AITUMN. Ab, Tom, my fricud, Mi Autumn. Don't jon OU Tie faded blossoms bow their Limits oud dlef There, Lenr the apples uiMujr from tbo tree. As friend, are fuiliug ucur to you uud X. Bco yonder mnn with cider apples pas, A heavy loud for that poor liorso to draw j Tom, will you drink your elder from a gins f To me 'tis sweeter coming through a straw. Let's drink It now 'tis sweet, my dear old friend : Let's drink it now 'tis harmless apple Juice, For If we watt 'twill sot us tip on end, And make us to our friends of little use. The chestnut burrs Jack Froet has opened wide i There ffo the boys a nutting to the wood I When winter winds sweep by the bright fire side The chestnuts and the butternuts are good. Lonit years ago, before we prcw to men Those tangled bushes oft we've travelled through ; The woods are smaller now than they were then ; The circle of old friends Is smaller, too. The buskers labor well In yonder field ; Another busker on the fence cloth rest; The hollow In that tree would some corn yield ; Wise squirrel, ho, to store with food his nest. How Is It, Tom, with you and I, to-day 7 Our autumn neuretu with its toil and strife-, Have we been wise and treasures hid away, To be enjoyed in the hereafter life f THE COXQUEKED FRENCH. How They are Governed. Mr Edward King write to the Bos ton Journal from Germany : The Governor-General over the French Provinces now occupied by Prussian troops has fixed his sjat of government at ltheima, and the attention of the world is rapidly turning that way. You have perhaps heard that the Grand Duke of Mecklenburg Schwerin was originally appointed to this office, but was found too tender-hearted for the post, so ho was recalled to the command of his corps under Paris, and Gen. de Rosenberg Guizynski was appointed to fill up the interregnum. He is a soldier even down to his boots, and knows noth ing but soldiering. After this Governor General there are two civil Commissioner-Generals : Prince Charles of Ilohen lohe for the interior and finances, and Count Taufkirchen for other matters. There is also a prefect in the chief towu of each department, a sub-prefect in the nest smaller towns, where there is also generally an officer commanding the place, and an " Etape." As 1 expect to have a good deal of business with the " Etapes " during the next few days, 1 must explain to you their duties. At every important railway station there is an " Etapen-Comtnando," who furnishes all information (or withholds it) as he thinks best ; arranges the billets of sol diers and stringers for transportation, and is a general executive for the high military officers. You do not travel in France now from town to town j you go from "Etape" to "Etape;" and you never know, when leaving one, whether you will be allowed to proceed beyond another. The Etape is a very Sultan in the arbitrary nature of his authority. Garrisons, of course, abound every where. There are 2.A00 men at Rheims, 1,200 at Epernay, 2.000 at Chalons, and 800 at the camp of the same name, witn an immense hospital, 200 at Sutppe, 200 at Suiute Menehould, and 600 at liethel, in which latter place a vast ambulance has been constructed at the expense of the town. At Chalons the soldiers are barracked ; the officers lodge with the inhabitants, but the city has to pay their board. At Rheims the barracks are not yet organized, so that all the soldiers live in the private houses. The Grand Duke used to live in the Hotel Cliquot, aud his successor will probably imitate so seductive an example. The Prussian authorities have been much criticised for their arbitrary meas ures in compelling the municipal gov ernment at Rheims to subscribe to the official paper which the Provincial gov ernment has seen fit to start. To show you how sharp and decisive are the measures taken by the Prussians there, I must mention that the Duke of Mech lenburg Schwerin was censured because he did not place a prominent citizen of the town on the locomotive of the first train that left every morning, intending in this manner to guarantee against any malicious attempts to upset the trains. The inhabitants of all these sections are almost frantic because the Prussians force them to pay the same tax they did last year, the burden now being quite overwhelming. One other measure which seems needlessly hard is the im perative command to all the captured towns to prepare a list of every man between the ages of twenty and forty, five, and the imposition of a fine ot fifty francs for every day of absence without motive on the part of any individual mentioned on the list. Bread is lacking nearly everywhere ; the people of Saint Menehould went without, recently, for three days. Cualons has been obliged to level to the ground its magnificent trees on the promenade which old Le Fotre planted. Chalons is condemned to pty 1,6UU,000 francs. The environs of Soissons are totally ruined for at laast two years to come. The arbitrary arrests continue to excite considerable indignation. The other day the Count de Chevigny was taken from his chateau at Bouisault, and locked up forty eight hours then set at liberty without ex planation. The Mayor of Rheims got five days in jail for some trifling insub ordination. But the officials the French, I mean in spite of their great vexations and sorrows, are doing all they can to build up that section of the country once more. They all refuse to S'jrve Prussia, and the consequence is that post-offices, tax-bureaux, every thing relating to the collection of any species of revenue, is barren of em ployees. The daily work can never be effected only one, two, and three days behind time. The Frenoh spirit, with the love of the grotesquely horrible, is udmirably illustrated in the case of a little town which had not made any very brave resistance, aud which was refused food in its distress a few days after by the French authorities of the department, who said that people who could defend themselves no better de terred to die of famine ! ' Mr. and Mrs. Sanson, of Chicago, filed cross-bills for divorce. He testified that he poured a panful of boiling water over - hi bad,vM4 then scraped -the hair off with the p va, he submitting H to see how far she would go." He now thinks she went too far. - She bad read of " heaping coals of fire," but thought hot water would be better. Ihe Ruined Cities of Central America. Captain Carmichael rend, at the reoent meeting of the Gographioal Section of the British Association, a paper of uiuuh interest on the ruined cities of Ceutrul America. He said that in his opinion, formed from personal investigation, the architecture of the aboriginal Indian of Central America was but a diversified reproduction of that of Eastern coun tries. He then pointed out a number of similarities in thi ir architecture, design?, oustoms, etc., to nations of th East, and showed how, as a general rule, it was very difficult to explore these ruins, owing to the hostility of the existing tribes of Indians. As regards their antiquity, he assigned to many of them an earlitr foundation than that accorded to them by Stephens aud Squier, and adduced some very convincing proofs in support of his theory. The picture he drew of the Enlaces of Quiche in Guatemala fully ore out the Ktatement of Torqueinada that they rivalled those of Montezuma j and he showed that, if that city one ot some eight hundred years' standing was in such a perfect state of conserva tion some fifty years ago that the padre of a neighboring Indian village, who then walked among its streets and palaces, imagined himself in Spain, what must be the era of those numerous cities compared with which Quiche was modern V He then pointed out the great length of these ruined cities, and added that in connection with this a r markable fact had seemingly been overlooked by most Central-American writers viz., that the stone buildings whose ruins we now find extent were used as temples, pala ces, and public offices generally, the poorer inhabitants living in huts of a perishable nature an arrangement which represented an almost incredible amount of population. He then ana lyzed the various elements composing the architecture of the ruined buildings and monuments, and gave an inteiesting account of the various uses to which the tcocali and tumuli were put by the Tol tecan and Aztec priests viz., for sacri ficial and burial purposes, to serve as beacons, for warlike defences, etc. and explained the relations between the temples and palaces, and offered a few hints as to the deciphering of the hiero glyphics, a subject to which he has paid much attention, and for which he i specially qualified from hisknowledgeot the Maya or Iudian language, showing that thoy were chiefly the works of the Indian priesthood, and, above all, were intended to inculcate moral and religious precepts, chronological events being made quite subservient to them. He then referred briefly to the round towers which contained the estuas for the sa cred fire of Montezuma, in connection with tho worship of the sun, and passed on to explain the nature and signifi cance of the various hideous and awe inspiring idols to whom the human sac rifice was offered on the summit of the teocali, and stated it as his belief that these idols, as well as the planed stones, were carved with clay or flint instru ments, as he bad often found flint and obsidian implements, but in no instance an instrument of metal. Referring to the state of decay in which they were mostly found, he stated that there were ruins which had never been visited by the Spaniards at the time of the conquest, and expressed it as his opinion that their crumbling and ruinous condition was mainly brought about by the earthquakes so prevalent throughout Central America, in con junction, of course, with the action on them of time and the elements. He gave a most interesting account of a ruined city in British Honduras, called Xmul, which he claims to have dis covered, and concluded by pointing out the great extent of unknown and un travelled districts in Central America, particularly in Guatemala, as presenting a fine field for future geographers and naturalists, and expressed it as his firm conviction that there existed at the present day an Indian city yet to be discovered whose inhabitants occupy the same splendid palaces and temples as in the days of tho Spanish conquest, whose priests inscribe fresh precepts on their tablets, and who would then read to us their now mystical hieroglyphics, lie supported the statement by describ ing an exploration he made in the south ern district of British Honduras, west ward toward Guatemala, whore, after several days' perilous river-navigation and farther journey on foot, he discov ered in the neighborhood of the Cox comb Peak the remains of an abandoned maize-plantation, and saw smoke as cending from the distant forest, and be lieves that the tribe of Indians who oc cupy this part of the country, which was before considered to be uninhabited, have some connection with the mysteri ous Aztec city he spoke of. In the discussion which followed, Cap tain Carmichael stated that he had re cently returned from California, where he had heard a Japanese and a digger Indian of Nevada, then brought to gether for the first time, converse in telligibly. This remarkable fact, in connection with the well-known resem blance of the tribes on the Amoor River to our Indians, has a very important bearing on the question of the source from which America was originally peopled. A Traveller's Story. In one of the cars of a train upon the Cleveland and Pittsburg Railroud, on a r.cent afternoon, a lady travelling from Wheeling, Va., bad her attention at tracted to a party of fellow-passengers, consisting of an elderly gentleman, two young men, and a young lady. All tour were elegantly dressed, and had the general appearance of people in what is called the higher walk of life ; but what gained the particular notice of the Vir ginia lady was the dejected countenance of the girl, whose striking beauty and tasteful apparel were in marked con trast with her look of hopeless despond ency. While yet the interested observer was speculating upon the possible mean ing of that look the train stopped at the Alleghany station, where the young la dy, upon making a rather passionate motion to leave the car, had her arm rudely grasped by the oldest of her mas culine escort, and was summarily pulled back into the seat. Submitting, but weeping bitterly, the fair subject of this compulsion made no further rebellious demonstration until the Union Dctpotat Pittsburg was reached ; when, upon the three gentlemen undertaking to lead her from the car, she resisted vigorously, and succeeded in " holding on by a seat," as the Pittsburg Gazette relates, until the lady who had been watching her ar rived opposite, on her way from the oar. Graspiug the dress of this lady, the girl asked, in a hurried whisper, "Are you not Mrs. So-and-so, of Wheeling If The reply fit the surprised lady was in the affirmative; whereupon the agitated suppliant said that she had onoo met her at the house of a friend iu Wells burg, and implored her " for Heaven's sake " to stay with and protect her from "those men." Convinced now that there was something wrong in the af fair, and nnieniberiiig that a friend ot hers in Wellsburg had, at a party one evening, introduced to her a young lady strongly resembling the stranger, the lady thus appealed to for protection in quired of the oldest gentleman of the party if all was right, and received an swer that he understood his own busi ness and should reply to no gratuitous inquisition. So speaking, the gentle man, atxttt d by his two younger com panions, was about seizing upon the captive again, when the latter, calling the laay uy ner name ot Mrs i , re newed the entreaty that she should not leave her. Still clinging to that lady. she was forced from the car by the three men, the old man saying that she should go to the St. Charles Hotel, where her sister was staying. The young ldy, continues the UazMe, remarked to Mrs. P that she had no sister at the St. Charles Hotel or in the city, and begged her for God's sake to take charge ot her aud protect her from the men. Mrs. P said she was going to the Motion- ifahela House, aud as there appeared to be Borne mystery about the mutter, she would take the girl with her where the gentleman could explain. The old gen tleman again made some crusty remark about being able to attend to his own business, and said that he would take the girl to the St. Charles. Mrs P was fixed in her purpose, aud insisted that she should accompany her to the Monongabela House. Tho old gentle man, probably to prevent a continuance of the parley, yielded, aud the party all save one ot the young men moved out of the car, the young lady still clinging to Airs, f , and got in an omnibus. Mrs. P directed the drivtr to drive to the Monongabela House. Ho evi dently received other instructions, as in stead of going to the hotel, he drove to the Monongabela wharf, where the mys terious party cot out, and the young la dy, against her consent, was forced upon tne Elector, which was just ready to start. Mrs. P felt that she had been out-generaled, but still thinking there was something wrong, tho culled to the captain of the boat, who was on the hurricane deck, and informed him that there was something mysterious about the party just going aboard the boat, tnd requested him to see that no harm came to the lady. Inquiry concerning the mutter ot tho othcers ot the steamer on which the purty took pussagp, proved that the patty disembarked at iiilic Val ley paper-mills, about thirty miles up the Monongabela River. The captain stated that he observed nothing unusual in the actions of the party. The girl made no complaint, and he saw no cause tor any interference on his port. If there was no foul play connected with the ati'uir, the only hypothesis upon which the mystery can be explained is that of the girl's insanity, a conclusion scarcely warrantable from the statement ot Airs. P , whose statement was in part corroborative of the gentleman con nected with tho wharf boat, who says he noticed that the young lady was forced on the boat against her will, and that be called the attention of a gentleman from Brownsville, who was aboard, to the matter, and requested him to investigate it. In short, the whole affair remains a mysteiy, and is lull of romantic sugges tion for the imaginative reader. Success in Life. Success in life is only attained by persistent industry and untiring de votion to whatever business we engage in. Thurlow Weed, one of our strong est self-made men of the day, snys thut when he was a young man, working at a printing-press in New York City, it was his rustom, as well as that of Mr. James Harper, who worked in the same office with him, to do, in summer, a fair half day's work before the other men .tnd boys got their breakfast. They would meet by appointment, in the gray of the morning, and go down to John Street. They got the key of the of fice by tapping on the window, and their employer would take it out from under his pillow and band it to one of them through an opening in the blind. " A pressmun," says Mr. Weed, J who could do twenty or even ten per 'cent, more work tbau usual, was always sure of a situation. James Harper, Tom Ken nedy long since dead and I made the largest bills in the vicinity. We often earned as much as fourteen dollars per week, liberal wages, when you remem ber that good board could be obtained tor ten dollars per month." When we look at such an example as this, we are amazed when we contrast it with those of so many of the young men of to-day, who are so dazed by their passions and the devil, that they do not see where in their own best good consists. They seem out of place in this busy world. In stead of being up in the morning to work, they are wasting their time in sleep long after the sun is up, lengthen ing out the night at the wrong end to make up for the time stolen at the other end in dissipation of various sorts. Gambling and billiards, chatnpaigne aud the turf, strong drink and fast women, are as surely destructive to a business re putation as arsenic or prussic acid is to physical life. A few may indulge in them, and not die; bul of what use in the world are such emasculated crea tures, except to enjoy themselves after a fashion, and die unmissed, because they leave no place of usefulness vacant ? Youth and young manhood is the time for work, to climb up the hill. And there is happiness in work, if one takes to it heartily and cheerfully. There is a manly pleasure in attacking aud over cotning d iffi culties,and a grand conscious ness of duty done ennobles the conqueror. If young men would achieve success, they must tight for it with indomitable pluck aud persistency. By industry, by self-control, by self-denial, by economy. by undeviatiug integrity, character is made ; and character is the best part of capital. In Boston, the other day, a respectable citizen imprudently yawned in the pres ence ot a policeman. The latter inter preted the yawn as an insult to bis die: nity, and the offender was bullied, arrest ed and imprisoned, while the officer was punished tor his outrage bv a mere noni lual fine. The Timet of that city says it is geiiiug to De a serious question bow far a quiet and orderly citizen can stretch an arm, or how much above his breath he may mdulge hii languid propensities. A cruel mother in Indiana recent h captured and married her daughter's in tended, whereat the young lad v. by way of revenge, set off a half doz-n bunches of tire-crackers under the Dridai couch, FA1UI AMI HOUSEHOLD. SoMKTUIHa ABOUT BrKAD-MAKIMO. A subject that interests everybody is mat ot uread-makmg, aua as a general thing, there is too much popular iguo rauce resoectina; it. Iu the process of grinding wheat for superfine flour, the outer bhell, oomposed chiefly of gluten, being tenacious and adhesive, comes from the mill in flakes with the bran, and is sifted out, while the starch is pul verized aud constitutes the fine flour. Thus the starch, which is the chief ele ment in fin- flour, is saved, which con tains no food for brain ind muscle ; and the gluten, containing phosphates and nitrates which furnish support for brain, bone, and muscle, is cast away with the bran, and is fed to horses, cittle, and pigs. And thin is the kind ot flour that makes nine-tenths of thn bread in Amer ican cities, besides all that is used in cakes, puddings, and pastiy. A method ot making bread trom whole wheat, without previously grinding it into flour, has been devised by a French man named Sezille. The grain is first soaked iu water for half an hour; then put into a revolving cylinder with a rough inside su i face, nnd shaken up, so as to remove the courier part ot the skin; and then soaked twenty or twen ty four hour hours more in water of the temperature of to degrees Fahrenheit, with which a little yeast and glucose has been mingled. By the-e means the grain acquires a Dusty, doughy consist ence, aud can be mixed up by machine ry and made into bread in tho u-.ua! wuy. The invention is an important one, both from its saving the expense of grinding-, ana irom tne greater economy of keeping and transporting the whole grain instead of flour. Ihe most economical and best bread, especially in cold weather, when a hot hre is constantly kept, is what is some times called gems, or unleavened biscuit. tor this purprse a group ot cast-iron pans or cups 2J by 3 inches each, all made in one taking, is ued. These pans are set on the top of a hot stove and allowed to become almost smoking hot when buttered for use. Then with cold water nnd milk, half-and-half, or with cold water alone, and the colder the better, mix nnd stir quickly with a stiff spoon as much Graham or unbolted wheat-meal as will make a stiff batter or thinnish mush : nnd when the puns are hot, fill them quickly with tho thin dough aud let them stand a minute on the stove before putting into a very hot oven, where they should remain twenty or twenty-five minuter, until done. It the mixture be neither too thin nor too stiff, and the pans and the oven be hot, you will have twelve as light and whole some biscuits as any epicure could with to eat. Tbcy may be eaten smoking warm from the oven, as they contain no poisonous chemical elements like yeast bread, which requires cooling to be rid of. They are good cold, or may be warmed in a steam-kettle. Anybody, however unskilled in cooking, can learn to make these light and nice every time. Nice, fresh wheat-meal, very cold wet ting, quickly done, with a very hot place to bike them, will insure tho best of " luck " always. These, like all other Graham bread, should be fresh every day. jjor growing: children, and those peo ple who woik or think, and especially students and sedentary persons, there is no other bread, and scarcely any other single urticle of food, that equals it. Let the poor who cannot afford to lose 14 per cent, of the grain in the cast-off bran ; let those whose bones and muscles are small, tending to rickets and spinal curvature; let invalids and dyspeptics try it, und tbey never will go back to superfine bread simply because it looks white and nice, and, when diy, is more pleasant to the mouth than the brown. Paper as a Protector rnoii Frost. The Xeu England Farmer endorses the following method of preventing freezing in a cellar, described in the JScientific American . The walls and the ceiling were pasted over with four or five thicknesses of old newspapers, a curtain of the same ma terial being also pasted over the small low windows at the top of the cellar. Tho papers were pasted to the bare joists over head, leaving an air space be- twei n them and the floor. Ho reports that the papers cai ried his roots through last winter, though the cellar was left unbanked, and he is confident they have made his cellar frost-proof. We do not counsel the special use of old newspapers for this purpose. It is just as well or better to use coarse brown paper. Whatever paper is employed, it will be necessary to sweep down the walls thoroughly, and to use a very strong size to hold the paper to the stones. It is not necessary to press the paper down into all the depressions of the wall ; every air space beneath it is an additional defiance against the cold. An old lady, a saloon keeper at Long Branch, became so frightened at the re cent appearance of the aurora borealis, that she rubbed all the names of her debtois off the slate, thinking the day of judgment bud come. The proprietors of a vineyard near Terra Haute, ilia., have made 10,200 gallons of wine this season, and sent four tons ot grapes to the markets ot New York and Philadelphia. New York Market. Fi oi k and Meal. The market for Western and fttHte ft ura was dull, aud iloseri o a loo lower; ile at H a Id 30 for auprliue, 5.7i a fti.10 for slilp- Biug exiruH, aud tu.Ua$4.75 i. r u.idiuui io choice Hkers' and lunii'y ,nnos rouihi in flour was Ktemly at id 10 a tti.M for shippiuKextrus, nd u 75 a tv ii r trade anil f m l)' exll., ltye Uour lu guutl deuiaiH at. $4.60 a (o SO. C'uin meal inure active; sal a Southern aid Bran ywlue at iii a, $4.40. buck heut Uour, J $1.40 100 tba. OkoCKuii a Coffee waa fa rly active, and Arm oa Briizils. Bio, I4H a 181.0. ; Java, 201 2io ; t U 16 a Is So. for Mar.cuuj. Molasses wasm f drdemaud. anu aeaoy; sale New Oi'itaua at 68 a 71tc , ami I'oi t j lit' o at We quote at 65 a 73o , a,.U Pui to Ku o 30 6oo. ltl eclul. aud U'icUai.g d; salt a C r el.ua a 8a7c. Sugar Haw waa higher, aud 'e v lirni but quii t. i'aii t pood refining, 101. a 10tc. ; sales ai 10 a 10 V f r Cuba, 13a 12).o. lor Ht nierara, and Havana at US s 1 So. Metlue 1 higher at 14 a, 14k. m. for tutrda, and US 13 S". for wtlie. PHOV 610N8 Pork W'S qui t aud agidn lower; sal a i f'JO a $J0 25 or new uuinspe -led iues. $125 for clear, aud 12 1 1 a pi line niets. Bret w ut iu ta r drm.ud and a eady ; aalea at I0 it (17 60 for plnin and extia mesa Tiorve heef quiet; milts at (J7a (28 50 lor piiiu mesa aud .u a fell f r Iudia mess, ije f hums dull; tales at (2Ufcu. Cut mea a Suli a of bulk sides a Vk iHc We quote liauis at 12 a 12lic., ard suoutdei a at 80. Buoou qu e out tinu ; sales at 1 1 So. f r cil longclear.a' d 11 e. ft r West, eiu ab lit c ear. Dienaed hogs unchanged at 8S a (lie. Laid was nioie active but .a l ei weak ; tales ai 12al2Se- for city, aid 12l2Sc. fni Weal .in steam. Mutter dull at 25 a Jiso fur Slate and 18 a too for Western. Che-He la a liing ai 12S a lGfcc 'orf.u toi i a, sml.aloSo for dailies. Eg 3J a 3oo for frtab, and 24 a 26u. lui limed. fiUNIHUKS. G'.itlon was qui t at about He. lower; sales at luSc for middling uplands, and 16 So. for low iu dd liig Tallow tret) at S aSc Hteariue weak ; fcili-sat 12S a 13c. Wlit-key ilruior; soles at VI S a 2c. fcpiiita lurneutlne was Hi iu t 47c. Uoaiu quiet at (2,06 a t2 In tr a. raiuetl. 'I ar Large sales u' il miugton at (2.30. Melala without apcciul t-haiiKe. Freights more active aud tinu; to Liverpool by sail, 22.600 bush, wheat at "d. ; 1,200 bales coltuu at 7 16 a hd:tn ulsa ow. 16 000 bush, wheal, bysall, at8d.; 1,600 bis. flour al 2 W.; l laiiduu, 1,001 bbla. nuur at w OBAw.-w.iBt cto pit mill ; (minis' Iras i.4o for I riiinHi.i W f i. iv mr w 111 in rnmru aim wo., v are, anil f 1.40 $i 47 for ml mil anitx-r wlnt r. Oats were higher, but the advauce seemed In i lie -k busi ness; null M 6'c fur hloon lhetrack,H-.2c.firsiat, (7c. fur olack, .ic fur white, and 61 it a ttlc. tor new Western. Barley mult null ajirt nominal. Bye In light demand i Jersey new at $1.02. l oin was i.Igh. er. with a good business at ihe advance; sales at 75 a 78o. fer western while, 76 at S0o. fur new mlied Wea em, 81 a sio. Cor W. alern yellow, 82 84. lor Jersey new yellow, aud 8U assc. lor Southern white. Livt stock Maiikvt. No Texan t were on su e, S' d poorest to best native steers wme ,old at 11a l&Ho. lb. 'Ihe sheen market wni a simile tlrmi r, ami prleesnb i.t ke.fMb better fur selling Interest We note sales it 4H a 6d. MI. fur she panilsltei-p anil Innibs uilxeit, anil n lew C'snnila and tnte Inmlis at 6 h 7to We qiv.te live lios ni 7H a 7Ho. tiress. e.ili its were soiling at ) a DI40. 4? lb. for welgbta offered. A Boon for all Ladies. By nsltiB " Cos mopolitan I'earute," a lovely complexion Is enjoyed without injury. Sold hy all drug gists. Young it T.ndcl, Wholesale Depot, 14 Murray street, N. Y. ADVERTISEMENTS. JOKEK' WaNI S DICTlONA HY. AWlf Fret. AC.K.VTS KD. UKO. MANSON. 37 Turk Row. N. Y. fTHK KINO OP FOX KII.LFHS l.as lind 20 Jl ) ers' prn'-t re poisoning Fuses. A sure I IliMir. Ktisy ami t.roniniile. tiiBtruclloiiS iu Hie art em f r 60 cnt4. Ad 'iee, J. U. UUX1KY, Owcaso. Mich. TIIK NEW YOHK WKGK1.T IMY-BOlilK TIIK UMMPJON OF I II K Itlt'K UK HfBUl! AUAIN8I THK WORLD.-! peryear. Address. "D Y-BvOK," New York lty. F ANCY roenr Blaik Spmia1' tllnh lriHli, ant Cu ban name, Wh le Out m Fowls, Bronze lurkeyn, houeii anu AyiMimrv uncut, err. r ueciin.ve circular h I1UT88 J. D. KICUAKUbON, Buckets- tnwu, Ma Iron nntl Steel for CrhIi ! JACKSON & CHACE. liOtf nnd UOti FRANKLIN ST., NEW-YORK, Off.rnll sizes KNOI.ISH and AMEHTCAX .BAR, Kul), l!Al), HOOP, and mll-.kl'IKO.N, Hol'slt SHOE lKl(N HuliHk SHOKS. III1U.1K NAILS. Sl'HINO STK.KL, UKE Hl'Efcl,. TOE-CALK S 1 KKL, t tc. Onlers torffe or tmalt. primintlv exe cuted at lowest prlcrs. Kend ensti wUboidirs, ex act cbULgo returned If In excess. 206 nnd 208 Frnnklln-st , near Pier 35, i. Hlver. EMPIRE MUTUAL Life Insui ance Company OF NEW YORK. OFFICE, No. 139 HBOADWAY. Chartered under ihe laws of lie stutrof Now York. "Succcsfl Is I lie llent Criterion' 8,000 folklcB I.imiH the tlrnt r Ine ni.titlis, insur in $.1,000,000. Thf 1 reoflt couinv nee nit nt LUsinoMPTorflonoby nny Life iiitiiiritLce Comi any, i-mi WHY NuT I Notice the Liberal Features I Onllii'iiT Whole-Life Poliil absolutely n on-for feitable f om payment of lir-t nnnu 1 pie.i lum. pipecini luuuruiice non jvijctiauie aiur two annual pnvm nt a All policlen incontestable for nminl nnsft, and ab aolutciy incvntentable afti-r t o annual prtiniuum. au r. emu ioubujiou travel nun remaencervuiovea, i no permit rt urt-1. One-third of nmnium loaned to the insured. If C.e- 6li nl, Mini i.o noU rt qui-ed. ao accumulation j uiivreftz on l.nns or iri rrea Pi cm uiur, uml no increase uf annual payintnt on aiiv clan of PoliHcp. Dividends on the vrotiretxlve vlan. and also nnon the guarantee interest plan. Th" im-iiirft-Mii this Coin nan v ia conducted nuon the Mutual i'lan. GUARANTEE INTEREST TLAN. AN ENTIRELY NEW FEATURE Numb or of annual nrcminma limited vnrrlnir from five to twenty tfto, ai'Curtling to ae. Six per cent coinpo nd Intern-1 ffutiranieeri fr ra the com nifucenifut. to theeMof the p; in pir o I on nil the piiynienta, or til the iuiu inn und ahat. have ueen nccuniuinieu. Monetary value of the policy during the paying Jier.tMl averages more than twelve per cent, compound nterest, ami ubi qiituily, during the whoe pe tod of life, th podcy pay an annuity on Ita face eqnnl to about fix pr ctnt Atdtu hthf amount nsured pannes unimpairtd to thorcpieaintutivta of the de ceived. TEMPORARY INSURANCE. tn cane of n n payment of t romiumn on ord'nnry h'Je-l-f pulicVH, secures for each premium paid, an areraae ext usion of the time of insurance nearly equal to that already tlapsed. 8 10 0,000 rtep-alted with the Superintendent of Insurance for the State of New Yolk, a ttpeilal aocuiily for ytli cy h-luerc. vrt v KKS G. HILTON SCIUBXER. President. LEMUEL 11. WATERS, .trtuury. EOhK W. SMITH Vice President. 1II08. K. MAKCY, M. !., M.dii al Kxandner. SI I'NKY W. CU iFCT, Secretary. EVERETT CLAPP, Superint-iident Aff. nciea. FIRST-CXASB AGFINTS wanted in bllparta ef the country. Apply at the Hoiue Ofilce. CABLE SCREW WIRE BOOTS AND SHOES. Bottoms fastened with a screw wire. Superior to sewed or in-Kgeil. Every pair warranted not to rip. FOH HALE BY ALL DE 1LE118. SOMETHING NEW! Read the Folloivlng: What the City Missionary of Boston 8AY3 ABOUT ALLEN'S LUNG BALSAM. THERK CERTAINLY CAN NOT RE FOUND A HiTTiat COUUM Oil LUXU KKilEDY. AB AH KXPKCTOBAST IT HAS NO tQUAL I BOSTON. Mass.. Feb. 18. 1W9. Mf.shiuj P. DAVIS dt SON Uentlemen : The packiiK" of Allen's Lung Ralsum you sent ine touse atnonp the attltcted poor In my city missionary work has proved very a-rei.table au 1 useful. It hus gone InU several futilities, and witli reiuurkuble effect 1b every lnsiauie. One woman has been restored from wbat her phr stelun pronounced eou-uiuptiou after veral utoultis' slckne . with couh, yreat pain in the lungs, aud prostration, so that she is able now to do housewoik and assist in the sunnort of her faiuilv. and with care aud continue.l use of the feuisuw, slle exneets entire i estorutiou. Another person, a youuff woman to whom I rave one botile, haa re-el ed creut benefit, so that her ccMRii, which waa of nioiitha' standing, ia Retting net (it, ami ne uaa purciiaaen ine aecona uoiuu, and hat every indication uf a needy cure. A young inau who waa raining blood, and qnlte WW1M HUH HICK, II hb, uy lilt UtW UI I wo iHJiues, own mttcu iiiiDroveu.aiKi ia auie tuuo a ill tie at hi work A young man to wh"iu I iwonmiemled a trial of It, who haa hud a had cough, and much pain In hla limga for montha past, and unable to get rttat or Blet'p, hua commenced taking It, and la now uaing the fourth bottle with great bent tit. He said tn nie on a r cent vinit, he would not do without it He la Imping (ami tvanoiiably it aeema to ine) to be able to reaunuf) ma worn again. rv r'Hpe ttullv and gratefully yonrs, CIIAHLKS A. UOUXDY.Clty Miaaionarr. J. N. HAllIUS A CO., Sole Proprietors. Clncln. nauf uiuu. Thr First Emtion of Onr HrxnKim and Pirrr ThuU'sanii cii'tee of Vli k'a llluatruted Cma. lacue vf herds and tloial liuitle. la p tbllsned au.! readv to send out UO nttaea. and an Knurav. Ing of alino-t every de itrsliie Flower and Veveta- uiv. i. is rieaau ly pnuieu uu uueuutea psper I lustratid Willi 1'i ree Hundred flue Wood Eugiav' lug" auu i wu uiiiiiiu COLOUED PLATES. The most '"eautlful and the m'at lnntrnrtlve Floral OudepublUhett AliEKIitM TUITION pu" untied, lu all other reepeeisslinthir to the fc.i irli.ii . bent free to all my cual .lut rs of 1870, as rsplillv aJ possUle w thout sppl cat on. f e :t to all othes who onler th ,m for ' inm ior 'lea ( . uia. wn en ia u,.t i,i, iud vvw auui,, JAMES VICE, Rochester, N,T. AGENTS WANTED p nTI'O FOR T E HISTORY OF UUJL O CHURCHBr Fr.ui siluu to the pieaentday. Utnt uiiaiiieu For men aud ladies eveiy wueie o 5 1, fur eucuUr. 2 1 EuLE .1 eX M lCi t jy Beua iliia, Pa. THE NOVELTY JOB TRlflTING PBESS ta th Best Press ever mde tor me !" Kins woo wish U) da Oielr General Job Printer, or for a VlUa w paper, on-1 Is lncomit lira .iu iTik Hi't. 1 'resell I that could be wade to at-7 hof orglrL Pr ce of Presses, S1JJ. ow' Bend for C.itaUwue Ith testimonials and speci men, of 9:?i'..'SJT KJ "US- f-.B'.:ViS... Tn Kin c. i ui'iw. TON 16Coilee Pla e, r.e Yo.k i KELLY. HOW KLL'i T LIII'WIOV 9 7 Market-ft, Pli 1 idelphtii, ra , C KEUOUu! West Van Boxen Bt . Chicago. 111. AT. rECK. Dsnimry, ft., proves . Vn,,.;rii,is -mssBiKik flat " .cb Toter can . . 1.1 . v...1 hnve (lOO.OttO if (rrcenu-.cl. a "ns mi as (toiii. aw paid any one prevlna-1 he statement untrue. Trice 2 ; puuiphUts 26 tents. free" to book agents. w wilt end a handsome Prospectne of onr JVne clilirire " Address NATIONAL PUBLIHHINO roPidtadelph P. Chicago, m., Cincinnati, .ti.....,.w i-.iu u;hj tit nnv hook Aa-ent, irte oi UIUO, Or Dl. IvOUJB, iUU. .. MAKE MONEY. WANTEDln every tow n and county, a r. iiniiiu mm i " man to act as iiocai ak'-"' vv-v- - i,,, EK's Uieat ItellKloes Weekly. fclKht """J "u" Hakiiikt hhF.niKH StoweV new Story, sn t a su, I erl. i Steel Km ravlug OIVKN A WAT. Man, a w tnaklug $! to $50 per day in cotrh. sample eopie FREK. Addies . v.,rk . . . i.iiivx vt'AHIi HKECI1- J. B. rUKU A t:u., av rr " " I vj I I I , ' WANTED. An Aeent In every connty in the rultid t-tates to lotrodti. e an aitjcle that sent io ev. ry linnse. 15 000 pi r year can oe rnwte, "J "; eneigticmen. A tiO WaU Ii (riven, free, to e .eiy agent. Agents have solecoutrol ot their tei ritory. Send for cncn'nr. Ait. ress, L. C. KKNNEDY & CO., Pittsburgh, Pa. tJOMKTHKttl NEW for cnning anu mm( O II air. Sain ides free. Adilress, BUKlUiN S 111., lliraiu, To 11 io Siiirering- ! A reelne for ronsnmntlon. Bronchitis, Hore Throiit. AHlhiiin, fcrol'uln. Coughs, nntl Unllls. lnr titt. HUB recipe i uiow.cimi "... w reliliiia In Brnill as a luUslouury. It ciireil pie of Consumption when all other means had falltd. inereiore i iei-i it my iiiiit in semi it, new wi m.i to s i who at e aufforiug from Throat aud Luug dis orders. Address, HKV. WIU;1A 11. nuK'iu.i, 33 Bleecker-St , New York City. Woman's Rights Washer. THK BEST NOW OUT FAR SUPERIOR TC Tllifi VLiV APS U tt IU 1-1 AvJ.tJ21.lJ MACHINK8. Bample sent to any address on reeelpt of 12. LIVE AOENT8 WANTED the highest com missions allowed. Address WOMAN'S RIGHTS WASHER CO., Wilmington, Del. C. M JONES, Manager. WE WILL PAY AGENTS A HILARY 1 $.tn oer wenK and exnenscs. or allow a large commission, to sell our new wonderful inventions Address M. WAU.NKll s CO., tuarsholl. Allen. HOW TO CET PATENTS 18 FULLY EXPLAINED In a Pnmphlet of 108 pu ea Just Issued by MUNN CO., 37 Park Bow, N.Y BENT FREE. MUNN A CO., Editors fcfrnMtemfrf. can, the hest Mechanical Puper In the world. 2R vears exnerience). have tnkon PATENTS. more patents and examined more In- Trnuon. iiitin any oilier sgeni-y, ovuu skotch and description for opinion. NO OMARHIt. THE VELOCIPEDE, a lnrge 24 eoltin.u niimtlilt lotirnul. s-nts nion hsnu trial for 10 cents. Ad dress the VKI.OCIi KUE Pearts Eddy. Pa. DON'T WASTE TIME A. LABOR by nalog up nn old Axe Hend 1.50 to LIP PINCH! T ilt HAKKWKLL. lltabnigh. Pa., and they will send a tip-top Axe, exprtawge paid. Holt a dnt' Inst In eriiidirg will Inns he saved i'O Week ealiiry I Youii,, men wanted at I with stump) R. II. iocr.i anu iraveuing salesmen. Addreat Walker, S4 Park Row, X. Y. VUK.NT WANTE-(K25 A MONTH) bj tba AMERICAN KNITTING MAC1IINK CO.. BOSTON, MA.SS. or ST. LOUIS. MO. T ANTED AUEN'i S, (tot per day) to sell tin ceieoruieu uunn BuuriLi: SEWino MACHINE. Hub the uniter .(, makes tin "lockMUh" (allkesn both sides), and lsu(ti Itcttitied. The hest aud cheapest family Hew Ing Maehluein the murket. AddreBS JOHN HON. CLARK & CO., Boston, Mass., Pitts burgh, Pa., Chicago, 111., or HL Louis, Mo. W. R. W. Money for all. Address C. M JON KM. Wilimunlim. Del. HAM'S IlEPIliATOHY POWDKIt.- Removi s siinei-tluo.isliali lu nve minute, with. out Injury to t he skin. Hetit hy mull fur 1.25. UPHAM'S ASTHMA CURE Relieves most violent naroxvsms in Ave minuter. aud effects a simedy cure. Price by luaiL THE JAPANESE HAIR STAIN Col rs the whiskers and hair a beautiful black oi bkown. It couslsts of only one preparation. 7b ceuts by mall. Address is. C. UP11AM, No. 72 J nyne street, Phlludelphia, Pa. Cli culars sent tree. 8uld by all t-ruggists. CETTINC UP CLUBS. CONSUMERS. GREAT SAVING TO Parties ennulre how to set on clubs. Onr anawei ta, aend for Price List, and a Clui form will aouotn puny it wnu iuii mreotioiiB, niRKlnK a large aavlu to ounauuiers and remunerative to Club organizera. The Great American Tea Co. 31 As 3:i VE8EY STREET, New York. P. O. Bos a4:i. Lands in South-West Missouri. THK ATLANTIC A PACIFIC RAILROAD (Embracing late South Pacific) have to sale 1,1)00,000 acres, ui uesi quality, long creuii, ciienp. For par ticulnrs, 1b pamphlets apply to AMOS TUCK, Land (iiiiiiiiiMaiiiuer. wo. Offll atnut sirei-t. HU ijo I.. Mo PEUPKTL'Al, AX1.K foui tiroes .ouger than HKHAhR Will lnD, foui time, .ouger than any uxlmr. I rv it Put up by NATIO 'AL MANUFACTURING CO., 172 HAMILTON OPERA HOUSE GuarantuetJ by the Best Men In Ohio- APPRAISED BY COUNTY FOLLOWS 1 OFFICERS AS THE OPERA HOUSE, TIMBERMAN FARM, . HAUE11AN FARM, A FINK RESIDENCE, f 100,000 sa.wio 13,800 . 8,000 TO BE DRAWN AT HAMILTON OHIO. December 3 1 st, 1870. FOR TICKETS (toooeacb) AND INFORMATION ADDRESS OPERA HOUSE COMMISSIONERS, Hamilton, Ohio. W wspeetfnlly refer to the following prominent me who have inveatigated Ibis enterprise i Ron. L. d. Cumpbell, Member of Congress. t'- Hughes, Pres. 1st Nat. Rank, Hamilton, Ohio, ic. Sands, " M " " i. Joan M. Long, of Long, Black Allatatter. E. Oweus. of Owens, Lane, Dyer 4 Co. P u Trailer and Bank Director. i " Ja. Boatty, of Beatty, Trowbriitge A Co., Cin. Louis Sohngen, Malater and ttrain Dealer. J. W. Benuluguofeu, of Shuler A BenningUofen. Jacob Shaffer, of Shaffer, Sloan A Co., Cin. Hon. Alex. F. Hume, late Jndge Conuuou Pleas. Hon. Thomas Mil iken. Attorney at Law. Dau'l llelwlg, Cash. 1st Nat. Bank, Middletowa. J. W. CaiT, Miller ami Bank Director. John W. Holm, Tanner aud Bank Director. at f M Eight O'Clock I" A 07.EAT MEDICAL DISCOVERY Sr. WALKEH'8 OAUVOBBXA. VINE Q-AR BITTERS g Hundreds of Thouiandi ?f . k " Bear teMlmpny to their Woador. i ar p ful CuiaUT.ateata. S4 litiWHAT ARE THEVls! KS 3 8f THEY ARE NOT A YTLK -FANCY DRINK, If Made of Poor Rnm, Whiskey, Proof Spirits anil Merusc Liquor dJctored, spiced andnirer I enedto pl?acthc tnsto, called "Tonics,"" Appeal ers," "r.Mtorcrs,"ftc.. that lead the tlprlor on to drunhennets and rnln, but ar. a trne Meillclne, tr.n '.e from tho Native Roots and flcro. or California, frrp from nil Alenlinllo Htiiniilnntx. Tlicynrc t:.s JIt EAT ni.oni) Pi niFIEtt nml A LIFT. GIVINO rRIXCin.E a perfect RrnoTMor.Tid. Invlgorator of tho Fytrni,rorrTlnir on; nil polsf -i i . matter and restoring the blood to a health- condition. Ko person cr.n ta!;e lhce Hitters sceorilluR o direc tion and rentctn long nnwell. S100 will bo given foe an Incnrablc case.provlded the bone, are not itrftroycd by mineral poison ot other means, and toe vital orKsns wasted beyond t, . polntof repair. For Infltiminnlnry nnit Chronic niienmn. tlsm nntl (ioiit, llysprpsln, nr Indigestion, Hiliolis. tteiiillteut nml I iiternilllent Fevei-s Dlsenses of tbc ICInoil, Liver, Kidney nnd lllaitilcr, these Hitters nave been most ncccf. ful. Such Discnsos are canscd by Vltlnud III ooil .which Is generally prodncedby derangement of the Digestive Organs. DYSPEPSIA OH INDIGESTION', Dead, ache, Pain In thcShonldcrs.ConsliB.Tightnt'usor the Chest, Dlizlness, Four Eructations of the f-torench, Bad taste In the Month, Bilious Attacks, Palpitation of the Ilcart, Inflammation ot the Lunpa.raln In tho regions of tho Kidneys, and a Imndrcd other pulnful symptoms, are the offsprings of Dyspeptlo. They Invigorate the stomach and stimulate the tor. pld llTer and bowels, which render them ofnneqnalled efficacy tn cleansing the blood of all imparities, ini Imparting new life and vhror to the whole tyrtcm. FOR Sit IX DISEASES, r.ruptlons.Tcttor, Salt Rhncm, Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, noils, Cor. bnnclcs, Ring-Worms, Scald llcad.Soro. Eyes, rryalp. elas. Itch, ScnrfS, Dlscolorstlons of the Sliln, II inner, and Diseases of tho Skin, of whatever name er nature, are literally dun; up and carried out of tho yptei:i ins short tlino by the nso of thnfc Bitters. One boitleln such cases will convince the most Incredulous cf tl.eli curative effect. Cleanse tho Vltititcd Blind v.-her.ever you Tim! it tmpurltlcsburBtingthrouhtiioskln InPiiur.lci.Hrnp tlon. or seres j clennscltwhen yon lind It i.'istr-.ic'.i .l and sluggish In tho veins ; cleanse it when It Is foul, and your feelings will tell you when. Keeptli? Mood pure and the health of the system will follow. PIX, TAPE and other WO 11 :I S, lurking !n t h ystemof so many thouMnds.arccfTcctuallydeHtroy ed and removed. For full directions, read carefully the circular around each botl.e, printed In four lan guagesEnglish, German, French and Spanish. J. WALKER, Proprietor. R. H. MCDONALD & CO. Druggists and Oen. Agents, Baa Francltoo, OaL and 32 and 34 Commerce Street, New York. TW SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS. r IE! ,Um CENT. I1NTKRKST, FUEK OP O OOVICRNMiCNT TAJt. MARKET SAVINGS BANK. ta NABBATJ-BT., NKW-TOBK Open dally from 10 a. M. to I p. K., and on M ON DAYS and THURSDAYS from ( to 7 r. at. laterest commence, on th Aral day of o.ek month, WM. VAN NAVX, President HENRY R. CONKLIN. Secretarr. A. OKEAT OITEHI HORACE WATERS, tfe. 481 BROADWAY, Hit YORK, Will dispose of Owe M irDRKD pianos, Mblodeomr, tnd OiioaNS, of six dt st-elsss makers, IncluiMug Chlcketing A Sons, oitxtremely Imt price for cash, lurlnv tills ntoutA, otwif takeu-am fS to 1 26 month, T until pld. 'y SE1VT FREE ! Twelve Reasons Why FOK UOItSKK, Will crRK RTNGBONF., SWEF.NT STIFF JOINTS, BPItAIKS, BKUIKEB. ANB LAMKNKSS OK ALL KlN'bs. Address D. G. CAREY CO., lau Iteade-at., Mew York. GET THE BESTI CAREY'S VEGETABLE HORSE 4 CATTLE POWDERS. ThamA Pnwifnr An the result of fifteen Tear.1 study and observation by oue of the moat em.neut oheerved how healthy, sleek, ai tlvr und fat borne, and cattle would becoiae when allowed to run in ih. n..tnM aii.l liv i-Iiihm AlkHi-VHtiitii kiieeite-fleil In fc'ut-tllffl M Hi ll numiruioii AUICIII .IIU IIIWII1ICU. XIV nulling out the vegetables which produmd thl. beuetii lal result. Tlies veteiHlile- aie gathered at the proper time, powdered and put up lu yellow wrappers, tacn package coutaiuiug nuu a pouuu or more. The difficulty which attend, the use of mny oft the "Sweet-scented Powders" of theilay, Is that, the perfumer? Usui almost Invariably counteracts. tne real meiuciue coniKiueu iu mem we una uu pe' fumery of any kind, pretcrnug the use oi i us MKD1C1XKS lor iiiseai-eii animals, our rnwoen cure Luutf Fever, lienvi a. Colds, Founders, Distent nnajis, Iaiks i.f Appetite, Loss ot Vital Energy, etc. nice per paesiige, m cents nuu uy mi m uss. U. u. CAKiUir A UU., Hole rropneun . 165 Beaile-at., New . ork. To Dyi any Color In a common Tin Wash-Boiler, USE HOWE'S Auaiine Couipound CONCENTRATED FAMILY DYE COLORS. ii. i ,Mu-uveari- the result of nine Tears' experi ence In the business, and tar excel all other, now manufactured. repared ready to dissolve lu wa'er, eoiilalning -out (to to six times mors than the llouid tor tba same price, any color, except macs, ana iiraus. we send to any person tn the Vnllort State, free oi postage, on receipt of tweiitv-ftve cents, provided they aie not tor sale by Ike dealers. Blacks aad drabs are sent tor tony ceuts each. Send with the order a .mall piece of the material you wlab Io color; ala postage stamp for pamphlet containing pai-ticuiara. Colors for sale by Druggists, (Hotels, and Deal er. MAN Lit Y HOWE. Proprietor, (aud aucceasur to Howe A Stevens) 41 i, 37, and 7. Broadway Boston Mas. COREY IMTKNT DITII.LPD NKATM KuT HAKXKHS Oil II has lut) per cent. more body thaa any other. Water hot or oukl will ant drive it out. I sed by all the principal fciprea Companies). Send for clre u lar. SAIIuNALMAN t'FAOlL' KINU tO., 1.1 Washington st eel, Kw York. pie rtiJ r la if? n auui ouvh "Mitlt lu.