FIR*, .GARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD. Pan* Nat**. The clover crop will he short in the West. It was generally very ranch damaged by the hard winter, and was frozen onl in many place*. " Ijtttinand Greek are all right," eaid a Delnwnre fanner an he halted hia team, "but giriVmo a mau who can plow around an apple tree 'thouht touching the roots." The New England Patrons purchase on an average 10,000 laurels of flour |x>r ! mouth directly from nulla owned by Granger*. The average saving i one dollar and iAftv eeute jx*r barrel, or $15,- 000 per raAnth. There arc over two lmndml grang** in Vermont Canada has one hundred and eighty-two granges, tweuty-seven having been catabltahed in May. There are one hundred and thirty-nine granges in M.uytand with a meiuborslup of about 7,600. The engineer of the Peruvian govern ment has estimate*! the quantity of guano in recentlv discovered U\ls to lx* not leas tlito tons, or enough to load a vessel of throe hundred toua every week day of the year for a century to come. The farmers around Eufaula, Ala,, are compelled to ovat 'ho ears, flanks, and other parts of thur live stock with tor and grokft to protect the® from the buffalo mttL, and ida>to keen ft res burn ing in tlfi Mock lota at night. This pest is about lialf the site of the larils law Wu enormous, and that they have been trap ped by thousands and fed to the hogs, on the theory that pork can be salted and sold while birds cannot. Now, let the journals snggeet to their waders the necessity of game laws, rigorous ones, which will impose heavy penalties not merely few killing the ohieke ns, but for expoaiug them for sale, and let local au thorities set* that such enactment* an enforced to the letter. If this be done, and if the MVsfern iuveutors will give more attention to devising exterminat ing machinery, by next year the hop per*, between the acorckiug from the machines and the hungTy crop* of the birds, will find life utterly devoid of j pleasure, and perhaps may be induce,! to migratff aut of the Pniti-d States terri torv, say to Canada or Mexico. there is another reason why the birds should be spared, and that is the potato bog. Prairie chickens and quail, it is said, will eat the insects, and other birds are said to feed upon them greedily.—- Scientific A merit:an. Lwrli far Tnogtu. Cold haled chicken, and oilier meats, carve,! before starting, coM boiled eggs, Graham dnwkers, brown bread, pickled fruit of almost any kind, and jellies— these are greatly relished by hungry tmvelers. Pies and cake are less in de maud by the locomotive stomach in a healthy condition, than the substantial*. If one most have tea and coffee on the rail, he or she can carry a ttu cap to tie filled at stopping places with the bever age ready wuuler with scalding water and make t|p infusion iu the cor. Ou many accdnnts it is better on a long journey to carry one's lunch than it is to depend for refreshments on way station*. , It is cheaper, it is more trustworthy, for one always knows just what he's going to have, and then one can cat at leisure, which is a great consideration.. If the appetite craves a warm dinner, it may be taken at the dinner stopping place ; i if wheia all the zest of the passengers are hurrying and scurrying to get places at the table, eat, and reach their seats before the cars start, our Erovident traveler sits quietly, enjoys , is victuals at his leisure, and lias a good tim- philosophizing on the necessity and folly of being in a hurry. Tfce Apple Tree Berrr. As this is the proper season of the year to prevent the apple borer from getting into the young orchard, I will j offer a few suggestions the result of ten j years' experience, with a hope that oth ers will try it Tm years ago I planted a young ueahar.t,-and every spring I run off a quantity of weak lye from the ash hopper, after tlio ashes were too much spent for soap making, and with that I scrubbed my trees, using an old corn broom. I also collected soot from my and saved it carefully until annum mixing two parts good 1 wood aahes'to one of soot. About the middle of June I would clean away from about tile bees all grass and trash, and remove suckers, and apply one quart of the soot and ashes around the collar and wet it to keep it from blowing away, also pressing it down with the foot. Now I do not say that this is new, but simply that I never had a borer in the orchard* The tent caterpillar I destroy with a long-handled stiff broom; this I de early in the morning while they are in their tents, and if#ho lldbe attended to every morning until fney are all hatched out and destroyed. t j . 1 I'are Cap Uapea la CkMua*. A correspondent of the London Field has the following for the benefit of poultry men who are troubled with this disease: One day I noticed a Hook of eleven pare bred OCT— o<*ur chickens very bad with what is called gapes. I remark ed to the man who had them in charge that he would not have many chickens oat of that lot. " Oh, never mind," said be, " I have got s core for them from a | neighboring woman, which is a common half penny tallow candle molted and mixed into about a quart of oat meal stirabout." The remedy sfes resorted ' to, and the Oreve-Cteura nave every one recovered and grown into finely devel oped chickens. I have since tried this cure with Invariable suceess on Bra xamas, Dorkings, etc. 81r*a a* Helper*. Our friends, the insect-eating birds, have been ruthlessly destroyed in all parts of the country, and a war of ex termination h Mid going on in commu nities where we might expect better things. These are but a small number of the causes -which might be named, all working together in giving the noxious insects the advantage over the hnslmnd . man, and bringing disastrous results where good woufil -come if an opposite course had been pursued.— New York j Nun. To Hot Rid of Ast*. Lay old bones or sponges saturated with molassegSßd water where they racist do congregate, taking away everything else edible- from that locality. When the bones are black with tiyim or the sponges populous with them give them a bath in nqalding water. This remedy is tedious, bof it is effective. If any one can give a better a Detroit lady will j be very glad t6 have it. At Annoying Insect. The worst insect pest of tropical America, says a traveler, in the terrible fire-aut, whose sting Is likened to the puncture of a reinetery, expressing his belief that Brown would cytno back to his wife even I there. When ha was arrested a letter to his mother was found on him which shows his intention of killing himself when he had reached the grave. Noth ing in fiction or history— not the agonies of Fagin, nor the face of his victim that pursued Eugene Aram bv mgjit and noontlay—is more tragic tlian tins letter written by the murderer to liis mother from time to time, as he fi.xl through the country, a horror of great ilarkness pursuing him. It is not the gallows tliat be sees or cares for, but " Bessy's blood running down her neck," or his own hand wet with it. He sees himself dead in his coffin, with a dread- - ful self-pity, and bids his mother bring Mime young people of whom he is fond ( to look at him, as a warning against liquor. It is not Bessy that he blames ; " she is an angel waiting for him to cross the river;" nor himself—the "Will" that his mother knew and he knew ; but the liqnor—the liquor. "If I had not : taken even that last drink, this would j not have happened." Brown is in prison now, waiting his triaL Whatever the verdict may be, we may be sure he has himself placed the guilt where it belongs. The Original Confederate Flag. At a recent meeting the Palmetto Guard were made the recipients of the first Confederate flag raised in the late struggle, and as this 1 tanner was identi j tied with the career of the company, it ' is doubly prized as a relic of the past. The donor, Mr. John 8. Bird, of Lau ren s, an old member of the comjtany, in a letter accompanying the fiag, thus tersely gives its history: In 1860, I to fore the passage of the ordinance of se cession by'this State, Captain Edward Mills, of the bark Jones, belonging to the Palmetto line of New York packets, i raise*! this fiag at his masthead in New York harbor, and his vessel was mobbed, but they could not compel him to strike his colors. On his return a gold headed palmetto cane was presented to him by some of the Palmetto Guard, and in turn he transferred to them the custody of the flag. The secession of the State was quickly followed by aggressive mili tary movements, and the flag accom panied the Palmetto Guard in their various encampments. At the siege of Sumter it marked their parade ground, and was used in ttu* truce boat tliat met the United States barges. The Palmetto Guard occupied the fort immediately ' after the surrender of Anderson, anil ' this flag was the first raised on its walls nfter the salute and before F. J. Moses, Jr., hod arrived at the fork The fiag remained with the company until they were mustered for the war, and was then taken by Mr. Bird to his home, and has : since remained in his charge—Chcnlea ' on Newt. The Invention of the Wheelbarrow. Says a writer in Scrif>nrr : It takes a gentleman to do a little thing sometimes. Who do you think invented that very simple thing called a wheelbarrow ! Why, no less a man tlian Leonardo da j Vinci. And who was he! He was a musician, poet, painter, architect, sculptor, physiologist, engineer, natural j historian, botanist azul inventor, all in i one. He wasn't a "Jack at all trades and master of none " either. He was a real master of many arts and a practical worker besides. When did he live! Somewhere about the time that Colum bus discovered Ani'-rica. And where wns be born! In the lieuutiful city of Florence, in Italy. I'> rhapa some of yon may feel a little la tter acquainted with him when I tell you that it was , Leonardo si- Ition at the table of the figures of our Lord and II is disciples, though I am told Ihat, , without seeing the ]x and commenced : "My friends, who hath redness of eyes? fho drunkard. Who hath woe? The drunkard. Heaven send us pure cold -water. There is noth i ing like w—." At that moment a boy who was throwing water from a garden j hose used around there, accidently turn ed the stream against the stranger's back, and he jumped down and said it was a case of assault, and ran after n warrant. He said that no human being could throw cold water or r him without being made to suffer for . A Bjear Stort.—A good deal of ex citement was ronsed iu Luther, Canada, i by the report that a little son of one of the villagers had been carried off by a wild bear. It seems that a servant girl, accompanied by a little boy, went for ! the cows, which were in a piece of brash ! a short distance from the house, when 1 they came across a bear, which seized i the little fellow by the back. The girl I heroically came to bis aid with shouta I and sticks, when bruin became alarmed, let go his hold of the little boy, and re- I treated a short distance into the bnsh. i Several parties started in pursuit with guns and dogs, but failed in getting a t shot at the bear. " Murder Will Out.'* Few murderers escape without meeting with the awful puniahiucut due ta their crimoa. Many strange stories, indeed, have been told of Uii" kind, some of which, however, it must l> oonfoeeod, stand ou too authority to la< re jeotad. The following is translated from a re|Hvtahlc publication at Basle, in Switzerland : A person who worked in a brewery quarreled with one of hia fel low-workmen, and struck him in such a manner that ho died u|miii the aimt. No other peraoti ww wiln>a* to the deed. He tlieu took the dead Itodv and threw It into a large tire under the ttoiliug vat, where it was iu a ahoit time so corn pletely eouaume*) that no trace of its ex I'tauoe remained. On the following day, when the mau una mimed, the nmr derer olwerved very coolly that he had obaeived hia fellow servant to haw tax-n ' intoxicated ; and that he had probably fallen from a bridge which he had to j crossed on hia way home, and been , drowned. For the spaee of seven years i after no one entertained any suspicious 'of the real slate of the fact. At the eiul of this perusl the murderer was again ; employed in the aiuue brewery. tlu\mg ; retire*! one evening to rest, one of tin other workmen, who slept with him, j hearing lam say ui hia sleep: "It is now full seven years ago," asked him : What was it you did seven years ago t" "I put hun," replied he, still mek mg iu his sleep, "under the boiling vat." As the affair was not entirely for gotten, it immediately occurred ti> the man that his Itedfellow must allude to the person who was missing about that time, and he accordingly gave inforuia- I tiou of what he luul ln-nrd to a uiagis | Irate. The murderer was apprehended ; and though at first he denied tliat he knew anything of the matter, a cottfea siou of his crime was at length obtained from him, for which he suffered condign punishment. l'he f*llowi:ig event hapiteued iu the neighborhood of Fraukrort-upou-tlie- I Oder: A woman, conceiving that her husband, who was a soldier in the I'm* siou service, had been killed m the bat j tie of Jena, in 1806, married another man. It turued out tliat her husband had been oulv wounded, add taken (wis oner by the French. A ©one was soon effected, and he joined one of the Prus sian regiment: which entered into the jaiy of France. After serving three years iu Siiaiu, he was discharged ; re turned suddenly to his native country, and ap{>eare*i greatly rejoiced to find his wife alive. She received him with every mark of affection, but did not avow the new matrimonial oumiectiou she had formed. After partaking of some re frvalmient, he complained of being quite overcome with fatigue, and retired to rest. She immediately joined with her new hnstiaud to *lia|>ateli tlie unwoj*-* uue visitor iu his sleep, which they accom plished by strangling him, and' put his laxly into" a sack. About midnight, in couveyiug it to the Oder, the weight of the corpse burst the bag, and one of his legs hung out. The woman set about sewing up the rent, and in her hurry and confusion sewed in at the same time the skirts of her accomplice's coat. Having reached the banks of the river, and making a great effort to precipitate his load as far into the stream as poaaible, he was dragged from the elevated ground he ha*i chonen into the river, but contrived to keep his head above water for several miuntes. The woman, not considering how important it was to keep silent, filled the air with cries, and brought to the snot several |xn*aiita, who, at the hazard of their own lives, 1 extricated the drowning man from his jx-nluus situation, at the same time dis covering the cause. The man and woman were charge*! with the crime, made a full confession, and were executed together. The (Jreat Dhat Is It. " What is the Keely motor ?" This i is th* question over which mnny art" puzzling their brains in vain. For what ever this power mav be, a definite knowledge of its capabilities is said to I be known only to four men. including ' the inventor or discove;er, Mr. Kooly. According to the statement* of those who are in the neerot, this newly discov ered power is destined to revolutionize tlie entire mechanical world, and to ren der possible feats which now seem lio yond the power of the moat jn-rfect ma chinery in the world. Guns are to lie fired by the same power that drives the ship that carries thorn; explosions are to be rendered com) aratively . harmless; engine* of 5,000 horsepower are to be constructed so as to occupy uo mora space than an ordinary steam engine; and all the marvel* which an- accom plished by sh-ani are to lx* ]>erform-d , with infinitely greater cam* by the cold vapor evolved from air and water. This is what the Keely motor propone* to do, for Mr. Kix-ly claims to have discovered one of the powers of nature by which vapor can lie produced. At present the great anxiety of the discoverer and his few confidential friends seems to lie to keep the secret of what this motor is until they have perfected the system of working the power, so as to be able to take out letters patent that will protect them. Then the public will lie informed about the matter more fully. Mean while there will lie many unlxdievers in a new agency of such tremendous force, while others, rememlieriug the history of inventions and discoveries, will watch with credulous intercut for further de - velopmenta. Who Wouldn't be an Editor.* The editor of the Vicksburg Herald is incensed at the remark of a New York York journal that four of the editors of j the Herald had lieen killed in as many months, and claims that the Sentitfl is the guilty jarty, which luul five of it* editors killed and then died itself. The Herald states that " Dr. James Hagon, the first on the list, was killed in astr<>et encounter by the late Gen. D. W. Adams; Walter Hickey, another, was killed in a dnel in Texas; Mr. Ryan, the third, wa* killed opposite Vicksbnrg in a duel with the late Kichard Hammot', who was a journalist himself, and the editor of the Whig; two others, John Jenkins anil W, D. Roy. were killed in the street* of j the city." But, according to his own confession, the editor of the Herald i exchanged shot* many years ago with 1 Dr. Hagan, the first named of the above j victims, and received n bullet in bis body from the Doctor's weapon, and subsequently had an affair of honor with ; Col. I "aae M. Partridge, then editor of the Whig, and sent tlie Whig man off with a broken leg or something. The pistol is evidently mightier than the jien in Vickaburg. A Desperate Duel. The Cologne Gaxeiie learns from Bonth Russia that a new development of the so-called "American duel " has made it* 4 appearance there. Two young men, ricn, of good family, and intimate friend* Tor a long perhxl, re* ntly lieeaine enamored of an actress. The immediate result was a coldness and distrust, which ; ended in tlie transmission of a challenge from one to the other. It was agreed, therefore, tliat the dispute should bo I decided by lot in tlie " American " stylo, i The man who drew the shorter straw ■ was to give up home, position in society and wealth, and retire to a foreign land to begiu life again empty-handed. The drawing duly took place, and the loser, after spending n few days in the settle ment of his affairs and the bestowal of his possessions for public purpose*, left ! his native place on foot, without n knap ' jick on hi* back or a coin in his pocket, to take a position as tutor in the neiglilmr hood, that he might earn enough to pay i his fare to America. Excited. President White, of Cornell Univer ' { sity, did not stand upon his dignity . when he heard of tlio second victory of the Cornell crew. The Aubnrn Adrer • titer says : He was taking dinner when i he received the dispatch announcing the i result, and became so excited that he I rushed from the table, headed for the t university, and arriving there, finding i the doors locked, kicked them in and , made for the ringing apparatus of the ■ chimes, which he pulled so vigorously . as to disarrange the machinery, causing i considerable delay before it could be i adjusted and the ringing proceeded with. The Frightful Inundation* In France. To form an iilca of the cause* of the inundation in the aouth of France, one lias to lk at the physical geography of the departments. They lie on the northern slo|>e# of the Pyrenees, inter •noted by nnmerous and rapid rivers, of i which at Intent four unite to form the Garonne Ix-fore it reaches Toulouse. 1 There lud Iteen heavy an>l continuous rain over the whole of the mountain range, ami a fall of anow at Lua, where it wouhl awell the lmmlwuU-rM of the (tannine, ami a contributory cause ia furnished by the great destruction of tinit>er m tile iliMtriet. Trena not only at morb water largely from the aoil, but prevent the surface fnmi Ix-illg listed ami hardened by the ami, and they eheek the rapidity and abruptneaa with which nun wouhl otherwise ma. li the ground. When it faila utiiui)edod upon dry and barmn hillahlea, it will ruu fnuil them alinoat aa freely an fnnu the sloping nxifs of houses, and a few hourn will carry the wabeartuice of the chief of tile state on the scene of a great public calamity would be deemed wholly unnecessary, and week* wouhl elapse ero Parliament was officially made acquainted with the extent of the misfortune and the need for alleviatiug it by a grant of public money; but, in France, personal government, although its principle is indiguantly acouted by an advanced school of politicians, ia, in practice, accepted and relied upon in cases of unusutd |s*ril not only by all shades of party, but by millioiiN who are not politician* at all." A border Hunt a nee, A romantic incident comes to u* from the borders of Kansas, which read- like a veritable Indian story. Among the settlers was a man named Falconer, who had a daughter aged seventeen, who was engaged to be marTie*J to a y.mng farm, r living near by. The night of the wed ding arrived, and at the unpointed time tlie brnh-gnsuu appeared, but the voting lady had not left h*r room. Her parents, went to th< door to warn her that the time for the performance of the ceremony luul arrived, when they found the r*x>m empty. It was early evening and not yet dusk, so they walked to the window to endeavor to discover the truant Their horror may la- imagined when they saw, rapidly disappearing through the timber on the creek bank, a man enrying in hi* arms tin* form of a young girl, which, from the dress, they im mediately recognised as that of their daughter. In an instant tin- alarm van given, and the whole jxvrtv, well armed, start.-*1 in pnrauit \\ ithin a few minutes they were in gunshot of the fugi tive, but were unable to urn- their weapons in consequence of his shielding his laxly with the loved form of the bride-elect. The young lover was almost frantic, and in his frenxy apjx-Arrd to have gained the fleetnes* of the antelope. Overtaking the almost bnwUilan ab ductor, he O

• much for him, and one of their numlx-r bnmght him to tlie ground by means of a well aimed bullet from a needle gun. It was soon ascertained that the red man was only wounded in the thigh. He was th.-u taken prisoner and lodgi-d in a neighboring dug-ont, from whirh by some means he eca|*ed during the night, carrving the needle gun lall in his thigh and has not since lxx*u heard of, although a diligent search has ixx-n made by tlie friends of the young lady, whose wed ding has lxx-n indefinitely jxmtponed in coiua-quence of an attack of brain fever, the result of the fright she received. The American ('tip. After a spirited contest Major Fnlton lias won the cup offered for competition to thi- American riflemen by the council of the British National Hide Associa tion, hi* score Wing 133 out of a posri ble 150. The cup does not become his property, but he will have the honor of conveying it to America, where it is to be shot for on terms to lie decided by the council of the American National Kiile Association. Tlie scores made by onr riflemen were remarkably good and ( excited general admiration. Mr. Can field, Jr., poshed Major Fulton very hard and defeated both Colonel Oilder deraleeve and Mr. Colemiui. The shoot ing for this cup was a severe tost of markmanship. Each contestant lmd to fire thirty shots, and the distance select ed was the one at which it was thought the Americnu riflemen were least expert. The splendid scores piled up, however, were a corrective to the opinion that the Americans were weak at the thou sand yards. The shooting also exploded the notion that breech-loaders, except when loaded at tlie muzzle, were not equal to the Hritish muzzle-loaders in accuracy. On account of this mistaken idea a rule was this year made at Wim bledon compelling breech-loaders to bo loaded from the breech. This rule was sjx'cially aimed at Major Fulton, whoso accurate shooting was in great part ascribed to the mysterious effects supposed to Ixs produced by load ing his rifle at the muzzle. A glance at the splendid target he made will show the unsoundness of this idea Nineteen bull's-eyes out of thirty shots bear wit ness to the splendid accnracy of tlie American breech-loading arms, which have proved their superiority over the cherished old-fashioned muzzle-loader as completely as did the men who used them over their competitors. One of the first effects of the shooting at Wiin bledom ami Dollymount will be the abandonment of the muzzle-loader as a target rifle. The breech-loader has so many obvious advantages over the older system that it will Is* impossible for the most ohstinate t deny its superiority now that it has been conclusively shown to possess the greatest possible accuracy at the longest ranges. Enrages of the Grasshopper*. A special correspondent of the Chicago Tribune, who has Ix-en through the grasshopper regions for the purpose of examining the condition of things oc curring from the ravages committed by the insects, nays he finds the northern portions of Nebraska, Kansas, lowa, and Missouri, which have been the principal sufferers, embrace a district eoual to about 20,000 square miles, in which from one half to three-fourths of the growing crops have been destroyed, involving the loss of sixty days' labor of about 20,000 people engaged in agricul tural pursuits. Replanting has taken place once, twice, thrice in some of the districts, and now that the grasshoppers have disappeared, fair orops are looked for if the weather is favorable and the fall frosts are late. There ia no destitu tion or suffering this year, and in those portions of the States not devastated the crops will -be larger than ever before. Served 111 in Right. | Tito Portland (Mo.) Adoertiter d scrilx-s tlio following adventure of Mr. John N*al, the veteran author, |XJOI, and critic of tliat city: A iinnilH-r of our oldest citizens, in eluding John Neal, were riding up home Ml tlieJ*tr<-< t earn,id .out MIX I*. M ,#s IN their wont, when two young rough*, perluqm twenty two or twenty three yearn of age, jum|*ed oil the front plat form of tlie car, otio f them pulling away at a villianoti* cigar. The front door wa* open, and the cloud* of Mtuoko rolling in tlie car almost cliAcd tlie oc cupant*. At last one of the older gen tlemen couUl nlai-d it no longer, and no remarked, at which one of the other* touched the smoker, *ayiiig that the Hmoko w-a very offensive, and tliat the rule* of the ooui]iaiiy did not |x*ruiit smoking on the car*. To thi* appeal the man |*ud no more attention than if he had lxx-n a statue. Mr. John Seal, leaning forward, remarked a* follow*: " Voting man, that smoke i* very offen sive, and you mut put that cigar out." '•la that ao, old man I" replied the rough, lazily looking over hi* shoulder at Mr. Neal, without removing the cigar from hi* mouth. The color iu the old gentleman'* face rose Nteadily, but rcpr.vtanig In* wrath he again remarked: " Young man. that cigar must lx* put out. Bmokiug is nut allowed on the car*." "Well, old man, what are you going I to do about it I" replied the rough. With the quickuosa of lightniug Mi. Neal made a Ixmml on to that platform, seized the cigar from the man'* mouth, and lluug it in the *tr*-*-t. With one hand he grasped the rough by the naix* of the neck and with the other by the left forearm, rawed Ititu off hi* feet and .bodied him to tlu- platform, and a* he placed hi* f.x.t on him ho exclaimed in quivering tone*: "Thank your stars, young man, I did not pitch you into the street after your cigar." The fellow was completely wived. When we remember tliat Mr. Neal is eighty four years old, the mere physical energy and js.wer displayed was some thing remarkable. Every oue will say tliat ho served tlu* rough just right. luridcntii of the Flood, The following are among the numerous incidents related in the Paris journals: In the flooded plain between St. Jory and CaMteluau, a Ixiat containing fifteen person* came into collision with a|xq>lar tree and was upset. Fourteen of these were drowned, and the survivor, a girl fifteen year* of age, na* lost her mason. At Anterive a family of four |x'rwoua took refuge iu the branches of an elm, a great part of which was swept aw ay by the torrent, and the four people dinging to its branches were drowned. At lioqiios and at l'iusaguel, it ia stated, tin- crosses, the statue* of tlie Virgin, and the images of the saints, are the only tilings that tlie water* have ataunxl. A poor (x-asant woman iu this district remarked: " God punishes Franc**. In the north it has been war; in the south it i* the inuudatious. It is time for ua to ojx-u onr eyes." At St. Gandeus a Newfoundland dog saved in succession twelve persons, dashing into the rushing torrent bravely, but making the attempt ■ thirteenth tun. the poor animal was drownidly tixl the infants to a branch, kissed them, made the sign of the cross, snd leaped into the waves. The two little twins were savixl, but the devoted mother was drowned. A Horse Tamer'* llorse. Probably no horse ws* ever more C morally known tlian tlie celebrated eras Cruiser, imported from England in I8tl by John S. Rarer, whose system of horse taming was for some time the sensation iu tins country ami England. When Mr. Rarey went to England his system was thoroughly put to the teat by oontact with Cruiser, an animal tliat was so vicious that ho was closely and con tinuously confined in a stable," in such a way that ht* could by no jxwsibilitr reach auylxxly, either with his mouth or heels. His fixsl was delivered to him through a sort of funnel, and he m-etmxl to have lxx-n kept solely as an extremely wicked curiosity. His splendid muscle i lid activity gave him the widest scope for tlwi exercise of his incorrigibility, and he is said to have kicked so high as to strike a tx>ard floor fourteen f*x-t alxive the floor on which h<> stood. Ordinarily, it wa* only the work of a few minutes for Mr. Rarey to tame a horse, but it took him three hours to subdue tlie ter rific Cruiser. Afb-r putting Cruiser under control, Mr. Rarey purchased him ami brought him to this eouutry, and pbuxxl him on the lUrey farm, at Grove port, in Ohio, where ho Ixvame popular among breeders. He tx-camn ao geutle that the ixxtple alxmt the llarev farm #could fondle him as they would a LitUffi, ami his colts wen* noted for their kind disposition. Strangers, however, wen* not )iermittod to have mueh b do with him. This was to prevent u*asing and the revival of the old propensities. Cruiser died at the Rarey farm recently nt the age of twenty two. A Wife's Trlrk. A lady occupying high position at Washington, wliose husbnnd was of the government, made n trip to Europe with him. She "doted" on lace, and hen* was her opportunity. Talking of the acquisitions she would make iu this line, he told her she shoiil.l purchase any rea sonable quantity, provided she wouhl not smuggle any. fo this she accepted. The gentleman took as part of his ward n*bo a dressing gown, 'for, like must Americans, in the privacy of his room he liked to pull off liis coat. Several times on the ship he observed the care hi* wife bxk of his garment, and was gratified for her anxiety for his comfort, (.luce when smoking, while lighting his cigar, he set his gown on fire and quite a hole was burned in the skirt. His wife wns considerably agitated, and he was flattered that so trilling a danger to him hail so moved her. One morning immediately after their return to this country ho found tlint Ix-fore he reached his office that keys he needed he luul left nt home, and retraced his steps to get them. Letting himself in witu his latch-key he proceeded to his ehamlx-r, and on opening the door found his wife on her kmx*s on the floor, hi* dressing gown divested of its lining and spread before her. and she, scissors in napd, disengaging from it a white, flimsy fabric with which it was covered. She sprang up on seeing him, laughed, and exclaimed : "You ore the smuggler, i You wore that lace nil over Europe, and i brought it home." Tur. MISSISSIPPI RlVP.R.— Captain Ends report* tliat provisional works 1,000 feet 1 long have already been constructed in the south JWIHK of the Mississippi on the ' line of the jetty and are being pushed 1 seaward at the rate of two hundred feet Eier day. Two hundred mechanics and rdHirers and four pile-driving machines , are nt work, and a large quantity of stone with other material ia ready at hand. Additional machinery nud acoommoda 1 tions ore being prepared, and in a short 1 time the working force will be largely in 1 creased. i If a man lias got something to say, it is proper to let hifti say it. If he is a i reasonable man he will be satisfied with i the permission to speak, and not expect you to quit work and listen to him. A TMRIU.INtI STORY. Mail Riaarlaara af aa Calartaaal* l.a*v— Tk> Wife mt aa *rai Ofllrrr Aaaanllrd aa a Taabaai—llar ttaraM fraai aa laaaaa A* j lam. About twelve o'clock at night, aaya the New Y'ork '/Sntrt, a woman of alxmt twenty eight years of age, shabbily dressed, but of a refilled and delicate ap pcarantH*, waa taken into tlie fourth pre riiit station by a patrolman. Hh* there complained tliat an assault luul lxx-n made upon her by five men on Ixtard the tugboat Mike Norton. Capt. Wil liams at ouce went to the Ixutt, which was lying at the wharf <>u the East river, and afb-r surrounding her with a cordon of patrolmeu, made a search of the cabin* ami engine r<*im, but am-<*eeded in find ing only oue |x*raou, a boy of about seventeen years, who was asleep iu the galley, lie then made inquiry uu board of the other vessel* lying near, but could learn nothing of the crew of the tug. He then determined to make an other and more thorough search of the I*>l, and this time was more suooeaafuL Two m-u were found hidden iu tlie run or lower hold of the vessel, and when the officer who found them waa taking them to tlu* pier, holding hia ianteru in his teeth and his elub iu one hand, ami lf-a.ling the uieu with the other, oue of them jumped ovcrlxiard. As there was a clear sjaoe of from thirty b* forty feet around the vessel, it was thought that he might be easily recaptured on oom ing U> tlie surface, but, to the surprise of all, h waa seen no more. I'aid. Williams tlu li unit-rod a imrcful mmrclt to lx- uiadu along tlio docks, and oouducUxl it ill ]x-raou, to am wboUu-r tlu-r- wore any tracm of any man having lauded on the piers in wet clothing, but could find nolhiug to indicate that any such landing hail lxx-n made. Just as ho was about to leave with his prisoners s wan, who claimed to be tho captain of tho tug, taunt- up, and appeared to lo ver y indignant that any arrasts should liavo btx-u uuido uu Ixmrd of his vessel. There was something very peculiar about his apix-arance, however, that iu dutxxl Capt. Williams to arn-at him also. This was that lie was dressed from head to ftxit in ix-rfecUy new clothes, the soles of his sbotrs showing that they hod lxx-n worn truly a very short tune, the gloss being still on them. He waa ac cordingly token to tho station house with the others. There ho gave his name as Philip Ryan, the name of the other man being George Miller. They were confronted with the complainant, who fully identified them. The boy, she said, she had not seen. The men were token to tho Tombs po lice court, where they were committed without boil by Justice Huffy, ou com plaint of Capt. Williams, and the Ixry was discharged, there being nothing against him. The lady who was assaulted gave her name as Louisa MerritL Bhe told Capt. Williams that she wan the wife of Col. Merritt, of the I'm tod States army, and that about three weeks ago she hail made her eMcajie from a lunatic asylum near Washington, 1). V. She had Deen confined there by her husband, she said, a year ajo!at September, iu order to break her uf the habit of eating mor phine. At the time mentioned she managed to make her oacupe through a hole in the wail, and went to Alexandria, Vs., on foot. From there she went to Baltimore, and thence to Philadelphia, where she remained for some days. She then sold a heavy gold ring she hail in her ]w-xMon and procured a few m-Arc-mary articles of clothing. Slie saw iu tlie Philadelphia newspapers that De tective McDcvitt, of Washington, was in the city, and fearing that he might be looking for her, determined to go away at once. Bhe therefore took the train for Jersey City, where she arrived on Tuesday morning. Hoping to find a situation she looked over the advertix-mentA in the daily papers, ami sow that a Ktcwardneas was needed on a steamer, and coma to New Y'ork to apply fur the position. Bhe lost her way during the day, and at last, when she attempted to return to Jersey City, become bewildered and wand-red aimlessly alxmt. N<*ar eleven o'clock at night she found herself in Bonth street, and while standing on a corner was ap proached by a man who asked her what she was doing there. She told him her story, and he said he was the agent of the vessel she was looking for, and told her he would take here on board. She then went with him to the tug Mike Norton, and entered the cabin with him. After she luul been there a short time four other m n made tin ir appearance, and the aoHault was made. The moment she effected her rac*|x she sought the protection of the first {mtrulman she met, who bxik her to the police station, with the result above stated. It was with great difficulty that Capt. Williams could get her to tell her story, OS she said that she did not want her trwuhlas to lx- made public, and that all she de sired wo* to lx- allowed to go nway in safety. She appealed to tlie officer for protection only, Half a dozen ooarse cotton handkerchiefs found in her pos suasion are markix! "C. E. Waldron." Bhe accounts fur this by saying that she bought them in Philadelphia, and had them so marked because she proposed to take that name, as she has a brother in-law by tlie name of Charles E. Wal dron in lloston, a member of a largo iron firm. Besides tho handkerchiefs a quantity of morphine vra* found in one of her pockets, and Capt. Williams says he thinks she won under its influence at the time she was brought to tlie station. li says that her manner and language indicate tliat ahe is a refined and culti vated lody, though evidently suffering from the excessive use of morphine. A medical examination disclosed the foot tliat she has several severe bruises on her arms. The Kljilum of Bummer*. Bail Franeineo is the cirri tun of " bniumera." Nowhere clue can a worth less fellow, too lazy to work, too coward ly to steal, got on no well. Tho climate befriends him, for ho can sleep ont of doors four-fifths of tho year, and the free lunch opens to him boundless vistas of carnal delights. He can gorge him self daily for n nominal sum; get a din ner thai a king might envy for fifty cents. There an- two classes of saloons where these middny repasts are fur uisln-d—" two-bit " places and " one bit " pliu-os. In tbe first he gets a drink and a meal; in the second a drink and a meal of inferior quality. He pays for tho drink (twentv-flve or fifteen cents, according to the grade of the place) and gets his meal for nothing. This con sists, in tho better class of establish ments, of soup, Ixiiled salmon, roast Ixx-f of the Ix-wt quality, bread mid but ter, po tab HIS, tomatoes, crackers and cheese. Many of these places are fitted np in a style of almost Oriental grandeur. A stranger, entering one of tliemoasnally, might lalxir under the delusion that he had found his war, by mistake, to tho *alnn of o Ban Francisco millionaire. He would find immense mirrors reach ing from floor to ceiling; carpets of the finest texture and the most exquisite pattern; massive tables covered with papers and periodicals; the walls em bellished with expensive paintings. A large picture which had adorned a famous drinking and free-lunch house was sold the other day for $12,000. Some of the keepers ore men of education and cul tnre. One is mi art critic of high local repute, who has written a liook, mid a very readable one, of San Francisco reminiscences.— Scribnrr'n Month!;/. (Irafiing. New Skin Upon a Wound. Of lute years one of the most impor tant anil useful operations iu surgery has been that of grafting new and healthy skin upon a wound or sore ami thus es tablishing the healing prixiess and ob taining a cicatrization. Hitherto the particles of skin have been taken from some nonnd part of patient's body and to tlie diseased or injured part, but M. Anger lias recently demonstrated that pieces of skin may bo taken from amputated limbs aud used successfully in lieteroplasty. In one case M. Anger took strips of skin from tho palmer sur face of an amputated finger and applied them to the ulcerated leg of another person. Iu three days the bandages were removed and the grafted parts found firmly united to the surface and evidently vascularized. To insure suc cess it is necessary that the graft be made immediately upon amputation. AUVBAKY OF NEWH. I ism* si Islsrsst from Itsms aa* A*ra4 Owing to prsvalanea of ItteamllaiiaA la Cauada, tha London insurance coapaulas will withdraw tliair sgsuoto* abortly Tho ctiallangs cup, (xaupotsd far at Wlmtdsdon by lbs Americans aluna, was won by Pulton. Tb* bial rsvanu* raealpto of tlio Pranch govarumout fur tha laai six montlia show an liter MM of • 79,000,000 ovar thus* of tb# cor responding |x*rind hurt year Tha bankers' ounvsnUun at Narabiga adoplsd raaoluUons favoring Immsdlale resumption of spool* pay mania l)ry waatlier la doing unmans* damaga to tb* ootlou crop* of Oaorgla A terrible fight occurred in I'ardado, Kaoambl* county, Ala., betwoso two families, Hatlslt, and llyera, in which aU man, ouuaiaUng af (tUisr and two sons on aacb aids, wars ao gaged. Five uf the party were kUied outright, ehite tke autb and last baa a load of buckshot In bis aids, ablcb must OSUM death, ~.. Ac countant Warren, of New York city, who baa been examining lbs New York Htate treasury at lbs request of Treasurer 1 tau.as. baa just completed that work, and reports having found • verything all right .... Alexander and Wm. Cotlis, who recently failed in London, have beeu arrested for procuring mousy on false pretenses They wers held In #10,0(10 ball sarb. One of the banks holds their paper to the amount of #2,600,000. The Maryland Democratic eouvaulioo nomi nated John Ls* Carroll for governor. Tb* |Utform protests against a high protective tariff , and against lbs multiplication of federal offices and lbs unusually high salaries ; de plores lbs abuses of federal patruuaga, which tend to corrupt the Males and free insUtuUons; that agriculture, manufactures and commerce aboukl be the equal oars of web-regulated governments ; protests against an increase of the circulating currency, and demands lbs re sumption of sped* payment at the earbeet practicable moment; oppoeee the granting of sutsudiaa.. .Tb* contest at Wimbledon be tween tb* Irish. Hootch and English rifle teams for lbs Klebo shield, resulted in a victory for lbs Irish, who mad* l.Sbfi point*, to tb* Hootch 1,603 and the English 1,605..... Tb* July re turn* to the department of agriculture ehow that the acreage of tobacco le greater than that of last year E. O. Johnson, deputy eollactor of internal revenue and a member of tb* Florula Legislator*, waa shot and killed at a still bourn about ten miles from Fernsudtna. The assassins ar* unknown ....... The Ohio rivet and lie tributaries overflowed their banks on account of heavy rains, and much damag* was done to ibe growing amps A san guinary affray took place at Hkm bayou, in tb* Chat-oka nation, twelve mile* from Fort Hmitb, in which three men were ugoantly lulled. The combatants were of tha rival political factious of Doss and Downing. Tha night following, lb* eon testing dans, about thirty strong each, again met and considerable firing aas indulged in, but with what result la not known .... Tb* coroner's jury in the in quest over the vidua* of tho coil torn on tb* K x-kaway railroad, returned a verdict in which they " severely censure tb* railroad company in not employing good and competent men in sufficient number to operate the road safely." Advices from Newark. 0., state that twenty- Mvon persons were horned by tb* explosion in the building ablcb waa being made ready to leet a fire extinguisher. Only one death has occurred llogb Donahue, the pedestrian, was comparatively fresh upon lbs completion of bis wonderful walk of 1.100 mile* in LIOO consecutive hours at Huston The steamer Abbotef'jrd, qf the Philadelphia line, which went ashore on the coast of Wales, baa keeled over and become a total wreck The moat important papers in tha Investigation of the New York canal oontracts have been spirited away, and the cases will probably have to b* postponed until winter The bank at Wtnlhrop, Mo., was entered by burg tare, who Mew open the safes with nitro glycerine and rifled the contents. The lorn amounts to #50,000.... Tb* Fraabytariaa oouncti is Loo dun bare adopt d the nam* of "Alliance of Deformed Churches Throughout the World.'' .... Close A Hons paper mill at lowa City, la., was {isrUaUy destroyed by explodiug its cook ing tanks, and Ave men were killed. LaeM atxmt #100.000..... The department of agri culture place the spring wheat crop at eighty two per cent, of an average.. .. . .The woman Calling herself Mrs. Col. Merrill, who created so much sympathy for herself in New York by her tale of outrage on a tugboat, has been ulsnUflsd as an insane woman from Washing ton Htshop Kmsth testified in the trial of tha Moan tain Meadow case to I'lab. that he oppoeed the massacre at a meeting of the Mor mon dignitaries in IBS", and it waa resolved to let the immigrants )*■>• harmlessly : subse quently It was decided to destroy them, and Lew took a party of soldiers out to where the immigrants were firmly intrenched against the Indians. By means of a white flag he induced tho parly out of their camp, sod at tb* word the Mormon soldier* shot them down. The men. women and eldest children were shot and ihetr throats rut. The young children wers saved and well cored for. A few day* after witness was sent with others to gather op the l-roperty of the Immigrants, which they took to the tithing-bouse. Bngharn Young told them to ssr nothing of the matter. The strike of the operatives in the ootton mill* at Oldham. Euglaud. closes one hundred milts and throw* thirteen thousand people out of work An official statement msd* by M. Coil lout. mm.iter of public works, to the French Assembly, estimate* the total damage don* to property by the inundations in the south of France at #15.000.000.... Assistant Htreet lnsjiectar Zcuner, of Cleveland, 0.. attacked Mr. Oowlen. editor of the Lemirr, for an alleged libelous article. Zeimer struck tiowtee a violent blow on the heed while the latter was sitting down, and when two bystan der* caught Zoimer's arms he drew a pistol and was endeavoring to cock it when Cowl** knocked htm down with a cone. Zeimer was arrested A < iermon employed on a plan tation at Frenchman's Dai ou. Ark., having disappeared after drawing some money, sus picion* were aroused, and two negroes with whom ho was last seen wore arras led. They confessed to having murdered and robbed the man and showed where the body was hidden. They also staled that they belonged to an organized band under the leadership of a white man named Burtou. and had killed and mur dered a number of people. Tlie crowd hod grown to a mob by this time and they were so infuriated by tlie confession that ibey took the negroes out and shot one dead, w hen the other escaped. Warrant* were issued for ail the par ties belonging to the baud of outlaw*. By the breaking of the Canada government boom in 8b Maurice river, over lea thousand log* drifted into the 81. Lawrence Judge Fisher has resigned his position as United States district attorney for the District of Columbia, and ex-Ooveruor Wells will take tlie office A roan named Johnson, with hi* wife sod five children in * wagon, drove into 111* CooMwhatchie river, in Gordon county, (it, and getting into deep water, the * agon-box floated off. AU tbe children were drowned. Tb* man and his wlf* escaped..... Tlie steamer Severn, recently towed into 8b John, N. F.. by the steamer Caspian, has been libeled for # 115.000 salvage ... A disastrous drought prevails in Portugal; the crops are destroyed, cattle are dying of hunger, famine is threatened and riots are imminent Tb* bishop and priest* connected with the Ban Mignef (Salvador) riot* have been aent ont of the country l>y the authorities. It has been discovered that similar outbreak* were ar ranged for different ports of the country, to take place in Ibe name of religion. l'art of a train on the Pseiflo road went through a bridge over the Mississippi at Ilrainerd, and four peraon* were killed and several wounded By an exploeion of gae in the Pennsylvania gas coal company'* works at Irwin'n Station, one man waa killed and six others badly burned Of the one hundred and elxty-twa mills at Oldham, England, only six are running. Fifty mills have also been closed at Asbton, throwing eight thousand |>eraons ont of enqiloyment. Trouble is ap prehended Tramp*, after having eaten at the house of a Mr. Hill at West Berlin, Vt, demanded money, but were driven away. They returned two days afterward and at tempted to fire the premn-ee, and the eame afternoon four of tliero burst open a door and fired at Mrs. Hill, without injuring her. Neigh bors went in pursuit Tbecompaniee hold ing policies on the life of Jackaon, the default ing revenue officer of Louisville, Ky., had his body exhumed for pott mortem examination, and found arsenic iu hie etomach Report* from Gloucester. Maaa., state that the mack erel oatoh ia very light and prioea have ad vanesd Prof. Jannsy, the govaranMmt geologist, reports tbM hs baa discovered gold ID PARING quantities ta lbs Blank Hilla . Tha whole draft of ihsnswftpniiiah ooosUtattao has been approved by tha oocnsrtHsa . ...Ooo aidorabla •lntr-roatil waa caused in Unsocial oirrlaa to New York city on nolle* being gtrau of tha failure of Ibwoan. Hharmau k Co.. tha bitiktri. Tbi hiMlltiii in it )!,• 000,000, and tha aaaata ara unknown. Tha lose faila heaviest on country tanka holding papar of tha firm's, and on traralara balding lattara of or adit Tha failnra waa cauaad by tha abrinkaga on railroad securities and ootton bald by tha firm. Huoran, Sherman k Co. When we took about us for the cause of the downfall of the house of Duncan, Hberman k Co., aaya the Herald, we find the subject to be one of unusual difficulty. In this country our business prospect* had only begun to brighten. A prolific yield at home and the promise of an active demand abroad were teach ing ua to expect from our wheat crop a revival of trade. The corn and cotton mop* also give excellent promise. There ia no unusual stringency in the money market, and no fears bsve been enter tained of s commercial crisis. In Europe, however, and especially in England, business hss lately presented a gloomy outlook. Many of the hanks and some of the greatest commercial houeee have been overtrading. The deprneaion in the iron trade caused the downfall of the A tM-r dare Company. Another class of miefortunea led to the auspeneion of Al exander Colli* A Co., and many bouses almost as prominent were dragged down with them. The banks narrowly es caped, and escaped only on the ground of their ability to wit batend misfortune. It la now believed that the difficulties in their affair* and all the real dangers of the situation have been successfully tided over. Lately, however, there waa a story of the failure of the Union bank, of London. Had this been true we would have had in it a ready explanation of the suspension of Duncan, Htinrmaii k Co. With heavy advances made upon both grain and cotton, and with in, rnense liabilities constantly presmtig them from all parte of the world, it would be simply impossible for the New York house to go on in the face of the London disaster. In *uy event, or from whatever the muw, the failure of a bonne like >'■! of l>unaan, .Sherman k Co. in to be de plored. If overtrading in the aauae of the disaster the event in one to be (*• pretted especially on that nooounL This WM a banking honae that wan eminently a credit bonne. Their draft* were cosh all over the worH, and American toor iata and traveler* carried their letter* of credit everywhere. Their boant of un exampled credit WM true only beoauae jwxipir believed that it wan imponnible for such a honrn to indalge in overtrad ing in any direction. It wan not expect ed that tli'-y could be "long " or "abort" in anything, or that their dealing*, either at home or abroad, oould affect their solvency, The fact of their foliar* in itaelf ap]iarenUy tells s different story. Their lames and misfortune* which cam? to tli. m so unexpectedly oonld have oome in no other way than through speculation. It ia liecanae of this fact, neowaary upon every hypothesis except thai they were dragged down by the ruin of their correspond ants, that the failnre is so complete s surprise, and the wonder is all the greater because the crash came at a time of business serenity, when the pro*j wet* for the future were not only bright but frightening. In this respect, however, their story is only the old, asd story common to business misfortune in every sge and country, and we can scarcely expect that the lesson of their failure will be less true or mure regarded ia the future than it has been in the P"*- Egyptian Wheat la Peaacytvaßla. A correspondent of the I sin caster (Pa.) Expresa says: The writer, in company with a friend, paid a viait to Mr. An drew Petersburg, thia coun ty, to see the Egyptian wheat be is rais ing. Mr. Holtx worth says that some yean ago the body of an Egyptian was taken up, and upon opening the stone coffin, in which he may have lain for thousand of years, a few grams of wheat were found,"which were sent to (Jer many and planted. From theae few grains a small lot was raised, some of which wire sent to Mr. HolUworth's son, in Fort Wayne, Indiana, who sent them to his father. From the first crop Mr. Holtzworth planted one handled aud thirty grains, from which be ob tained two quarts. The next crop he raised was two and a half bushels, and this year he expects to have about twenty bushel* of grain ou a three-quarter acre of ground. H* has raised three crops of this wheat in four years on the same ground without a particle of manure. One year the ground ansa planted in potatoes. Our farmer* should secure a supply of this seed, a* there is no doubt thit it will be the wheat of the future. Mr. Holtxworth would be pleased to hsve persons call and see this remarka ble wheat before it is cat. The straw is excellent. Millions of intelligent women sav that Dobbins' Electric Soap (made by (Vagin k Co., Philadelphia) is in everv respect the bestscap ever made, and wilfdo three timea the work of any other. Try it. • The luster of Morocco leather is re stored by varnishing with white of egg. Farmers and sbick raisers have fre quently laid us that tlisv hars seen very good results from giving Shrridnn't Cavalry C•• Is sat m aksais •!. I'm., string soars of tbw p*P*c. The Markets. Beef Psttle—Prtms to Fitra Bollocks UVS l*w Common to Oood Trxsrst. MlfS HA Milch Cows 41 AO ATI 00 Hots-Mrs r**A Dressed IS A 10<* Sheep 04.S A MS Lambs t*WA W Cotton-Middling UNA 1K Flour—Rxtra Western...... * 7* dill State Kxtra a... • 71 A * 1* Wheel—Red Western..... 1 IS A 1 II No. 1 Spring 1 94 A 1 ** Rye—Slate. 1 l A 1 II Barley—State 1 A 1 in Rarley Malt 1 10 A 1 TO uete-Mli-d Western ao A *"V Ctorc- Mixed Wee tern 11 * M Bay. perowt M A 1 IS Straw, per cwt SO A ** Hoye .". Via, ISA*I—olds 1 —olds OS A Pork-Mess II 00 All * Lard USA US Fish—Mackerel No. 1, new.........17 00 All 00 No X new II oo u an Pry Cod. per c5>t............ t "X A S SI Ilerrlns. Scaled, per Sox SS A IS Petrol-urn—Crude OS SAO® It' R-"od, I'X Wool—California Fleece N S IS T*xs •' m A M Australia* " ' A M Butter—State F * 1 Western Hairy IS A I* Western Yellow ISA 91 Western Ordinary..... 11 A '* Penrsylvanta Fine M A IS Cheese—State Factory 0d A li " Kklmmed 01 A 'S Western 04 A 0< Kgge—dfsts II All* ALBANT . Wheel 1 40 A 1 41 Rye—HUte 10* A 1 14 Oorn—Mixed MA *1 Barley—mate 1 rn A 1 SO Oets—State 04 A 14 atrwano. lour d Ml A 8 IS Wheat—No. | Spring.....• 1 S4 AIM Oorn—Mixed.. 77 A 78 Oats 68 A *3 57*- II A 1 II Barley 1 40 A 1 40 aaLviifoaa Cotton—Low Middlings 14SA US Flour—Extra 8 60 A 860 Wheel—Red Western 141 A 1 41 Rye....... 1 00 A 1 04 C0rn—Ye110w............ Fg exparienred editor, rail of valu able information of ibe FactOe **. It ia only gS "** nmra CABLE "SCREW WIRE Ttw* mw He. Mek, ar eaaw IBmmfiXMißmtt Mtrl __Tnr IbMS. all sasetae ■. Y. 0. u -■* a OPIUM IL M &£ AAPA A MONTH tsas wasted evaey s2so rnilUTVi wairrau MISSOURI oooimr BONOS ilßnm PENNSYLVANIA ir^r'insr^br ONLY 50 CENTS rat The Maatae Waah-lr tileha, analhiyaa.- s< ii i. b-t uku SIX Trained let a aatoaeeiat *rt laTiaWaim SJ* teasel haw ia (W * tnttf. a* am. aadbnenme ta.ee- SZSiS-HSS*SiS ass eat| aeaHaal '■■■ iiml Aalxwl aai aar awe imrtiai amwiw l Untwut Um *a pSiim aed aradaaMa w aeaeie aaaa* aMr asd Warm Srw Heiuxao sow area. k*Snaii aatm aa* 4a AS 2TJUX2TV. gaufAAgl>^' larrwall Saaatr l4> rra aed aS Mm ams Mud WNBI MM! At ImmmAl vHA Tsrrsnt'* EflbrTrarent Seltser Aperient, at mm* a SMM rafieafca* Axasght aed tha beat el aS raealatlaa aaedwmee. OPIUM CURE a* ftat. It. SraSw. f u nea W*. Uaehjhl rata saw Traaa Si aara with amSaat naUt riuxfikf ua fftSTeJM m. Sed t . *.p|^W OSS. \ M Hold Ihiae h aa V/ \S Elastic Trut* Co., ha. ua hreadwa,. H. V. UtT, aadaaaibrmafl OaU ar aead fee fVewMe.aad baemaS 10 mriAM •v •eesiii*i!sewumej >MuTT - L e mw* Item Mtaa, ChS a Oa, Siiw. Sea new let c*j. rwnmu !" . rvmrn". la-1 nTEeela, Ma. 8OK AfiCim WANTED A-Bk" GLEANWCS FOR THE CUKlOri" unOikl kWBlStfsL briSUltißi TtkisinQt tn Jk4 wXfAXa iim u eatafM nmm SWe i Jw aMW; adUhMMI ceeelieen .eu keaaw 7>.gfber -■V WSIISt.* Aeeett ■ "-m a mn WIT. -aed Uaa see M ret - '* sSa aamkl h eel!. ~r*. MU w eite *" rafk f we tf t* m kmm #. W# ) Ot.DDD mm** Urmatf Afwr ie m*-mrm mII Jww wtn mmA Dtt Ym hltei whe eSk MS ear- uc~e. AGM^I^EDtS out ttift l*tn V) Agwa',- wrioa aT wiuiianro x>. n>uadaiaMa.ra. SQMOTHING\s^SSsrM. W, ban eera aed aa.ee * lot all. wen or eiiene. bn*a e w NEW YORK TRIBUNE The heeding American Newspaper. THE BK*T ADVKKTIMMI MKIUCS. Daily, $lO a rear Semi A'eeklr. 3 Weekly. $3. Smhi he M li. ttiiiie r. Kr r lema Oaplin aed ileiieli* Rale In* Weekly, la crab* of SO or mate, wtrfl, pmiMr* pad. Addmea TnTwnsXT. \VA>TKI, AfJKNTM Vwalmhrlb Oa*. >' irealtl Illmert OOt) aaae,Xg earn*, mn. ermn* eML kddreaa H. f> HOt t.MTON A CO.. I baiiMi flue. RoMna. Mam. $lO f SSOO SvHh'SS •renlbiad. aa.l eyr d tot Well NrtH Unite .loss Hwuim AOo.Saehae aßn * rnMaCt. dTrohtea. fj iaedaif, It- T pmt PJUULYWms IT. Hoaw le K. IV Sold ht Armla iMtea M S IT>V!U J. I&te. Wa Geo- p. Rowellx Cb-I Uf IIITC n ~-s WSKf vv An I IS Ka.ee.yea. Oedei rau. re. H M, Peorll. Patent > ard Maaaare and a Ptee •af Jew air, Htoale Packaea. eUh ete*aai Cnie. poai paid. Hi e- ata llwcuUr Ira*. KKIIH. A CXI . 7Kit (troadwa... See Ta k CintCoß ,rrJ " S-nlteChnwMCtblataa 4> 1U *" Uh|j. H. lirrruei. St - ■*. Btetea. Vara WANTED AISKNTM. " .>e-r ~ eed 'owvir JW. 1> Seller lAwe UWd. A. OOl" LtEKd OO . LSloa** CIAtTION—NOTICE.—The Oeeelee Edit lea. LIFE AND LABORS OF 1 VJ NGBTONE < Ineludla* the - LAST JOURNALS"), anfolda etei.tl* bit SO V aen* atraaee adreatatwa. alao tha ptrieirte, Woadera and Waal h at that ewtra-lee- ooaatiy. and w abanlulel tha nu-i tea, eetni!eta wnek Hence It Sella. met think. I Y.f'oo flret ervea eaaka Ayatita' taeeee. amnld aetoakh ma, aaere weal ml Band for Tanaa aed pcaiuea pronf at eenolne- e- m'BDARD BROS PahaT" 24 naaaumStcaei. Philadelphia, Pa. AGENTS WANTED HISTORY at tb. UJUTWJ RTATra. h. KgsaoV j! U>aai*n. now read, I tm both K**ii K •..I Cwa.., MOO WiSiTJSXJSC, /Lbaieieiewl'til ■it mwaethMm fc'rwej (Wteeial KMnde. Interim Intel. >l evaiyahere ta the itrt'flee bWlur, f see can try: btmea..ar, chahoa fur AKFNT* eekiae e. flee* book. Hl Mhlnt l;'i deeerlpthia at d liberal IC*ABH.MRS l*aOi*H-'lwbt*" I -n- "J ' Uk. usesi.i.Y my ssrramt AUJL „ W" CATASSI BKMXBY. linß K I Hnhß raMtdyaadaaeaaera leidhmad OManh IMyjL Wa-raniea le reUer, uwtaaU, e> the BatteM cm llnHk iShfisnniM an, wehHami Srea* feiv e-Ssi *'■*'•' m,|itld with ,mpit jectatMSt earn ■■DHL irtrra* CaU aay eat ne* at addnaa ... _ RLdSSXU.awhCneh.aMa ■ lilthy UetCtaM. raiiMa* rackaaa, S, aaS, tUM P WIU. HAYK OUR OOODB. Bead S eaeta and E' r -ee Win -end by aaaC. prepaid, our Laer Pmuta. with wlitob roa ma RHaey Jf.toteae lee* wiilowi _ awaMy thlatetv or y mv etUMda V O Lam,. At am lime we il P>a .11 on. ctrailera P M lacm.t.i aeantaon twenty at* ful bomehold ; J aitkM*. with B'eh ear yerwa nan mk# fiwa It b v "SfiisferoM. C. Baron. Mtaa - DOUBLE YOUR TRADE l>ro**lu. tSßtceraaad Daslara- Bet China and Japan TWat.in male I pcite..i-fi. •** ". cbmta— Sriwtr' a.itw. Send for circular Tut *'Ui fti UoMfHT, YOt Kail..a M.N Y.P O.Wi WO. ■ TBi i ——J—Xi ilC' "'C/>, Votra'aKtacraeßaayamad gV* t I* I n, r Bauiia ale ludoraed by tha v x \ J / A moat emisrnt ybyateraad ia the world for ibecnrrofrbea. Piaiut, dyayepai*. kidney da ' aeee.acbee.paint uerToat dia yyflX*. an) ra.flta.rmalac. malair U 1 nerytMia and aenerel debility, e* and other chronic dlaeaaea of . IS LIFE. KTO'rtffiSSrffif