DI Rittsintrgt Gayttt ...... ocTossi H. 111117. Tux World lays the Reconstruction laws must now faIl; that the Southern people will be encouraged by the Ista elections to Wet a further reaction, and by stubbont inaction they will defeat the Congreutonetplan, and adds : "The'Republicans have, in a thousand . and a thousand ways, so committed themselves. to. their present' ►theme of veconstroatiOn, that they cannot retreat from it without a tot .1 rout; but they are exposed to still greater disaiters If they try to maiiitalnakeir ground." What greater 'disaster this "a total rent" . can siparty be exposed tot The ' World Is right In saying that a retreat from their plan will bring a total rout but it predicted greater disasters In '62 If hir. Lincoln persisted In the Emma: paten scheme. He persisted, and the greater. dimstars were reserved for its opponents. £ll that the baton party has to do is to "go forward," - as the children of Israel were commanded to do when the unbroken Dui Bea lay before them, mountains ottalther hand, and the hosts of Biaraoh in the rear. Let them go forward. as they did in '62, and the "treater disasters" of '6B will over , votehn their opponnats as they did in '62. ERSTRAUE OF FRANCE. IThe foreltntradeof FlllllO5 U uwen II SI great as it was in 11328. In the t ten months of 1866 she Imported g • • de to the induct' 2,486,000,000 francs, and exported goods to the value 0(2,829,- 000,000 franca Balance In her favor $86,000,000. Now let as see in what her priempalimports consisted. In the first ten months of last. year Prince imported 90,500,000kilogrammett of cotton; sgain►t 49,000,G/oin the same months of 1865. From England alone she imported cotton to the value of 187,- 59000 francs—en increase of 48,000,000 • francs from the Previous gear—end wool to the value of more than 75,000,000 . francs-41 increase of 14,000,000. francs from the previous year. She also im ported from Belgiuritwool to the value 6[16,1500,000 hums, increase (14,000,000 francs; team Germany, wool to the val. ire of 16,000,000 franc; from Italy, silk ' to the value of 79;500,000 francs, an in-. cruse of 6,000,000 hums. - The production of coal his risen from 79,000,000 metrical quintals. in 1857 to 120,000,000 metrical quintals lut year.. In 1865; 78,243,927 metrical quintals were imported—an increase of 5.918,420 from 1864. nese, it will be observed, are all raw materials, out of which her- Tilt produc tion of manufactured articles are pro• duced," 'of 'which, after supplying the home tisiinand, she exported in 1864 to _. the valin of 1,924,200,000 francs, or atom 8584,000,000, an iscrease over the tin. ports of 1859 of 677,800,000 francs. - 'll3lOO exports no raw materlais ; we export little else ; and hence it is hat the precious =smilers abundant and Is• -b— creasing there, while we an unable to retain them, although we have the most c.!-produCtive mines in the world _ _ . BOOK NOTICE& ikiivii:or Tax Covirrmmenr or mu on- Tao swum. Or Thom tt, farm - . BoNtont Little, Wow ark s Cos A CA. Fir by Davis . Cl. John Randolph once said that for nation in he infancy to adopt a written Constitation of Gouniment, expecting to be boundiby it, vas ps unreuonable ss for Daniel Lambert in his babyhood, to ba - measnisOi for the clothes' he wu to wear to middle life. Certainly there are infelicities in our Constitraion, but be tween the Cionrta and the innate sorer eigaty of the people, the Instrument has from time to time been adjusted c to the fresh tecusides; aad doubtless this will °Diatomite be the ease as long u a writ tea Constitution shall endure. Xiny IA the firm' of expression toed W.l Constitution are indefinite even to mumss and obscurity. Not a few of them eon be. detail: Wed with tolerable precierin wily by interpretations from analogies or precedents. Bence, the ne cessity, now that the Coistitiation,.: by . the ciente of events„ bur been brought specially under coaalderation and re 'law; fora minuet, adapted as well to populer um is for the convenience f the legal Profeeelos, in Which the gen• oral scope of the Constitution and the distribution of potrers made therein be tween the co.ordinate departments or 'the government, are pet forth In the ligtt 101 only of our 011 A legislative and ju. &dal expositions, Ind uconiing to the recognized principles of reopinsible ad• sednitgation in all countries. .11r. - Firrar ham, to a large degree, sup plied this want In his adintrable.trestise. 'Be bronzht to tha task a fullness of the knowledge particularly Deeded, en ex. miner of dmaintkmdon, and a calm, jultchtliasperWasint, all conspiring to lead hint to 'wand autcluinons and to the proseniation of them is a manner to matt= respect and corbel conviction. .oxuldeting that the adjustment of the . 08POW4lidan to the amazing derelop mai' Of JIM country has not been fin. idled, mad is not hkaly to be for sometime to crielse,rthis Totems is pecullarly timely and adaptable. Mugu ea PeTLoah Imams. By sots dam Wood. lertotow. /WOW ideas- Leo. catty cow hundred zed toente.tire Iliestralwas. New Tort: Kuper #.l: On% r 12011111111116 Per see bY Lte.• 111nerr, rth smut. TM/dough. Ike Mum+ mamba gymnastics, rowiPA, skating, fonds& cricket, mires thudese ceding,ir wheitairg, sparring, bus bill,ptifether with rules for train. tag and lattflart seigtimilone. Physical ourelsmant so Largely practised noes days. Gate work of this kind will be highly irked, for the 'skiable informs Muni; contains on such topics. It Is tudruntfiy practical throughout, and every part Is presented with such clear- Zen, Idulplbdty and plainness, that any • novice may easily comprehend the rules laid down to govern them. And while it Is so Well adapted for beginner,, It nevertheless contains much instruction foe the most szpert in any or all of the cdarrdedd treated. The author his het] years o r excertenee. and is thereby ena. hiatus:Out the topics Ina practical fovea to his readers. T6B illustrations makit the book still mom interesting and . Sea Coulees Ihsetrisse. A level. BY Mrs. Attain. Xe• Tore, Harper A Dom Ylnabereht Weary Abner. so Lamer of Select hotels are so mach above the Frisby light literature teeming from tha preselhat the aeries may appropriately be mated a "Library of Solon Bewail." The Curate's Gls . option 1 N 6.299 of the series, and, from the Wang reputation of the author, the work will be popilarianing a large clue of readers: The type and paper are on nattily Ike fort OW . class of publics '. time _m nest. at ucous 'OW TocAri he T Touts:orler it lieg A. -T .leasli..latiar Writer." ell, Jew Turlt Di e s C itumersin. Pittsburgh r w. A. eniumumer. ..'. - - Thle little work of 174 pages le a col lection of original; moral tad hamorous dialagrusS,,idapud to the use of school and-church elbibitione, fatally gather iegti,aad jusalle celebrations on all cc. culotte Groat witiety is Mutated, and eatable, too, for- well 'disused young people, as well as the Utile folks. It Is rapreasated,wo bang Moral and unex ceptional ter youths. , Tos.Aatellerur Lew flArrunr. eew Ootober. 1887. lersingave. nrcertit=iit.ri • a 00, Wood street. vitzsarge. This Wither contains grates of Lyon thefollowitg subjects:: Liability en Patter;'Ballroad,'Legialistion; Chief ♦ Wok About Liwyers; Batted States Circuit Gull; Digest of the Forglish Itiparte for Ray, June sod /My, lea; Selected Digest of State .Bolunts; Book Notices; List of new Lsw Banks,: end Smommy of ent& ThistioOtitfOo! ti icallFdt its spin to , • ovitiol dap 4cint /AM but die . mum Ines tefor!fis; ?oltal.agpsel of Fem . Ica iatt, iiiirMdlolakiprosiloss; Sun— mete with , , notee. ghee historical and biographical notices; articles from goglishand Conti- Dental pnblications,&c. The articles of this number are of decided 'merit, not only to 'those in tho profession of law, but to the general readers. /Wien? Golsen,. ti novel. By Brulont_, nether of nLady Andlei r a. ant.° °Masons or tionrsly , s I:SsuOtter,“ °Decry Dunttr.” etc. Ne.r.t.ork: Mak in Ftlecerel.l. Far sate by W...A.J.llJett , lacer, FILL street, eitiaburah..„l • This author is so well•knownlto novel readers, by the publication of tb:o works l•tismed above, that it is'-only nem ' we ICo announce "Rupert Godwin," the latest publication of the writer. It is a I stout pamphlet of fill two 'hundred pages, and will doubtless find it Jorge . sale. • • Te• Lore Dar/ or Barran. By lalworr. Yelmaislpt2!.a.L k. D. ...1 , 1 4, , mizt . t.1 I Co. Pltubmjb:-Dash. Curie This is anothi r installment of t o ex cellent "Globe Edition," of the full works of the great novelist. AGRICULTURAL•! reenimees. The great trouble of farmers is the de terioration of land under tillage, and the cost Of manure to supply the properties abstracted by growing - crops. By the order of nature the tree returns go the earth all that it has taken from It, by giving back each year its crop of leaves and fruit, and finally its woody fibre. This year's grass is food for that of next. Every animal returns, in droppings and its carcass, nil that it takes from the greitind, and, in savage life, tide% true of man. Civilization, by • depositing the waste of families in deep *stilts, and draining it off into rtvers, poisons the wells and streams, kills the fish, creates pestilential discuses and robs the ;land. The river Thames became so foul from the drainage of London that the new Parliament House and • other :costly buildings on its banks were uninhabita ble. Tho sewers are now emptied into teaks forty miles - from the bier; of the 'city, there deodorized by ei chemical I compound, which precipitates all solid matter to the bottom and leave& clear water on the surface. This is drawn off and the sediment carted out and sold for manure. By this devige the city waste I la returned to the earth, and instead of Impor.ing fertilizers, from the Guano Isles and battlefields of the continent, the English farmer, near London, gets his substitute for guano and bone dust, in a form as inoffensive as either, from the city sewer tanks. The process Is,' perhaps, the most expensive which could be adopted, but, even then, It is a vast economy compared, to the old sys tem of, waste. A new plan of "earth' closets," as a substitute for "water closets," has been adopted in some parts or England. The Baron Rothschild Las 'them introduced on his estate at Halton. These consist of water tight, shallow boxes, on low wheels, under the seat. About one pound and a half of dry earth Is thrown into the box, daily, for every member of the family, mita to cover and absorb the waste. The . iox lit drawn out and Its contents thrown is a convenient place to dry, when the i same earth Ica sometimes used several times an an at,- ' sorbent or deodorizer, and becomes equal in:value to guano._ Thoie who oblect to a second nee have it removed at once to the compost heap, and an "earth closet" is found so free from offensive odors that it may be kept in the henna without any unpleasantness. This Secure' the occu pants from that frultfdl vane of dis ease, the exhalations of multi and water closets, and cultures' return to the earth of the waste which is its natural corn- 1 pensation for the strength expanded in maturing crops. . • In'cities a sysiem of cartage and rail way tracks can bring In the clay and take out the waste, much as the kitchen slops of large cities are now removed. In a coal region the ashes, made in a dwell- sag, would often be sufficient as an als• sorbent, and there would * be no addi tional cost in removal. Furetsce cinders, snd coke dust, in addition to being val uable absorbents and deoderizers, ate the •best • puivertzers for clay soils that hers imolai:tisk:peered. , No ehovelful of coal ashes or cinders should be wasted. In addition to their pulverizing and fertilizing qualities they are sure to enrich the land by their color. This absorbs the sun's rays and thus warms and feeds the growing plant. The blackness of toil is so assurance of Its fertility, not only from indicating chemical properties, but from the color itself. White rejects the light and warmth, and reflects It back into the atmosphere. Black drinks the ressarst they become warmth sea nourishment. For this reason soot is amore powerful felling/sr gulp guano. , _ Tar ..rostsricarettiturill -Says that a rail fence monad a field of siz acres will occupy st little over three quarters :of en acre, and be a eursery for weeds. It .recommenda as milking stool s piece of plank two feet long, four inches high at ono end and air at the other, and a seat on the high end. :Pet the low end under the cow, sit on the seat, place the feet and bucket, on the platform before you and milk fast. To suns Willey press and strain the pike out of your 'grapes by any process most convenient. If you wish the color and aroma of the strums, let the maim fo ment before strainiog. Fill your keg or I demijohn, cork it, putting one end of an India Rubber tube into the cork, and turning the other end into a cop or water, so that the gas can escape end no air enter.. When fermentation ceases close the vessel until the wine is clear, then rack it off, carefully, unto a clean vessel, replace the tube until the second fermentation cease*, close, end let it stand until spring, when it rosy be bob. tied. if the grapes are oufeciently rich In sugar it will be wine, If not, it will be vinegar. Too much sugar In the gp.pe will nuke }t sweet wine; the 'Aprietafts., rarist, from. hich we gather our state. meat does not suggest the eddition or sugar when It is deficient; but if the 'grapes ere ."sour_grapes," as ore our's, being finite out of:tit:soh, we would re, commends pound of .sugar to a' galling of juice. Ix sowing grass or clover Kids put on plenty of seed; and be careful to hava 'it regularly distributed. Occupy.rat the space with Eau, and do not condemn a sparse Potmlation of cultleatedinsdes to straggle with' (ha aboriginal weeds. First ow ;oat -geld, walling hack and forth in opposite directions, than crou and smelt prolmeise. This.distributes more evenly than putting on all the seed by one sowing, and tends to make two blades grow where only one grew before. Boos, pub and turkeys, while fat. I toning, should have .st plentiful supply of charcoal and rotten wood, not mixed In their food, so es to compel ihesto eat it, but left where they can take ell they want, and as often as they went it. Bop provided with charcoal, salt, rotten wood, pure water and 'a clean bed, do not have tussle, defeated liver or tri• NOIR pit acid fruits into tin cane. They always become more or leas potion. one by decomposing the tin ♦ new tin can is More objectionable than an old one, as it is the tin, not the iron, which combines with the acid of the treat to make poisonous compounds. The iron of a can from which the tin lute been eaten by fruit formerly kept in it, will discolor, bit not potscni fruit. Don Tax.—Thers are 100,000 dogs taxed in Great Britain at twelve shil -1 Hags each, making a revenue of neer . $300,000.' There are 700,000 dogs in this'conutry, and a similar tax ($0.00) each would yield 43,100,003 revenue, reheye come overtaxed hands of indus try, mate wool and mutton cheaper, and increase the profits of woolgrowers. To doraurr rocs gnawing clothes, put old newspapers in with them. Mica have a literary tam, a tooth for printer's Ink, and will MU dhaarb your cott Lt you famish tiem the papers; • . . =MI —The Democt - all , State_Cptttrlti Corn mittce, beture Occtioc, cents circular to County Co6.mittct., rvhhth tlee. iS copy. "In very C. 137: l'..Ftlitl6 1 would wit ge 4 t. r' , 4t.ract with rirt,n MIL Thua In pul d I Dr./octane 1586. 120 Demo- matte votee; flow Int every Democratic vote over 110 we will pay you n fixed sum the day atter the election. This is simply en Meeunive to bring mea out, for the vote .3[lBo shows they are there. "Be mry e.arelui of Allis paper. Keep It entirely private. if you have any doubt of the men you umploy, tsll others of your friends that you have placed money in their hands. "Wm. A. WALLACE, Chairman." —lowa la one of the Republican States which never falters. The "Great States" may stand or full; but lowa . Is great in standing by her principles let who will desert. Minnesota will doubtless stand by and with her. I=3 Gatignani says'. "From a letter we havis lust received from Homburg we learn that the same Maltese millionaire who in 1104 broke the bank at Baden has renewed his exploits this year. A few days ago he did the same in that town three times ruining. The Prince of Wales happened to be there at the time, attuning himself with -playing a few Napoleons from time to time; the Dt to of Hamilton and Muatapha Yachts were also among the visitors. He then alerted for Berlin, taking Homburg on his wart and at this latter place won three linn • deed thousand traucs, bat did not break the bank, because the director kept seed. log banknotes as long &tithe play lasted. The coolness with which the Maltese played struck every one with astonishment, so much so that the direc tor of the Homburg bank called upon him the day after and — told him he had never 'seen a gentleman play with the tame impissive demeanor, since he was not more moved than the bank Itself. But what is narrated as most singular is the circumstance that the Maltese keeps the money he wins, and does not, like almost all others, Wit one day to lose doable the, next. It also appear that he spends his 'winnings moat freely, giv ing largo sums in chanty and presents, and that he has thus become well known among the personages who frequent these bathing places. In 1800, •it ap pears, he dui not pay any That to Ger many." !Moult up tio %Woos. V gee. few dare since a lady and her ater, and a grown•un son of the latter, took the cars at Baton for the east, the sisters occupying a seat together, and the young man the one behind with another per son. Upon entering the Salem tunnel the aunt, to bare a little fun, rose up carefully, reached over to the seat the young man had been:occupying, seised some one by the collar, shook him soundly, and then resumed her seat. The enter, surprised at her vigorous movements, asked whet she bad been doing, and was informed by thetother that she had been attempting to frighten her nephew. liar feelings can be imag. fined when the other made her acqdninted with the fact that the young non left the train at Salem, and that she bad been"shaking up the wrong passenger." When the train emerged front the tun nel, the man who bed bean mistaken for the eon was observed adjusting his neck tie and collar, and observing that he did not know what the matter was with the ladies in front of him, but ono Of them had just given hire a Severe shaking, torn off •111.3 necktie, scratching his face, and disarranging his hair, and he was at , a lois to give any other account of the sadden 'attack that had been mule upon JOSEPTI IFILEZTIECti, Druggist, Corset As,tut ...I tee l'lstosatt, Aso an osnd s vsrf large .tuck a' taut! ♦nte!.s. frtmes sad fop? as:. of sit lots.. sott 11111, Pests a. Dfs Otcls of a:1 d.siftztlftas. at .en le. csives. Vet, •hpegt"r 90.16 acb stmeveed pecez. rs•atc /nue Liet and l'osAr• • %CLL., Gnal "Trln4e• um,l4ll:•sit gne•Lva:.tT..l , old p.lcus.• I.!nu:,i - • for las.acln.lpeor.nt. that caws