good# , mafksl toward* the close exhibits a ' eanstdui utile degree of activity. There are few changes in prices, "however, and these are unitnjxirtatii, now thai cool weather ha* set in, there is every prospect of early activity. Bleached Sheetings and Bblrtlng*.— Standard goour(eected. [ Foreign Dry tiood*.—Foreign good# j closet with u fair husiucHS. Merciiaul# from the South and \Ve#t are In town, and largo purchase* aru anticipatud. HSVRT, — At political meeting, the speaker and audience were very innch disturbed by a man who constantly called out foi Mr. Henry. Whenever a new spdakar coine on, this man bawled out, "Mr. Hi-nry! Henry! Henry! I want Mr. Henry. A (tor several interruption# of thi* kiad at each spot ch, a Joting nuta a .. t — . . f Say nothing respecting yourself either good, bad or indifferent. Nothing good, for that is vauity; norhiug bad, for that is affectation ; nothing indifferent, lor that is silly. In AO IBMO Aajltiw. At the limn of the Dhxtndngdale Lunatic Aoyltim investigation, tin- Now York Tribunt made an attempt at testing Ilia manner in which it ia alleged HW* persona were anut to asylntnf, M& Hwo u the atory a* told by the ja|HT : On August H, Julius Chambers, a reporter of this paper, was oou -tgued to liloom ingdale Lunatic Aaylum by regular process of law, nnd waa placed by the Aaaiatuut Physician ill charge in the ward* fur clotted patient*, being thought a dangerous maniac. At the end of a week be apjieareJ (by instruction from tbia offloe) to tm ao much improved that | ho waa remove! to tho ward forquiet pa Lenta, and encouragement *w lild out by tho aatuo physician that in aix or no Ten week* bo might be diachaiged. Ou Haturday laai, after a writ of habta corpus for his release bad Imn served. Dr. David T. Itrown, Kupenndcndent of tho iuatitution, talked with him for an hour or two, and, being familiar with tho diaoaao which ho simulated, it oucc ow that the reporter waa sane. At tho wolieitalion of tho phi tuciau and the legu! adviser of tho Asylum, consent waa given that hobo released without further i iubha legal proceeding*. Mr. John D. j Towuseud, in whose uaine the applira tiou for release waa made, explained in i tho Supreme Court bia connection with , tho oami nud the fact that the person I committed was a reporter. The juiper ; adds : To have brded two phyaiciana ! to certify fuUely tire reporter'* uiaduea* ! would have lieou to prove only tliut 1 titers were rogue* in the proluasiou; • hetieo it waa decided to feign insanity I and test the scientific knowledge of the I committing physician*. Two leput.ible ( phyaiciana, s medical student, and a I professional nurse, pronounced the man "a violent lunatic, dangerous to diim self and other*." It was charged that Ktrangera to patients sometimes com mil !ted them. It •* therefore decided that abso'ut* strangers should by em j ployed. It wu* said that policy justice* | vVUiUrtf'cd men without examination. • The Jwntico who Mint our re|M>rter to | liloomingdale never saw him ut ail, aud l doe* nut know the names of the person^ or physician* who msde the application, j Theiiovaruor of the Asylum to whom application waa made tor admission de | elated that the physician* at the Asylum I *oukl fcoaivc no patient without his cn [doraeinent It was therefore desided ; to avoid this Governor altogether, and m apMr of the strict regulations the physician* in charge received the patient, uud without even asking the name of one of the gentlemen commuting htm, and after an examination of leas than one minute, consigned him to the ward for exalted patients. The re porter wa* directed to study care/ullj the character of the attendant* and phyticaaua, the condition of the apartment*, nature of the general treatmeut, whether cruel or 1 kind, the character of the tnesla sup plied, nud to obtain the ktatements of nv |N-raons whom lis had reasons to think sane. It was also charged that tlie phjaichna coauived at the removal of jmtienta for whom writs of knbcai had iieen procured, having wm<- means of communication with the Court by which they wt-ru advised in advance of #ueh proceeding*. To Wt this question a writ of k'tbctii crTffHS was served, but the prisoner had not been removed, and no suggestion was made of removal. But strenuous efi'orta to keen the matter from lh oourt# wers made, and finalb witli sticaeaa. Weeklt Review of Sew Tark Market. BMitMiTL'rnL—The market for Btate and Western flour is asliadcflriu er. with a MM active business. WKAT.—Tbe market la two ceuts higher on spring and three to live on Wliilef. We quote No. 2in atom at $1 ,V'asl 54; No. 1 in store at $1 55afl 67; western at $1 soafl ffll; amlter do. at $1 ti.all 70. white do. at $! The sale* #ra &S.(kiO bushels at f 1 55 for No. 2 spring afloat; f 1 Vhisl 00 for new winter red western; $1 70 for amber Tennessee; f 1 75 for while fudiaiiaaud Tennessee, and $1 fto for very choice old white Panada, duty paid. Pnoviaioxa.™Pork.—The market for inesa on the rpt la lower. For forward delivery there is a moderate business. At the "chaw. Heptember hi quoted at 14 Id. Prime mud extra prime are quiet but steady at 10 .Viaf 11. In prime turns there Is the usual jobbing traded old rati*#: 75 barrel# western sold at 12 12. We quote ft2al2 50. 8 OKKI MKATS.—There Is good bu*- IIICMN at full rate*. We quote ham# at 13a]tie; shoulders at Sjc; and clear rib at lOjc. M lUPl.Hß.—'There I# a brisk demand from exporters mainly for long clear for forwurd delivery at full rate*. BEKP —Is dull and heavy. We quote plain western in ess at S'ia7; and extra lues# at S7as9. BKEK HAWS.—There Is but little do ing. We quote old western at 150a28; and ew at *.. —The Market for old western i quiet but fl' iu. We quote MMM Bi'TTKR —is quiet. We quote t?tfe I n Welsh tubs at 20a24<- ; w cetera at 10A 15c. for COUIUJOU to fair, and 18a 2b. for faucy. CmiEJUt—Tbe market is higher ami excited. We quote State factories at 13a14 jo. for fhir to fancy, ami western at 1213|c. RICK.-There la no change to note. Carolina B|u9{c.; Rangoon 7a7|c; and Pain a Bc. CkUAR.—Tbe market for raw Is act ive and steady. We quote. No. 12box clayed at Ojcaml No. II to 13 een'.rifu gul at hialuic. In refined the business Is more active and |>rWs are firmer. We quote granulated at PA-.; crushed and |>owdcrcU at 12in12(c., and cut loaf at 13jc. TOBACCO—The market for Kentucky leaf is less active. Virginia leaf is in the sellers' favor. We quote Viglnia common to good lugs at fejalOc.; dark wrap|ers at bright at 25.-i7sc. I'KTKot.ixa— is quiet at the moment, hut there Is a Arm feeling. Crude in hulk i# held at 11 jal'2{o; uapthais quiet at 14al4Jc. TITE DIAMOND FETER.— The latest re port from the Arizona diamond fields is that a party which thoroughly explored the so-railed diamond region found an abundance of rallies, sapphires, and crystals which resembled diamonds, but which were simply quartz. If the diamonds have alrfadv turned into worthless quartz, it wili hardly do for those who have taken stock in the dia mond mining companies to console themselves by faith iu rubies and sap phircs. 'lbere is no security that the latter will not luru into cheap agates and oornelias, anil the whole story of the price lew gems of Arizona prove to t>e the result of ignorance and fraud. No one has yet explained why men who i-nn pirk up diamonds without number should content..themselves with securing sam ples of the precious gems, and then pro ceed to form stock companies with the view of selling their invaluable posses sions at a rate very far below the market price of a half a dozen of their best gems. __ RUSSIA AND On IN A.—A letter from Rf. Petersburg in the SchfcsitcJir Z thing says that Russia is preparing for a war with China. The territory of Konldscha, on the western frontier of the latter country, was, as is known, occupied by the Russian trpops last year, ana China now intends to regain liossessiou of it. The Mahommcduu population, however, are so hostile to the Chiue.se govern incut, that they declare they will put to death any Chinese official who appears in the country: This would of course lend to a conflict, in which Russia will donbtlcsa take the part of Kouldseha against its so-called oppressors. The Government at Pekin seems to be id ready anticipa ting such a contingency, for it is build ing ironclads and employing 1,500 men daily In the preparation of guns and amu'nition, and has sunt agents among the Russian Khirgis to induce them to resume their old ulliance to China. A SCIENTIFIC THIEF.—A professor who had formerly been employed in Al leghany Observatory, and had coneeiv coa great affection for the object-glass for a new telescope, eloped with it late ly. Thongh the glass is worth 17,000, it is not possible to dispose of it, oa it is unique and well known. Tbe theft, therefore, is said to be " the result of uncontrolled affbetlo*.'' South African Diamonds. A miner who has Just returned from the diamond field* of Kouth Afrim says. "Alargw portion of the dinger* are Capo colonial* nod NaUvliau*. I Pitch men, Englishmen, A ustndians, snd of course Americans- There in * sprink lino of Frenchmen, Italian*, and Span iard* Those who do well are generally Australians aud American*, who hare had experience In mining in California and Anntndi*. A soek-ty, remarkably mixed in ita chnrseter, haa aprong up, and It ia a notifiable fact that among thi* new gathering of old nations the latter or more rc|ect*ble class prcvalL The fields are pretty clear of that class of roughs that infested the gold mines of Australia aud California. o 1| this discovery of diamonds seems like a realisation of Biubad, there is nut much romance about the oouutry. The Western lands of gold aud ailvcr (Califor nia and Nevada) were picturesque in spite of their savagery. But the Afri can dittinund field* are flat, dreary, tree less wastes; h:t suu glenring upon white limestone ; hot scorching winds, dust storms. The hot winds debilitate the constitution, yet thejr are indi*|KUiible to life, for rottu cannot work or hardly breathe when they cease to blow. For four months the news from the ' fields' haa Ihwu discouraging. It senna that the 'finds' arc of an inferior quality, still the quantity docs not decrease. •* For some reason what are termed the -off-coler' diamonds are not faahionsblr, consequently they are sold at low prices particularly to the speculators wh throng the fields. If fashion would cond< spend to pronounce these Iwsutiful baubles 'the thing,' Immense fortunes would be made. Larger atones sre found in Africs than iu Brutl; for in stance, stones over 10 carats are rare in Urmxil, while in the new found diggings Uwy are numerous, and stones within a few' .-arals ol 100 ars among ths weekly finds. " 'flu-re we the usual temptations of rausp life. gambling and drinking. the letter a fatal habit tn auoh a climate Hitherto the moot aueewasfd apot for operations is a place called Die Toils Paaa. This Hiubad's valley in lean than twelvemonth* became a town, baring hotels and billiard rooma, alula concert hall*, a good library, and an American hoe ling alley. Life and propart y are secure, for the reason that there are rery fee of the numaldom of Europe and p-etido genteel idler* If yon eau afford to emptier Caffre labor your mode of oix-rations will in many rexpecta re ►emble Unit of gold digging in the olden time of 'SO-'3l. The same tent life, tough working clothes, the name cook ing of food, the same dirty feeling, only varied by shivering In the eold ami melt tug beneath a burning sun. There ia . cihii'imlly the same fruitless work. We Lave a story of a man who worked day ami night for many mouths, till at last he gave up in despair and sold the claim for 83 The purchaser the next day fottud a very targe diamond a few inches balow the depth the old man had reached. *• The Cafitra are not a pleasant people, bat what they aalled Urn Dutch Boers are many degree# worse. 'The latter are full of low canning, very brutal, and Terr stupid. They debet the English ami the Americans, and to swindle a £r**-n Englishman or a thundering Vsnkee is the height of their ambition. Tbey are very lucky. A report spreads about that another 70 or tlO caret stone has been found. Who, found it? Oh, another Dutchman, ia the usual answer. Everything is diamonds tn these dig gings, and if a man wishes to expri as hi* idmiratscn of another, he say* ' He's a clear diamond.' Everything is 'diamond iferoua." The auctioneers and store* offer you a di-injondiferou* spade or pick, a diamondifierooa tent, a bedstead, an axe, and the hotels supply yon with diamond iferous drinks "In summer time (our winter), yon want pood protection against wet. In winter (onr summer), plenty of protec tion against cold." The Metis Disaster. Tha following is the statement of Capt. Charles L. Burton of the ill fated steamer Metis, 'which was lost on the Sound with many lives : We left Kew l'ork at 5:55 r. M, on the 29th of August. The weather was over east and rainy, with a frtsh breeze from (ho southeast. At 3:40 a. M. , when be tween the two lighthouses of Montank I'oint and Watch Hill, about Are miles off the Rhode Island shore, the propel ler was run into by an unknown schooner, iking us forty feet abaft of the stem, or nearly abreast ot the pilot house. The prejieller was immediately stopped and turned round, and we endeavored to And the vessel, but failed to do so. I sent the mates and pilot below to ascer tain if the propeller waa making any water. Thev reported to me that she was not, and we considered the damage very alight. We then proceeded on our way to Provwlene-j. After running a few moment* the engineer reported that the steamer was rapidly tilling. I immedi ately headed her for the nearest thorn, and*used erery gsertion in my power to Hive the passengers and crew. At this time the wind was blowing a strong gale from the wiuthweat, accompanied by heavy nun. It aoon became evident the t vainer mast go down. It was not longer than half an hour from the time she was beaded for the shore until she sunk. The life l>oats a ere lowered and filled at oucc with persons anxious to he saved. One of the boats was swamped, bat was soon lighted bv the chief engineer, wlm was in her. He sculled her up to the wreck, and she waa again boaraed with success. About fifty persons were left on tlie upper deck, which drifted with the gale. The storm still continued, and although Hcrcral vessels came wi:hiu sight, none recognuhvl us. We contin ued in this perilous condition until about 8 o'clock s. 11.. when we drifted on the bench about half a mile from the Watch Hill Lighthouse. The surf wa- very high, aud our danger arms increased. By this time unite a large number of people from the Watch Hill Hotel, were on the beach proffering aid, but all was of no nae to tin. The roar of the surf prevent ed any communication, and it was evi dent to ua that the deck, on which we floated, must soon go to pieces. In a few moments tha breaking began, and we were all thrown into the surf. Bv the kindness of those on shore nearly all j were saved from the pilot house and up-: per work a lam unable to aiy at pres- j ent how many of the crew and passengers ; were loat with Ibe hulk. THX FINGER-NAILR. -Nothing seems unworthy the notice of your acientiflc inveitigstor. One of them has been watching hi* lingers so intently that he i- able to tell ns how fast the nails grow. The mean rate of growth is one millime ter (nearly fonr tenths of an inch) in ten days ; the nail of the little finger grows one ninth lei fast than those of the other fingers and thumbs. WI REGARD BI RNCTT'S FLAVORING EX TRACTS (for Ice creams, elongs to is nnkuown, but she Is supposed to have been fright ened by Indians and have strayed miles away from lier people and lier home. Symptoms of Catarrh. Pull, heavy headache, obstruction •• nnsal passages, discbarge falliug into throat, sometimes profuse, watery, acid, thick and tenacious mucous, purulent., ruuoo-puru lent, bloody, putrid, offensive, ete. In other-i a dryness, dry, watery, weak or in flamed eyes, ringing in ears, deainess, hawking and coughing to clear throat, ul cerations, scabs from ulcers, voice altered, nasxl twang, offensive breath, impaired smell and taste, ditzincss, mental depres sion, fiekhng rough, etc. Only few of the aoove symptoms arc likely to be present in any case at one time. No disease is more common or less understood by phy sician*. The proprietor of Da. SACK'S CA TARRH RRMPET will pay SSOO reward for s case of Catarrh which be cannot cure. SoH by Druggist* at 30 cento. 008. MT RAILROAD BoSDß.—Whethw you wish to buy or Mil. writ# to Crawlm W. lIAMUtR, No. 7 wjl mrwt N. T. • About as,ooo bricks *r> Ui4 scb day on tb* now post'oSss in N. Y. - 'J9O and 300 moa srs cm ploy oil. sad it is UolioYotl that the satire citorior of lbs wliftcs will bs complsted by as*t Ksw-Year's Iay. It is hoped that the building will be ready for occupancy by Jauuary 1, 1874. A Nsw Krorn tx Vboical Illsroar.— ; " Keaaon and cbaaos." Mys Pliny, " lsd me to tbe dineocery erf the virtues of rasd idne herb#." In tbeM modern dty, re .earcb and experiment hsee iterfected Ibe | work that reason and aeddsnt began. Da. Walkks'a Viwioae Ilrrnma, are tbe : latMl result of botanical invastigation and l>Uarmaceutical science. Tbe extraordin ary icedioine, oompneed entirely of rege teble Ingredients collsd from tbs soil of eur Pacific Territory, U pronounced a remedy for every dUetae—not organic— oi tlie etouiacb, tbe liver, tbe bowels, tbs respiratory syatero, tlie kidneys the mne clea, and the other organ* which make up tbe machinery of life. AH wbo have \rUncased its effect are in fevor of its oni venal adoption as tbs mfest aud most rellahls tonic known. Free from tbe alcohol, it ia nev.rtherleM a etimnlant, Utougb not a dangerous excitant. One thing la certain—no curative heretofore ' introduced to tbe public through tbe praaa, tiaa ever obtained in eo abort a time, tbe 1 celebrity of Dm WAinu's Cauvsexu lltrrana, or bean supported by eueb sn itnjieschable teetimouy. Prom that testi mony it Is evidsnt that this prvparetios is a sped fie for Dy*fpslt, Nervous Debility, InteriniUent and Bilious Remittent Fevers Diarrrixwa, Dvaentery, lUeumatiAm, tteuh ; sad all disturbances of the accretive and excretive functions.—flam , Tea purest sad sweetest Cod- User Oil in the world is lists* l> k Caswell's, mads on the m ! .bore from fresh, selected fivers, by Caswbx, iisxAsn ft Co., New Ttwk. It is sheulatelT ptr* | sad sums. Pattest* who have ohm taken it : prefer it to all others. PbysicUn* bsvs decided i it etnisrior to any Of the other tola in market. I -Otwa. Tbs meet satoniahiDg curs tor ebresie diar ' rIKM we ever hvartl at is that of We. Clark, , Praakfort Nllla, Wtode Co., Maine ; the fact, are stteetad bf Sara Treat, Uptoe Tree* sad H. A. Merrill, other of whom mtaht be addrwse tol tut partici Jar*. Mr. Clask waa cured by ; Jomunv's iuoom lasiwewt — Com. Ibis Joesob Paiwwell Mayor of Itoekland, ,Mr but M. Itrags, Bangor, and Msssre. < Peps Brm, MachiasTaff*. lumhsr merchant*, I fully .odors*! the gassreas Casals* Cowm -1 ruts Powmma, and hare given the jropritoors 1 liberty to um tfator name* ts rsoom mending them.— (Jam. It best* til how siosdy the Elm wood atolsr imitate, i n<-. f.imwood rollers ere all the rage in socito v. to Elmwood collar makes the b"BMtist man took stylish. Ash yosr Pur -1 umber tor it-Cost. H. H. Knrvwurr k Co., tk Xsteiv • m* IsMMd nwdeotisea sad a to) j denntw.— M Mm auA u to Da. Vvra i EaEtaw < via QnsM, utob>MS matwMtotMd to MMha. Mritoa MfMh Wxlcb Cows U4W ftUi Bom 14M •''w *St Oram) UMki .MM immme - #e i .M orroe-MkUUteg V# k fiotrn—Eitie UVuura t * X I M Stair Extra ttt t* T.r Waaat— Bed Wwtara JW !* - Bleu 14* • LSC ' BlS—Wsmvs Ts O .TS BaeXAT-Mali 1 *• 1 Mk ! 1 ouM-auto wmuss .as to as taia-Missß Kaslars.m... <*• ** itav - I N to t > .sreaw fa to t.aa How •71a. y to •--* J* it a | "una-Mm* tt It toM I , S Use Hki to i l-rrmitat'W—CVed. tt Srtmt -B* . iicTTse —mats - •* • -* Ohio W. A. IS to -* • Fancy ti • •! Witoera ordinary .1* S I* taa .SS to 41 i YUrt- But Factory tt to ••*>! •• kkimmod it to .** oauo W to • lM EDM Bttta -a* • a* BBMS ; mcr c.m*. i to tr LB • tjk ; tl- VM tsas WW re Itieothy Asa toisa ioorTO-hswM.ddSngA UMto *h pwt'K—Bxtra - i-ss toll as Wuear— IM total c.wa... ■ • o.v* a • M Mpsotal Notloss. M e*trleal Pelawe* as tho Waaa TM painaioM Saoh m mmhuvt. m ki—lk. m ledlee, M Uiweide •< MUmlaaa bo vtrrvkorU, aa xe eis*. Hapiu uid (vnttaMM : thor did aoa ree kaoa of the aanlenre of litem •'ll*ol Soi." aed roltMo muoliw of kiw doy. to aloe IM am popular. TtioaoMito ef peeoom who oaly a taw yean •go bolweod imp!inly ia ail tM pataoM which Agmn Is lb* phai manepta. uow proooaaoa Ihw paiaUhis Mai* aad .Iterate, aa oJLowtooMrt nanty far ftp*p#P*ia rsfvtnm drbt'tly jjytol tirn. biUoM fionplbtote, IbtoSMl - arhe. mtonalttoel fMC*. aqd all tM ordiaary dwtart, •ore. of the sUwaarh. tho limr. tho disoharftM oerea* aad the hmia Tho lias to box far dioXaat whoa Ban of the row.rial iod niiain drayo sow aa roehlmoly •dtotmnwod hr proetiliooor* of tho " botow" oohocl, lo mom that nih< emty bo vnalrottod hy milder kroat aieot, will b* aktwHy dtaoardrd Hy all ]Ui.taoophi*al phy- *n. Aa IX i*. th* thioklae pohtia. wM aiw yoeoralt) ahead of th* pn f lolooal*. Mm alraady pat the dinin* 00. teri*itiv*k a-tda and adopted II strtter'. S|U* ta khair .teed sea eata aad vxiwrteal h meehold m*dr etna, adapted to aiato- 1 rmry aUmeat except th* otwaaic aad Ml) rostaiowe fimtw. For more then tweot) tear, ttia fimewe re.Vi. atieo aad prrveatlM ha* boon aaanaily itroaatbakuas tta bald ot ■ the public ooeS daace cad It bow takce tho load of ovny adwrttaad nmtlcine minTsrtard In thl tcraW. TO rOXSI'BrTITRA to tuxsvMFTirni. The ad-v-tteor. hortac bam permanonUjcnmd of ltv*t dread dimo. Cnaekuapttaa. hy a atmple rMwdy. la aa* toe* t make kaoww to hi* tallow enSccvr* th* nee a. ot 'etarv. To All wito doeirc th ho will send* sop) of the Ptoeoripftaa U*ed. <1 too of oharyok tth tho ditmMoa* tat peeporln* and o.tae tM MOM. wbtoh thoy will Snd • ktnui oca* tar ixuscio-iios. Atnu, Baopcarria and all tbroit or InoadtAcQliiea _ . .. I'krttre wtotiHicUt# prwscnpi '"u • £ Eyery &oofl Hnslisod & | L- V D , I HUWS. t > wi. T. I GKAOT. 'isiiss [ iS^gSl§B 12K5BSSn"lS* 7 tiV Set* *■* WUcw toeplej , 3!cM*4 tl. toflMMe UM* !**" U ■ ; | S&'Sr'BCrtMftgto JS2^r£?lfesys r iis: : br-TF^fcfCKrssJbt; "Kr wTuTm******. *•{*• > iwva. B*>ums. yM. p ry*- 52* 1 i S^JiiSwt-a^S • rim if mi i emst •# ty um am of • *2- , Drsgyltoa v" ""• O - *" 4 wipS Twubn._ -■ g rrr - HsCZZ " """" Aig^araf^yr,- aggy^iMSJi©?*" utwHimk'n, ifflCTS*: MOTHERS! MOTHERS!! MOTHERS!!! (himiwkmn m wnuowi twmuifi mr wmm ciilbih tcct>ix. ,rsa^mrflrssmtfstaEir* l! mm .l, iwm*m tM f>W toon pm, bo* ammm irtEr •*, Miton enr( k U* Bmk M M t#c , WTA-STISirSJSJSt^HS ' OUKHUKA fx CfflLfrtUtX. iwto HUM frwe i HjtoHtoMy __ .^,...„. f , D*|i*of fM ■!■■. W'tf" M HHIH I and Katie* mm* iMltb u TTesw f afMrte. hMtoalk - Mn. Wluln'• rtM 11**0# im imm •( -ccbtis * rawws MtM null WIOpP" MM Ut * M"' l>iM*'to > *toM A. Wellington Hart & Co., AIM OTTER* ar CLAIMS ma * Insolvents A Bankrupts. 110 Leonard St., X. F. fr jm BeMtaußNMMi . I, Y.. will dnepomof I ,nx Mrawum l-u*<, M(3 ..ra..|>*. awd Oman* to *>l ftra-clua .Una. tefhndtaw WMM, to aMtnmta deeta* Sm nuiiifl i m wto take Ma Bile Mi tatinlhly wsta paid : Uneamwctort *4 M Mpitto W |to it ni A am kind to Fashes ' U* nan bMMtfnf •.! ito pert a In. mi *Wo to tol MMf a Tur*- mmm Thea-Nectar IS A PCRB yBMMMMT" BLACK TEA Pjto^: M tfr-o* TV. ru—r. TV. jJI&BEiSkTn Inti-ortod. VUrmleeenw- IBtonKT *** • And (or Mtl wtwlo-ale only JTfcj Li;.^M-rd rw fc, rt.,. v-w fr-^u. uk. WHirritt •^SSiX Ueewt wMtol *ad ■ iMMewtoui P ",n* to IM • OaaMttotom or trn-hM fw>. Otolcwwrii*. PITTSBURGH, BfMcb-lxdi mt Shot O.M. Me • taw. Doobl. XMI a-ss-vas umr. Arm. lia. frw-v'-r.. toiall r I'uCto tor. . 5h Berarts ef Tests ESj *1 LOWELL Sin., prom B! N. F. BURNHAM'S NEW TURBINE CMtohillittoi. ZM o h.r hinl tooommon tiai.h ;YBI Putt I*l.'m and friru Ut, ho IMiSaflL H. K BrKNHAM. York. Vl I 111 SSK m'l I 111 PtLS Rkmkdt (ail* t. - SB I I |l| MtoilT U U cy ttTfi'to WIIUUU Sltea!3 •aftJSg.jg Tk. KWk*. .CtAe AleA.—lt t* tb.ripkt to t0.17 tu.alid In tow what hi* aiidloiac i, and wfcjr it t* pr-- ar-itwd. btotoim (roai dy*pop*>>*. Hrto*to>jH.ic t, baudacl a, towtiv.ua.*, r Vrartburo, dtoimtt- to k* *••¥ tkitToauiPi maiaka Ar*afwr ■., and h, M toa oOfbtt.tak.rtT Th. an*w#ri*attux-lr It iatfc.clt.wi. IMI vgu'vartnt to tb.Srttn Suanatrr.end|bcfrmt -t