Hcnry Ward Beecher on Chicago. Mr. Beecher has been to Chicago, and is as tonished at her size and heauty of her arohitec .ture. But he seems to be most struck with the mode practiced of raising the streets and houses above their former level. He says r “The city of Chicago stood upon ground which was both flat and low, and several grades have been adopted to remedy the evil. But the latest and supposed final grade is now estab lished, and the whole city is to be raised, from five to eight feetl First the streets are raised >nd then the houses are pulled up to level af rterwards. And no tongue can describe the ' state of a city where is going on at once the "building of sewers, the raising of grades, and the screwing up of all the houses, intermixed with an enormous business, which butts and pushes and dodges through all manner of ob stacles in the most surprising manner! But it is the sidewalk that gives you the most original views of possibilities. They are made of brick, or stone, or plank, and the grade of the side walk varies we should think, in some ten or fifteen different degrees. First is one at the old level, five or six feet below the grade of the street, and you walk down there inside of a curb or coffer-dam, with your head on a level with the horses’ feet in the street. But right in the middle of a block shall be one store built to the new grade, and the sidewalk looms above -your head some five or six feet, to which you rise by steps six or eight, and proceed the width 9f the sipgle store. But beyond that you go down two steps, next up three, 1 down six, up two, then up two more, then down eight, then up an inclined plane then mount into an inclosed board, walk suspended over an awful chasm where men are screwing up an enormous build- ja g. And if there is a possible modification of six feet, through the instrumentality of stairs, steps, inclined planes, or perpendiculars; if there is a possible catalogue of stretches, jumps, slips, steps, tumbles, or toe-stubbing plunges, that is not exhausted in the extraordinary va rieties of Lake street, Randolph street, or Clark street, then we marvel yet more than ever be fore at the infinite divisibility of matter and distance! Some waggish editors of neighboring rival cities say that a genuine Chicago man may be known abroad, as a sailor is off from a ship, by certain mysterious efforts to step up invisi ble stairs, or by an accommodating of himself on a smooth sidewalk to imaginary obstacles. But these are only temporary troubles, and ■when Chicago gets fairly on to her new position, she will be a comely city as well as a “tremen dous place for business.” And now, the pro cess which is going on has one element of great interest, viz; the raising of brick and stone houses.' Not that the lifting of brick houses is a new thing.- But if screwing up whole blocks at once, and lifting a whole street, is not new in fact, it ia new to me. Buildings of brick or stone, one hundred and fifty feet by two hundred, and five stories high, are raised eight feet or ten, without a crack or the dis placement of a single thing. A hotel contracts to be lifted up. In a short time two thousand screws are under it, and little by little the house rises. Nothing is changed within. The kitchen the dining-room eats, the bar drinks, and all the rooms smoke, as if nothing was going A block of stores and offices begins this new process of growth, and all the tenants maintain their usual functions; and except the outrageous heaps of dirt and piles of lumber, everything goes on as before. The plank into the door gets a little cus usual places. It is worth a visit to Chicago fo see a new method of digging a city out of the mud, and in a great deal better state of preservation than Pompeii and Herculaneum when dug out of the ashes. Election in Philadelphia. The Spring election, yesterday, resulted, as was expected, in the complete discomfiture of the Buchanan Democracy. The vote was a very light one, or the majorities for the People's ticket would have been double what they are. Still sufficient has been accomplished to show that a great majority of the people of Philadel phia are uncompromisingly opposed to the pol icy, the practice and the men of the federal Administration party. The only two officers chosen by the vote of the whole city were the City Treasurer and a City Commissioner,,and Messrs. Benjamin H. Brown and Charles M. Neal, who are chosen to fill these posts,* are gentlemen who, we are confident, will prove fully worthy of the public confidence. Both branches of the City Councils and the School Board, are carried by the People’s party, so that there is a certainty of harmony in all parts of the city government, and a continuance of the excellent system of the past year. The result of the election is, in all respects, grati fying, and particularly as it indicates what will be the result of the more important 'State elec tion next October.- —Philadelphia Bulletin. The Avroral Belt.— The Auroral Belt is not so frequent a visiter as it was ten years ago, but we are occasionally gratified with a good display of this beautiful phenomenon. The one which occurred on Friday night last, (April 29th,) presented one feature of special interest. During the early part of the evening, there was much auroral light in the north, and now and then a cluster of streamers, extending op forty or fifty degrees. A few minutes before nine o’clock, in addition to the display in the nor thern quarter, a belt began to form, and in a very short time spanned the heavens nearly from east to west. It was about five degrees wide, of variable brightness, gently bent about the meridian, and presented a spectacle of great grandeur and beauty. —Sew Haven Journal. A Commercial College of Tubes Hundred an’d Fifty - Seven Students.— Prominent among reasons why the Iron City College has four limes as many students as any other Commer cial School in the United States, are the follow ing: It is the only College in Pittsburgh that gives three daily lectures on Book-Keeping; three daily recitations and an examination in Commercial Calculations ; the only one which requires weekly exercises in Composition and Commercial Correspondence of all its students ; the only one which employs teachers whose qualifications are recognized by literary men, or are experienced educators, and the only one that grants Diplomas to those only of its stu dents who are competent and skillful account ants,—PitisburgU True Press . Paul Morphy, the great Chess player, has left Paris for England, previous to starting home to the United States. A dinner was giv en him before leaving Paris and his marble bust was crowned with laurel as a token that the assemblage considered him the greatest chess player that ever Uved. THE AGITATOR. BUGS YOUNG, Editor & Proprietor. WELLSBOROUGH, PA. Thursday Morning,'jMay 13,’59. s. M. Pcttenoill Si Co., 119 Nassau St., New York, and 10 State St-. Boston, are the Agents for tbo Agitator , and the most influential and largest circulating Newspapers in the United States and the Canadas. They are authorized to con* tract for us at our lowest rates. Republican State .Convention, The citizens of Philadelphia and of the- sev eral counties of this Commonwealth attached to the People’s party, and all others who are op posed to the unwise and extravagant measures of the National Administration, are requested to send delegatee, equal in number to their rep resentation in the General Assembly, to a Con vention to be held at Harrisbdro on Wednes day the Bth of Jone, 1859, to nominate. can didates for Auditor General and Surveyor Gen eral, to be voted for at the General Election in next October. HENRY M. FULLER, Wii, B. Mann, Secy, Chairman. More Wriggling-. The organ of the administration at Washing ton which recently changed its name from the Union to the Constitution and is now edited by Mr. James Buchanan, lately ventilated its views of Squatter Sovereignty, the pet doctrine of the Democratic Party, in a manner entirely satisfactory to itself but no doubt very surpri sing to thh Douglas wing of that political con glomeration. It might seem to some people that while the parly which put him into power is cut up and divided in this State, and while there is an evident distrust of himself and his administration in almost every other State in the North, Mr. Buchanan would hesitate to enunciate dogmas calculated to make the breach between the distracted elements of the Democ racy still wider, and render harmony of action forever impossible. Mr, Buchanan seems to care but little for the perpetuity of any party which is not wholly and unreservedly his party, but he wants to be a candidate again, and this is his first open bid for the Charleston nomina tion in 1800, which it will doubtless do much to secure. When we use the word forever in the above paragraph, we speak relatively, and give the word its Democratic meaning. Every one at all conversant with the politics of the country, knows that several important measures based on the eternal principles of the Democratic party, were set aside as inexpedient and the new principles involved in the new measures were declared to be eternal and adopted into the great family of political truths. We may mention as an example of the eternal character of Democratic measures, that one which more than all others opened the eyes of the world to its glaring inconsistencies, to wit; the estab lishment forever of a line of Compromise be tween Freedom and Slavery ; and the repeal of the law making this restriction just as soon as Slavery demanded it. “We argue then, that the word forever does not express -v jL/cuxucntLio measure or policy, but simply means until such times as it will be better for Slavery and slave-drivers to change. So when we start out with the declaration that “J. B.” instead of trying to heal up the great Democratic sore is only making it worse and preventing it from healing again forever , we mean, of course, that bc'will not let it be healed till Slavery demands it. And “J. B." wishes to show the men of the South who would op pose his reflection, that he alone can pour in the oil. What is more natural than to suppose, that, believing thus he should try it, even through a column of sophistry > The idea advanced by the Constitution news paper is this: that Popular Sovereignty and Squatter Sovereignty are two very different things, the one being opposed to the other. The gist of the argument would seem to be, that Popular Sovereignty is the doctrine of the Cincinatti Platform and means the protection of slavery in the territories by Congressional intervention, while Squatter Sovereignty as en tertained by Forney and his followers is a rev olutionary sentiment, and means that the peo ple of a territory may exclude or adopt slavery as they see fit. Now whether this definition will unite the Northern and Southern Democ racy on the Slavery question—whether Douglas himself is a patty to certain negotiations lately made, at Washington for this purpose, as has been intimated—must remain, to be seen. One thing is quite certain, that the pill was not sugar-coated sufficiently for Forney to swallow, as, in commenting upon the article in question, he pronounces its character ‘Jesuitical,'’ and says that under the Buchanan definition of Popular Sovreignty a dozen men may estab lish slavery in defiance of the wishes of eighty thousand freemen, and that the latter cannot abolish it. Here is the closing paragraph from the Press: •The Democracy of the North hare struggled long and manfully for the preservation of the Constitutional rights of the south, and arc willing to do so still. But, like the prisoner in the iron cell who saw Us limit* gradualty circum scribing round him, one demand has followed upon another, until now that Congressional protection for Slavery is presen ted as a test of political orthodoxy, as a dogma which must be advocated under penality of excommunication. Self- pre servation compels them to repudiate it in terms which none can misunderstand.” Mr. Forney has not over-stated the labor per formed for the South by the Northern Democ racy. They have not only “struggled long and manfully for the Constitutional rights of the South,” but they have for ten years persistently “struggled” for every demand of the South for the protection and extension of her peculiar institution, till she has been led to believe that no demand she can make is too extravagant, no job too dirty, for the Northern dough face Democracy to perform. Herein is found the secret of all the trouble which now distracts and rends that wriggling party. Let the lea' dors at Washington and elsewhere wriggle and twist, Every new move but discovers their weakness, and shows how futile is tbs attempt to keep together as a unit, any political party based upon the extension and perpetuation of slave labor, as against free labor. THE TIOGA COUNTY AGITATOR. GENERAL NEWS ITEMS. Senator Seward is making preparations for a voyage to Edrope. He will be absent un til late in the Fall. ' , A bill has passed one branch of the Cal ifornia Legislature to divide the State andmake two States of it. “The Latest Fashion.” —The latest style of hoop-skirt is the grand self-adjusting, double back-action bustle, etruscan lace expansion spi ral Piocoloroini attachment, gossamer indistruc tible 1 It is a love of a thing. At the close of the Paraguay negotiations, the municipal authorities of Conception gave a ball to President Urquiza -and Commissioner Bowlin. Upon retiring to his quarters, each American guest found a bottle of brandy at his bedside. The telegraphs in India have many spe cial disturbing influences which the lines of the United States are not subject to. The elephants there use the polo for scratching their sides, and the monkeys curl their tails upon the wires. .The lines ore down more than half the time. The Congressional elections in all the Northern States are now completed. Of the thirty Northern members of the House of Rep resentatives, who voted for the Lecompton bill but sis have been returned, viz: Sickles, John Cochraneand Maclay, of New York; Florence and Dimmiek, of Pennsylvania, and Niblack, of Indiana. I Advices received at Washington from J&tah. nnfier date of -Marcb*'d.sth, conhrfi the previous accounts that aposta'oy from BTormon ism is becoming common. Large numbers are' represented to be leaving the sect, being disgus ted with its abominations and heresies, and tired of the tyranny of the leading spirits in the church. A curious case has just transpired at Monticello, Mo. Two boys were arrested for stealing a §2O gold piece. The one who did not steal it was put upon trial first, and the other chap was used as a witness, and his innocence was established. The other boy was then placed on trial, when the one just acquitted came for ward and swore that he had stolen the money himself. We never knew the times so herd in our city when money was so plenty. Men who have money are afraid to invest it; and persons out of debt are determined to keep so." It is very seldom nown that you can find men of good credit who will undertake any speculation which requires the borrowing of money. On the other hand, men in straightened circumstances never found it so hard to get money. Men who fjave plenty of property and owe a little money, are skinned harder than ever we knew them to be before, —Chicago Times. Two men, says the Boston Traveler, re cently contrived to saw their way out x oi the Little Bock (Ark) jail, but before they left held a meeting, and adopted resolutions denouncing Know Nothingism, endorsing the foreign and domestic policy of the “present administration,' and expressing their "unabated confidence in the wisdom, patriotism and integrity of our present Chief Magistrate.” The resolutions were carried unanimously, and a copy left with a request that they be published in the Little Bock papers. The meeting adjourned sine die, and went to sawing, The evils of the failure to pass the Post OfilPA A ltd ’>l "Western States. The Postmaster General has discontinued several mail routes on the Mississ ippi, among others, the river mail between Ga lena and St. Paul, supplying forty-two post of fices between these points. Ilereafter all the cor respondence of the business men of Galena, Dubuque and Dunleith with all points on the river above Prairie du Chien, must take the cir cuitous route by Chicago—traveling over 300 miles out of the way, and causing a delay of about three days. The river mail from Dubuque to Hock Island has been discontinued also. G. P. P.—Years ago the significant let ters, G. T., Gone to Texas —were used as n means of marking upon the ledger bad debts. Now the initials G. P. P.—Gone to Pike’s Peak —are used for the same purpose. The coolest thing from Pike’s Peak that we have seen is the following from a letter, which is going the rounds of the press: “In Arrapahoe county there are from eight to twelve hundred poor devils, like myself, hun ting gold, but not finding any. At present, we are preparing to skin the spring emigration, which is to be done by disposing of town sites and bad whiskey.” Reports of the wheat crop continue fa vorable. There are some execeptions, of course, but generally the prospects are quite encourag ing. The Illinois papers agree that there is a probability of more than a general average in that State. In Michigan the prospects are equally favorable. These remarks also .apply to Ohio and Western New York. From 'Texas the accounts are exceedingly flattering. iVhe&t is in fine condition. • Corn is looking well. It is five or six inches high and has received the first plowing. The season in that State is three weeks earlier than usual. The forests have as sumed a green hue, and the fruit trees are cov ered with young fruit. In Louisiana wheat is in good condition and promises well. A correspondent of the New Orleans Picayune say that Gen. Walker, the “Gray-eyed Man of Destiny,” has returned to his old haunts on the Pacific coast. He travels un der the modest alms of “James Wilson,” and is attended by Bruno Natzmer, of Nicaraguan memory, who came with him. They put up at the Metropolitan Hotel. 'No public demonstra tion was made, and I fear that the General has “caved in,” at least for California. lie finds the character of our population much altered. The wild, roving adventurous reckless fellows who used to flock to Walker’s banners have all gone to more prosperous employments. No one knows what Walker means to do here. He keeps very snug, and I have not yet seen him in the streets. Democratic politicians should never med dle with Scripture: It is something of which they know but very little at best, and it is un safe for them, therefore to touch it. In his letter to Hon. David Hubbard, Gov. Wise of Va., says: “The Reubens have tried to sell me into Egypt for my dreaming.” The Governor has reference, doubtless, to the story of Joseph being sold into Egypt, but, unfortunately, he has got it all wrong. “Reuben,” it so happens, was the only one of the brethren who did not want to sell him. The Governor should join a Bible class right off, and let Goggin go. A few weeks ago a Democratic Judge in New York remarked that we had the highest authority for saying that all a man hath he will give for his life. A reference to the passage in the book of Job, will show that it is Satan that is the authority alluded to, However this may be the highest Democratic authority. FROM THE PEOPLE Boles, or no Boles. Ed. Agitator : Will you give as poor a wri ter as lam a corner in your paper? I want to say a word about "rules” to my “fellow teach ers”—so here His. •• Lstppped into a neighboring school a few days since, and happened to be just in time to hear the “3d class in arithmetic” recite. Now I know iit is very wrong to “tell tales," but for once I ask the privilege. -The class had just begun ■ subtraction, and one item of the lesson was, to "recite the rule." Accordingly, each one went through the formula with more or less accuracy (about as his mem ory had. been developed) and then came the ap-, plication. , ... Therexample was written on the board with the less number under the greater “because the rule said so.” (I judged they thought it could just as well have been subtracted, the greater number from the less except for the violation of the “rule.”) Then, when the lower figure was greater than the upper yon “must borrow one” says the rule. Then to “make things square,” they paid back an amount equal to that “borrowed,” —but to my surprise, and I have no doubt to the surprise of the class, it was paid to the lower number, while the “bor rowing” was from the upper. This, I presume the class thought, (I certainly did) was a very unfair way of doing business; The reason for it was, “the rule said so." And thus the recitation proceeded. The “rule” was considered sufficient authority, to justify the violation of reason or common sense. Having heard it was a question among “learned men” whether the rales in arithmetic, should be learned at all or not, I began to think the matter over, after hearing this recitation, and came to the following conclusion : The object of arithmetic, I knew was to “dis cipline the mind,” and teach the application of numbers. To .do this I concluded the pupil must thoroughly understand the principle of all operations performed. Anything then tending to explain these principles, and impress them upon the mind, helps to accomplish the object sought. But if the work is made mechanical, I do not see how the mind is developed, or the general application of numbers taught. The “rule,” which this teacher considered of such vital importance, seemed to me to have the effect to make “machine scholars,” —and gen erally, if committed to memory, wonld, I think, have the same effect. A science too, must be much less interesting if taught as a series of rules, rather than a natural succession of cor responding and useful principles. Rules, in arithmetic, I observe to be very numerous, and would quite likely be forgotten, if unused for a short time. Summing the matter up, I concluded it was not best to require scholars to learn the rules in arithmetic at all, —but to teach thoroughly the principle of all operations, and then rules would be quite unnecessary. In arriving at this conclusion, however, I have not the aid of experience, and would be glad to have my errors corrected by any one who observes them. What say you, fellow teachers.—rules, or no rules? May, 1859. Peleg Plumb. Death of Bishop Doane. —The Rev. Geo rge Washington Doane, Bishop of the Protes tant Episcopal Church in the Diocese of New Satotji af His residence, Riverside, Burlington. He was in bis 61st year, and had been Bishop of New Jersey, his native State, since 1832. In early life he was rector of Trinity Church, Boston, and there first attracted attention for his tal ents. The remains were consigned to their last rest ing plade on Saturday in the presence of a large concourse of persons- Eighty clergymen, including several from New York and Philadel phia, were present, sixty of whom were sur plieed. The Right Rov’s Bishop Southgate, Hopkins and Potter, who performed the ser vice, preceded the mournful cortege in their full canonical robes. It is estimated that at least fifteen hundred persons joined in the process ion. The late Bishop's two sons, one a clergyman of the Protestant Episcopal Church, the other (the eldestla Roman Catholic Priest, it is said were very |3eeply afflicted. The scene at the grave is' described as most affecting. Popular Logic. —“The Lounger,’’who occu pied a conspicous place in Harper’s Weekly, finds a great variety of things to say. Among the good ones we find the following about. A "on Sequiturs. —There used to bo an oc casional statement in a certain newspaper of a certain town, that the boat of a party of naugh ty hoys sailing in the bay on a summer Sunday afternoon had been struck by a gust and cap sized, and the naughty boys were lost.— Moral; —Boys who go a sailing on Sundays will be drowned. But in the same town it happened that a minister looking out of the window of an un finished house, lost his balance, fell and brok6 his neck. Thereupon an Abe r newspaper an nounced.— “On Tuesday afternoon, the Rev. James Jones was standing in the unfinished building. No, 210 Water St,, and looking from the win dow, unfortunately lost his balance and fell to the ground, breaking his neck by the fall.— This melancholy casualty should serve as a warning to clergyman not to look out of win dows of unfinished buildings on Tuesday af ternoons.” Pins Tree Shilling.— We have been shown by Mr. E. P. Rogers of this village one of these ancient coin which has been an heir loom in the family tor a hundred years as a memorial of the olden time. The inscription on one side is “Massachusetts” and on the other “In New England.” The date is in re lief on the centre of one side and is 1652. Underneath are the; letters XII, denoting its value. On the other side is a rude device of a pine tree. The coinage contrasts greatly with the mechanical appearance of the coins of the present day. The association clustering around this silver coin cannot fail to quicken the pulse of any descendant of the early settlers of New England. —Coming Journal, The New York Herald, in giving the result of the April elections in Connecticut, Michigan St. Louis, and Louisville, asks, "What does all this mean 1” and answering its own ques tion, says: “It means that the great Demo cratic party has gone to wreck and ruin, and that the Opposition, as sure as fate, hold the next Presidential election in their handn." The Herald, which is one of the organs of Mr. Buchanan, plays very much out of tune when it, as seldom happens, undertakes to tell the truth. Attempt to Burn the Yates County Jail. —The Penn Yan Chronicle, of Thursday last, says:—“Sheriff Remer found the jail on fire the other evening, and after some trouble extin guished the flames. The fire had apparently taken from a stove pipe which entered the chimney very near the upper ceiling, from which the plastering had fallen, leaving the lath bare. A piece of zinc was nailed over the exposed place and all danger was supposed to be averted.' But on Monday night, about mid night, an alarm was -raised by the prisoners, and the jail was found to he on fire again. It seems that young Dingman, one- of the prison ers, removed the zinc, stuffed cotton into the crevice and with sticks tied together managed to apply a torch of whitjlings to the cotton from the door of his cell. The fire was blazing finely when the alarm was raised, and would soon have been too strong to be overcome! — The Sheriff more than half suspects that the first fire was caused by the prisoners. The young scoundrel who caused the last fire should be severely punished.” A man arrived at Pittsford, HI., ft few days since, from Biwood, Kansas, his sole er rand being to thrash his brother-in-law, who had maltreated his wife. Having finished the business to the satisfaction of all concerned, he returned home. Commodore Shubrick, of the Paragon squadron, is described by a letter writer as a wonderful specimen of the sailor, the man of business, and the gentleman. He is as green as the live oak, as cheerful as a song bird, and as ‘‘cool as Sir John Franklin's bones!” -M-A-R-B-I-E-D At the Hotel of 8.~8. Holliday, in Wellsboro, by A. J. Sofiold, Esq., HIRAM E, SIMMONS and RA CHAEL WARRINER. At the residence of Lyman Faulkner, April 25, by Rev. R. L. Stilweli, Mr. ADOLPHUS SUCART of Mansfield and Miss MARTHA COPENEY of Cov ington, Pa. In Warren, Pa„ on the 3d inst., by Rev. C. L. Heq embonrg, Mr. S. P. JOHNSON and Mrs. MARTHA PARMLEE, all of Warren. May 4th. by Rev. M. Rockwell, at in Gray's Valley, Mr. FRANK L. MILLER of William sport and Miss EMMA P. ROCKWELL,_daugbter of the -officiating clergyman. > IMCKINSOfir HOUSE CORNING, N. T. D. C. Noe, Guests taken to and from the Depot free of charge. HORSE FEED, Cow Feed, Wheat Flour, Buck wheat Flour. Graham Flour Ac., for sale very cheap at WEIGHT'S CHEAP FLOUE AND FEED STORE. Also, an extra article of Corn Meal, Bolted and Unbolted. Tioga Foundry & Machine Shop THE undersigned bog to announce to the public that they have leased the Tioga Foundry and Machine Shop, and are engaged in the manufacture of Mill Irons, Plows and Plow Points. Castings of any kind or desdription made on short notice. Ad dress or call upon BALDWIN, LOWELL A CO. Tioga, May 12, 1559. - Administrator’s Sale. THE Administrators of the Estate of John L. Ev ans, dec’d, will offer for sale at Public Vendue, at Blossburg, on Monday the 23d Inst, the personal property of said John L. Evans, dec'd.,consisting of a STOCK OF GOODS, such as Dry Goods, Groceries, Crockery, Hardware Ac. Also the Household Furni ture, and other articles too numerous to mention.— Terms made known on day of sale. JOHN JAMES, | u , May 12, 185(1. JAMES 11. GULICK, | Adm ™ Applications for Licence. NOTICtI is hereby given that the following named persons have filed their petitions to keep Inns or Taverns in the Court of Quarter Sessions of ■ Tioga County, and that the same will bo presented to tbo Judges of said Court on "Wednesday the Bth day of June next, at 2 o'clock in the afternoon: L. D. Taylor, Wellaboro. Chns. G. Douglass, Clymer, B. B. Holliday, Wellsboro. Benj. E. Hall, Blossburg Daniel McVoy, “ Eoyal Rose, Rutland. H. C. Vermilyea, Gaines. Joel H. Woodruff, Liberty. May 12, 1559. J. F. DONALDSON, CtcrJc. ROY’S REVIVE POWDER. THIS MEDICINE is proved by experience to be a sure cure for Heaves in the early stages, and wiU keep them back in tbo most advanced stages of this prevalent and dangerous disease. The owners of horses are here offered the most valuable preparation of the kind ever produced ,* and by its timely use the lives of many valuable animals may be saved. Give a borso two large table-spoonfulls every day; Give but little hay, and when given it should be wet. For tale of Boy's Drug