N Ring. What M it that apoil th tkir *££ With which hpr body ahe would diguifr. Whrnt from her bod she rise* in the morning To enmb, end pi*it, *mi tto Her hair with nbhoM colored like the sky t What is it that herpk-asare dkcomjweos When ah*' vroithl nit and niffp the nun away- | Making her no dead rose* in rod rowos. And in the down gray A blight that *<-om Bio wortd to overlay ? What i* it makes the tromhiinc look of temtftk About hor tender mouth and eyelid* fiur ? Ah mo, ah me' she feel* her heart lett double. Without the mother'* prayer. And her wild fears are toon than she can bear. To the poor stghtlosa lark new power* are given. Not onle with a golden tongue to amg, But at ill' to make her wavering way toward heaven With untUeeerning wing; But what to her doth her aiek aorrow hring r Her day* abe turn*, and yet keeps ererturainii. And her fleeh shrink.*, a* if tthe Pelt the rod; For, gainst her will, eh> think* hard Uunga concerning The everlasting Ood, ... And long* to be in*oii*ite, hke the elod. Sweet Heaven, be pitifW! rain down npon her 4 The saintly ohantie* or-lstned hw such - j i Rhr aa* eo poor in everything but honor, And she Wed ranch—loved niuelt! Would, Lord, ahe bad thy garment's hem to j touch. Haply, it was the hungry heart wilhin her. Tbe woman's heart, itemed ita natural right. That made her he the thing men call a sinner. Kwn in her own d wptte. Lord, that her judge* might receive their atghU Farm, Garden and Household. SNOW NAN, CAXK. —One cop of sugar, half a eup of butter, half a imp of tttti milk, two cups of dour, the whites of three eggs, half a teaapoonful of soda, one spoonful of cream tarter, sifted * illi the flour; heat butter and sogwr ! thoroughly together; aihl the whitea of egg* beaten to stiff foam ; then the floor, and milk and soda the bat. Fmrrr Cant. Three-quarters of a ! pound of raisins, two small cups of cur rants, one full op of sugar, thret^qunit ers of * cap of sugar and till the imp with inoiaaacs, one eup of sour milk, three • cups of dour, two eggs, three-quarters of a cup of butter, a quarter of a pound of citron, one toaspoonful of soda, flavor with cinnamon, cloves, and lemon, lu mixing the cake. 1 prefer putting only part of the fruit in the hatter, all the currants and part of the raisins. I then put in a layer of butter, then a layer of citron and raisins, until I fill the pan, lastly putting in the batter; this prevents the fruit from leing burned on the out aide of the cake. Bake about an hour and free-quarters ; it requires a good hot oven. SUPERIOR Lmn.—Loaf laid is the nicest for all cooking purposes; skin all the fat that is to be tried into lard, and imminence by frying gently a little leaf lard, or your fat will scorch ; let it cook slowly, sad dip off the fat as it is liqne fied. and strain it through a cloth ; when oil is strained that can be dipped off. squeeze the remainder by itself in the cloth. If the lanl is to be uaetl for cook ing, salt it a trifle when first put on ; much of the salt will be found at the bottom of the kettle undissolved ; still, it would seem better that salt should he used. If the lanl ato he used for burn ing in bud lamp*, salt would he injuri ous. If the fat is not skinned before trying, the gluten in the skin will make the lard inquire and frothy Have the scraps and skin* for soap grease. BCCXWHXAT CASKS.— One quart of bock wheat flour, mix with lukewarm wa ter. rather thicker than yon will wish it when reidy to bake. A cup of Graham meal added is, we think, an improve ment ; stir in a can of family vea.it, or half a penny's worth of bakers', and a teasixvnful of salt ; mix in an earthen bowl, or a larger earthen pitcher ; the latter is the most convenient, as the bat ter can be poured from the lip of the pitcher more natly than it can be dipped out of a bowl; set it where it will keep warm ail night. The batter should be made early in the evening, as it takes fully ten hours in winter to rise ; when ready to bake in the morning beat half a teaspoonful of molasses and iir into the batter, adding enough lukewarm water to make it thin enough to fry : bake quick; the thinner the cakea can be baked the better they wall be. BED Bra EXTERMINATOR. —A 1 idy who moved into a house swarming with bed bugs, after cleansing the house, tells how she exterminated them from her bedsteads : —" I took a teaspoonful of quicksilver, costing ten or fifteen cents, which 1 beat up with the whites of two eggs, just as I would make frosting for a cake, till the quicksilver was thor oughly mixed with the egg; this I ap plied with a feather to every crack and crevice where a bed bug could hide, af ter washing the bedstead* in cold water. This I repeated three or four times du ring the hnrt summer, and about three times during the second summer. The result is, I have not seen a bug for two year*. As the bug* will not stay where • quicksilver is applied faithfully, it is necessary to overhaul the bedding fre quently to capture stragglers who mnv be seeking a more healthful locality." * LOOSENING SCREWS AKD STOPPERS.— A knowledge of the fact that bodies ox- Cd by heat, and an application of this wledge, will often save much trouble. Ground glass stoppers in bottles often be come fast by being put into the neck af ter the latter are wanned by the fingers, the stoppers being cold." To loosen them, warm the neck, by applying a small cloth dipped in warm water," which will expand it and loosen the stopper. Nut>-on threshing and other • machines sometimes become immovable by being put on the screws in cold weather, after the nuts have been warmed by holding in the hands. The only way to get them off, is to exjiand them again bv heating. The work shonld be quickly done, otherwise the serewrs will also be come heated and expanded. We once saw three strong men trying to unscrew a rusty iron pump. We suggested beat ing the outer or hollow screw, when it was loosened with one hand. KEEPING MUCH Cows.—lt is an axiom among our dairymen here, in Southern Herkimer county, that much grain fed to cows will not pay—that is to keep it; fattening is a different thing, and mav poy or may not Sometimes it does not, and generally not too much. Few milch cows it will not pay ; so it is thought here. There is one thing that will pay—that does pay. It is the feeding of green ten der hay, cut green and young ; and then from such hay—it may be said grass— butter is made equal to summer and fall butter. The quantity of milk is large in November ana December, and again at calving time. There is an excellent flow of milk,not quite so rich perhaps as grain would make it, but ricn and copi ous; and it was brought without the great expense, the cost not being more than half. When summer opens, your cow is still strong, and will continue in that condi tion on good feed—that is. good pasture, and when getting short, fed on cornstalks provided for her, which is but a continu tion of the green pasture. And when winter comes, your cow will still be round and strong—not overfed, nor over strained with grain, but what a cow should be—a quiet, domestic animal, supporting the dairy, intended for milk, not to lie driven, either too hard by lx>ys, or yoked as in Europe. Such "a milk giving mother, needs but sufficient strength for her purpose, and that is not much in her quiet routine. She needs good treatment ; that is the great point. She grows under it, but deteriorates un der abuse, and that rapidly. Give her warm winter quarters and plenty of water with her grass hay.— Country Gen tleman. r DURING the oelebration of the crystal wedding of Mr. and Mrs. George Burn ham, in Portland, last week, a young man named Robert Wood, one of the guests, - fell down a flight of stairs from the dining-room, by taking a false step back wards, owing to the careless flirting of a handkerchief in his face by a young girl, and struck on his head, severing the meningital artery. Four physicians were called but although he was tre panned, he died. A DESPATCH from the government at Versailles, calling for volunteers to re establish order in Paris, elicited but a small response in Havre. Summary of Helm. NEW-HAMPSHIRE* annual fast is to be on the 6th of April. SOITHFRN Illinois re|*u-t* that the iv(iect for all kinds of fruit is excel lent. Oonrr VON BUKAMI HM been elevated to the rank of l*rince of the German Empire. A ROT only twelve years old is on trial in Lexington, Ky., on the charge of set ting fire to a factory. THK hark Cornwall lin* lx<en sunk in colUftioa with the steamer Himalaya, and eleven person* drowned. THOMAS HART Guar, second son of Henry Clay, .lied iu Lexington, Ky.. t the ge of sixty-eight year*. THK journal* complain that the Prus sian* an- still depredating upon tlie iu hahitanta, and urge reprisal*, j NAVTOATTON has Ixx-n reaumed on Irake ' Erie and Huron, and the tributary har- Ixira and rivers arc free of ice. THE statement comes that ardors have j lieen issued to stop the return home of French prisoners for the present. PRMUUKKT GRANT ordered tlie U. S. iiavr to proti-ct the 00-rernmailt of Hae* against any demonstrations by Hayti- LUUNCXT laU-1* art- said to cireulate freety among the Indians of the North t wtrat, who take them for greeulmck*. At Racine, Wis., three small children ! of Mr. Bauman died within a few hours of each other, and were buried together on Monday. A TORNADO near East Lebanon! lIL, oemoUahcd about twentv farm-houses, killing two (x-rwvns, and fatally injuring several other*. DATIP RKKVBH, Eraj., a prothineut iron manufacturer. President of the lfluenix Iron tomjsmy. diet! in Phrenixville, Pl-un.. age 79." lhsoM-uoNAi. certificates have N-en grauted to the Democratic caudnlates for Congress in the receut New-Hamjv -hire election NEWS has bx-u received of an engage nieut at Ladichoaa, Onlwi. iu which thirtex-n insurgent* were killed, and : thefr intreuchmeuts dntroytd. Cuißr-KsaiNRER Andrew Ijwton, U. A N., .litxl at the Phibablphiu Navy- YanL He was a native of Massachusetts, and entenxl the navy in June, 1850. IT has been decided by the French Government, to place on the market a loan of two and a half milliards of francs in the form of three per cent rentes. THK Dominion Government has issued a circular withdnwing all charge* ou American vessel* engaged in the lake trade, in view of recent American actiou. Two men in an iron foundry at Lowell, Mass., recently quarreled, when oue threw the contents of a ladle full of molten iron at the other, burning him terribly. JOHN SC-ARLJW recently shot a grizzly bear near Fort Tejon, CaL, and, on entering the chapparel to 1-xik for its mate, was attacked by it and torn and mangled fatally. Is the carrying trade between the United States and European porta 133 steamers are employed. Of these 101 are British, and the American (lag is borne by not a single one. ' A handsome Italian, who claims to be a lineal deccciuiaut of the once princely house of the Eitee, is now a hack-driver in Ferraro, where once his ducal ances tors held almost imperial sway. AT St. Carroll. lowa, R. B. Terry, a lumber meridiant, shot and killed bis wife, set lire to bia house, and then ahot himself dead. He was cmrried last Oc tober. Intemperance was the cause. THE Canadian elections are over, and the Liberals claim to have gained eight or ten members. The Government still claims to have a working majority. The Manitoha elections have passed quietly. FLORIDA proposes to sell to Alahsma the strip of country lying between the latter State and the Gulf of Mexico, and stretching from the ApalacLicola River on the east to the Peruido on the west, for *1,000,000. THE Pennsylvania House of Repre sentatives has passed a bill authorizing the people of each ward and township in the State to vote once in three years upon the question of licensing the sale of intoxicating liquors. THERE are in the State of Connecticut 4,000 pensioners, mostly of the late civil war, and no less than 33 widows of rev olutionary soldiers, while tuere are only 21 who were widowed by the Mexican, Florida and 1812 wars together. THE vigilant* of Nevada are sending notices to suspected persons to leave immediately, and their demands are invariably complied with alacrity. Eight persons have been banished from Virginia City already, and six from Gold HilL A GENOA correspondent writes that more than 20 Americans and English men have died in that city in the past two years, snil argues thence that it is an unhealthy place, especially for per sons troubled with pulmonary affec tions. AN Elmira despatch reports that Mrs. Hess, who murdered two men last Janu ary in Stenben conntv, has been adjudged insane by a jury w&o investigated ber condition. She* will consequently be transferred from the jail to an insane asylum. . IN the trial of Gov. Holden, of North Carolina, the Senate voted him "guilty" on six of the eight articles of impeach - menk and adopted an order removing bim from office and disqnalifying him from holding office of honor or profit in the State, by 86 to 13. . THERE are three international commis sions now* itting in Washington. One is engaged in settling the claims between Mexico and the United State* ; one arbi trating between Spain and several South American States ; anil the Joint High Commission between England and the United States. THE Albany Grand Jury having fail ed to indict Dr. Lemuel B. Van Hoosen. who killed his wife, last week, while laboring under an attack of delirium tremens, the Conrt ordered that he be confined in the State Lunatic Asylum until he is restored to his right mind, qr until the further order of the Court in the premises. IH A SCTT on a promissory note, Judge Smith, of Illinois, decided that the words and letters Urn pet inti annually, meant nothing, and were surplusage, ami so to be treated; that the note was, therefore, silent as to the rate of inter eat it would drew, and must be governed by the statute, which provides nix per cent per annum. He gave judgment for the amount due on the note, and in terest at the rate of six per omit pera num. ■ ■ A CORRESPONDENT of the San Frenciaco Bulletin, writing from Mexico, says that a new spirit has been aroused in that unhappy countrv. The reports of revo lution and robberies are disappearing from the papers, giving place to the enumeration of improvements, and es tablishment of schools and academies. At Mazatlan, a musical school has been established with the assistance of the local authorities. A similiar institution has been started at La Paz. At Duron go, a school for iron smelting h*s been founded, to moke the fsmoua iron moun tain at that place available for home in dustries. Lancastrian schools are being established in almost every village, and the parents made subject to a fine if they fail to look after the education of their children. At Vera Cruz, a public library has been founded, and the federal Gov ernment has granted it from seven to eight thousand choice volumes. Other cities are following the example. There have also been established lately two colleges devoted to industrial pursuits. THE war bet wean France and Germany has led to very unpleasant relations be tween the French and German officers in the army of the Viceroy of Egypt. So many challenges, to fight duels were the consequence that the Khedive had finally to interfere. He restored order and tranquility among his officers by sum marily dismissing some of the most quarrelsome individuals. JOHN MCRK/.T, of Philadelphia, shot his wife, killing her instanly. He then shot himself. Senator Sumner and San Domingo. In hia noted apeeeh in tha Senate on the K*n Ihimiugo auestlon, Senator Sumner asserted that it is now on evi dence before the Sen ate that Hie navv of the United States, scting under order* from Washington, lias been engaged in measure* of violence and of belligerent intervention ix-ing war without the authority of Congress. The whole buai nuM, be raid* Is aggravated when it i* eonsidoriHl Unit the declared object of this violence is the acquisition of foreign territory, being half an inland inthet'ar ilx-au Sou; and still further, that this violence has I won employeil first, to prop and maintain a www ruler, himself n usurjier, upholding him iu power, that he might sell hia country ; and eccondly, it ha* lieou employeil to menace the lUeck Republic of Haytl. Such a caae. Mr. Hnmner continues, is too grave for ailetiee. For sake of the navy, the Administration, lb-publican Institution*, and for the sake of the Ite- C* lioaii Party which cannot afford to one reepouailth- forauc.h oonduct, the case must not (mas without inquiry Hut beyond all these considerations is the commanding rule of justice. The question is uot whether the iietiiit aition of San Douuugo is desirable, but whether we are justified in the uieau* employed to accomplish this acquisition, and the evidence uow In-fore us shows too clearlv tint tucans have Ix-eu em ploveil winch calling lie justified. He tn.il supposed tliat the proceedings re garding the treatv for annexation were blameless until wfiilc it was (tending lie fore tlie Senate, the A-austaut Secre tary of Slate brought him a uuiuber of deapatehM, among which was oue from tmrt'onnilar Agent there, who signed the treaty of annexation, from which it dis tinct! v appeared tlwt Baca while engaged in selling hi* country was maintained in (aiwer by the Navy of the United States. Other evidence has accumulated to show that we were engaged in forcing u|xm a weak people the sacrifice ol their country. The State Department and tlte Navy iV-jvartuicnt each contained a record of the disgraceful, intolerable, and deplora ble proceeding!? and still tliey pressed the consummation. The Story of Na bott's vineyard was revived Mr. Sumner then entered into legal argument, and rites precedent* to show that a contract for oi-saiou of territory must be without presence of superior force, and allude* to the fact that recent returns of the Navy Department show the whole island has 1-eeu Wleagured bv our navy, tailing from port to port, and hugging the laud with its guns, and un less tlie re(>orts of the State and Navy Department are discrediu-d, it is obvious beyoud doubt that our Government has seized the war powers carefully guarded by the constitution, and without the au thority of Congress ha* employed them to trample on iude(euilence and equal rights of two nation* rorqual with ours. Mr. Sumner then repealed the allega tions in a former speeeli, that Baez was maintained in power by our nary to ena ble him to carry out the contract with Mr. Uabcock, and that to a**ure this sale ilavti was violently menaced by our fleet ant! presented voluminous documentary official evidenoe to suxt-uu them. The result upon the independence and equalitvof the Black Republic, Mr. Sum ner adds, appear* more fully iu the re- Iport of the Navy Department, which is an authentic record of acta flagrant and indefensible, unless we are ready to set aside the law of nations and the Consti tion of the United States. Both of these are degraded in order to advance the scheme. If I called it a plot I should not err, for this term is suggested by the machination, ami the record* is complete. In conclusion Mr. Sumner said :—Mr. President, as I draw to close, allow me to rejieat the very deep regret with which I make this exposure. Most gladly would 1 avoid it- Controversy, especi ally at mv time of life, lias no attraction for me ; tint I have been reared in the school of duty, and now. as of old 1 can not see wrong without trying to arrest it I plead OOW, as I have often jdeaded before, for Justice and Peace. In the evidence adduced I have con ! fined myself carefully to public docu ments, 11 ot traveling out of the record. Disputche*. naval orders, naval report*- the.se are the unimpeachable authorities. And all these liare Usui officially com municated to the Senate, are now print ed by its order, aeoeasible to aIL On this unanswerable and cumulative testi intny, where each port confirms the rest, and whole bas the harmony of truth, 1 present this transgression. And her*' it is not 1 who speak, but the testimony. Thus stand the case. International law ha* been violated in two of its com manding rules, uuc securing the equality of oatioua, the other providing against U'Uigerent intervention, while a distinc tive fundamental principle of (he fon sitution, by which the President is de prived of a kingly prerogative, is dis regarded, and this very kiugly prerog ative is asserted by the President. This is the simple statement. Look -1 mg still further at the facts, we see that all this g rest disobedience has for its ob ject the acquisition of au outlying tropi | cai island, with large promise of wealth, 1 and that, in carrying out this scheme, i our Republic has* forcibly maintained a usurper in power that ho might sell bis country, and his death blow at the in , dependence of the Black Republic of Hayti, which, besides faring a wrong to that Republic, was nu insult to the African race. And all this has been done by prerogative alone, without the 1 authority of an act of Congress. If such a transaction, many-beaded, is wrong, can escape judgment, it is difficult to *ee what securities remain. What other snored rule of international law may not be violated ? What other foreign nation may not be struck at ? What other bel ligerent menace may not be hurled ? lit hat other kiugly prerogative may not tic smzed ? On another occur ion I showed how (those wrongful proceedings hod been sustained by the President beyond all example, bat in a corresponding sprit. Never liefore lias there leeu such Presi dential intervention in the Senate as we have leeu constrained to witness. Presi dential visits to the Capitol, with appeals |to Senators, have been followed by as semblies at the Executive Mansion, also with appeals to Senators ; and who can , measure the pressure nil kinds by him self or agent!, especially through the appointing power, all to secure the con summation of this scheme ? In harmony with this effort was the Presidential message, where, while taxing the Senate with " folly"' in rejecting the treaty, we are gravely assured that by the promised acquisition " our large debt abroad is to I be ultimately extinguished," thus mak ing Santo Domingo the pack-horse of our vast loal, or, perhaps, copying Don Ouixote when be imposed upon the shoulders of Saneho l'anza the peni tential stripes which belonged to him self. Then, responding to the belligerent , menace of his Admiral, the President makes a kindred menace by proposing nothing less than the acquisition of the " Ldand of Santo Domingo," thus lidding the Black Republic to his scheme. The innocent population there were startled. Their Minister hero protested. Nor is it unnatural that it should lie so. Sup pose the Queen of England, in her speech at the opening of Parliament, had pro posed in formal terms the aoqnisition of the United States, or suppose Louis | Napoleon, iu his speech at the opening i of the Chambers during the Mexican ! War, while the French forces were in Mexico, had coolly proposed the acquisi tion of that ixirtion of the United States 1 adjoining Mexico and stretching to the ' Atlantic, and, in support of his proposi j tion, had set forth the productiveness of , the soil, the natural wealth that abounded : there, and wound up by announcing that out of this might lie iid the French debt abroad, which was to be saddled I upon the coveted territory. Suppose such a proposition by Louis Napoleon or by Jthe English Queen, made in formal speech to Chambers or Parliament, what would have been the feeling in our country ? Nor would that feeling have been diminished by the excuse that the offensive proposition crept into the speech by accident. Whether by speech or design, it would attest small consider ation for our national independence. All this is shown by the reports which reach as now, even ii their whole history did not attest it. The language uf the President in charging the tjenate with "folly" was not according to ap|iroved precedent*. Clearly, this i* not a proper term to W employed by cue btineh of the Govern ment with regard to another—least of all by the Ihestdent with regard to tho Senate. Folly, Sir ! Was It folly when j the Henate refused to aaiictiou proceed ings by which the Equal Right* of Uie I thick Republic were a-witled f Waa it folly not to sanction hoatilitiea against tlie'lllnek Republic without the authority of (Vingres* '' Waa it hilly not to souo tion Wlligereut intervention in a foreign country without the authority of I'on- j gnu*? Was it folly not to aauctiou a usurpation of the Nt'ar Powers uuder the Constitution f Aeoordiug to tba Prvsi ih'iit all this waa folly iu Uie Henate. I *-t the country judge. Thna Jo wo discern, whether on the coast* of Hanto Doiutugo, or here at Washington, the same determination, with the same disregard of giwat priu eiploa, aa also the same rcckleaniiea* toward the people of llayli, who have never lujurod ita In view of these things, the ft rat sub ject of iuquiry ia not noil, climate, pro duetivonena, auJ j* mobilities of wrulUi, but the exoepUoual auJ abnormal proceeding* of onr own (tavernwont, lliia inquiry ia ecaaotaally preliminary to character. Before considering the treaty or any question of acquisition, we must at leust put oorwltwi right na a na tion ; nor Jo I nee how tliia cau tie Juno without retracting our atapa, and coti aentiug to art in aubordinaUon to inter national law ami the Constitution of the United State*. Therefore on the question of aixpiisi tion I say nothing U-day. only alluding to certain points involved. Hoowfintt it ia insisted that emigrant* will hurry iu large numbers to this tropical island when once annexed, and thus swell ita menus ; but this allegation forgets that, uceordtug to the testimony of history, peueeful emigration travel* with the sun on jwirallelsof latitude, aud not on paral lels of longitude, mainly following the isothermal line, Aiid not turning off at right angles, whether North or South Sometimes it is insisted that it will Ih !letter for the people of that island, if annexed to our Republic ; but Una alle gation forgets the transcendent question, whether it is better for them 1 wlter for the African race, Iwetter for civilisation, Utat the Black Republic should be absorbed out of sight, instead of Wing fostered into a suoctwaful example of aetf-goveru raect for the redemption of the race, not oul v is the Cam Wan Islands, lut on the eoutiueut of Africa. Then, again, arises that other question, whether we will as some the bloody haxards involved in that business, as it has iieen puram tl with the alternative of expenditures for —ar-hijs and troops, causing most pain ful anxieties, while the land of Touaaaint L'( hivertnre liiiteus to Uie constant whis per of independence. Aud there is still thnt other question of dt bta and obliga tions acknowledged and unacknowledg ed, wiUi an immense claim by Hayti ami an unsettled botiutlary which I have already railed a bloody lawsuit. Theae questions I state only. Mean while to my mind there is something, lietter than belligerent intervention and acta of war. with Uie menace of alssirp tion at untold coat of treasure. It is a M nee re and humane effort on our part, in the spirit of peace, to reconcile Huvti and Dominica, and to establish tr iDquU ity throughout the island. l**t thia he attempted aud our Republic will become an example worthy of its name and of the civilization which it represent*, while republican institutions will have new glory. The blesaiug* of good men would .it tend such an effort, nor would -the smile of Heaven be wanting. And may we not justly expect the Pres ident to unite in such a meaurv of |w*oe and good will ? "lis that ruleth his spir it ia greater than he that taketh a city," and ao th" I "resident ruling his spirit in subjection to the humaue principles of international law and theCourtitiiiton of his country, will lie greater than if bv had taken all the islands of the *-a. Eulargiug upon the declaration that the President tiad pltuxxl himself st the head of a more pow. rftil and catly Ku- Klux than thoae of the South. Mr. Hum ner proceeded : Hod the President been so inspired as to lestow on the Southern Unionists, white and black, one-half the time aiul zeal, will, personal attention, pcraoual effort, aud jK-raonal interecaaion, which he has bestowed upon his attempt to ob tain half on island in the (arribloan Sea, our South Mil Ku-Klux would have exist ed iu name only, while tranquility would liave reigned everywhere within our bor der*. (General applause u the gollenea and hisacs.} M. Sumner proceeded. Now, MI I de sire the suppression of the ku-Klux wherever it shows itself, ami the eleva tion of the African race. I iusist thai the Presidential scheme which installs the Ku-Klux on the coast of Hanto lh>iningn, am! which at the same time i units the African race in the lllack Republic. ahull lie fairly represented. I apeak now of that Ku-Kliix of which the President i* the declared head, and 1 apenk for the African race, whom the President has trampled down. Is there any Senator in earnest against the Ku-Khix ? Let him arrest it on the coast of Santo Domingo. I* there any Senator ready at all time* to seek the elevation of the Afri<-au race? Here is the occaaiou for his beet effort*. After speaking for three hoars and a quarter Mr. Sumner, at 3:30 o'clock con cluded. Kojalty in Marriage. The marriage of the Princess Louise is the only instance in English history since the reign of Edward 111., five cen turies since, of the daughter of a living crowned head marrying a subject Marriages have occurred aincc that period between prince**** and subjects, but at most in five canes, and under peculiar I circumstances. The Princess Elisabeth, daughter of Jamea I. ami widow of the King of Bohemia, is uudeistond to have privately married Lord Craven, at whose house, in Drury-lane, she died a few months after her return from exile with her nephew, Charles 11. ; but the cir cumstances of the marriage are extremely obscure, and the Queen waa entirely re leased from royal control. The Princess Mary, sister of Henry VTII., took the opportunity, much to the indignation of her brother, of marrying Charles Bran don, who was sent to fetch her lsck from France on the death of her htuiband, Ismis XII. ; but the in-culiaritv of thin cane u also obvious. Henry Vll. per mitted three of the .laughters of Elward IV., and sisters of his own Queen, to marry the heads of the famili of How ard, Oiurtenay, and the now extinct Welles ; but Henry the ATI. never fully j recognised the legality of the royal title j of his father-in-law- It ha# been illegal during th lost 100 year* for it momlier of the royal family to marrv a subject, unless the royal per sonage intruding to contrnrt such marri age had received the special sanction of the sovereign, and this approval cxtcud# only to case# when the intended royal bride or bridegroom is under '25 year* of age—over that age, the sanction of Par liament is necessary. This was strin gently laifl down in what is known ss the Royal Marriage net, which wna pass ed in 1 < 72, at the iuatanee of King (leorge 111., who was indignant at the marriage of his brother William Henry, I hike of Gloucester, in 1776, with the widow of Earl Waldgrave, an illegitimate daughter of Sir Edward Walpole. Hi* brother Henry Frederick, the Duke of Cumber land, in like manner, had offended the King by his marriage, in 1771, with T<ady Anno Lnttrell. daughter of Earl Caruampton, and widow of Mr. Charles Horton of Catton Hall, Derbyshire. It is well-known that the late Duke of Sus sex braved hia father's displeasure, and, in defiance of that enactment, went through the ceremony of marriage with the late Lady Augusta Murray, second daughter of John, fourth Earl of Dun more, first at Rome in April, 1793, and again at St. George's Hanovorsquare, London, after the publication of banns on the sth of December following. The Duke, having been left a widower, mar ried as hia second wife lardy Cecelia Letitia Buggin, a daughter of Arthur, second Eai 1 of Arran, now Duchess of Inverness. In the like manner George IV., while Prince of Wales, contracted a secret marriage with the celebrated Mrs. Fitzherbert; but in none of the above cases was the royid sanction given to the union. A Royal Wedding. The Marriage of the Princess Isiuiae and the Marquis of Lome took |tw at St. George's C'luijxl, Windsor. In Lam don there waa little excitement- Mueh diaaatinfaethiu prevailed because tin wedding did not take place at Wrstiniu ater or nt. Paul's The town nf Windsor was crowded. There were thousands ou Uie Cnstlc (tieen, and the Eton boya iKVupierl tlu- Castle Hill. The police and soldiery kept a |wsange open for the invited guests, who came from leiudon by <qs cinl train ami were conveyeil iu royal carriages Ui the Clia|K*l, amid the ring ing of Vadla. The interior of the Chapel was appropriately i|e-ombil. The Mtn latera of the Caliinet, Foreign Emt*asaa dors, the Roytd family, and other jmini iuent iH-rmms were present. Of we briihd party tlie first to arrive was Uie lhike of Argyll, drcve-d iu full Highland costume; the Duchess of Argyll, rulsM iu doth of silver; the lVlnceas of Wales, in a blue satin rolie with a train of blue velvet, lending Uie Itoyal children, who were in Hcotrli coatnme. Then came the lVinccss t'bria tian, tlresiw d in pink satin, trimmed with white lace, ami Uie Indian Princess, binning wiUi scarlet and gold. Then Lord Lorno entered, while the choir aang an anthem. He was attended by his groouismeu, Earl Percy and I*>rd Lev etien Ctawar, AU thrti worn dnrmwl in the uniform of thr Volunteer Artillery of Argylewlure —a gneu suit trimiuod with silver. I.ord lsirtte liMiked j-ale and itervona. After a }>auM- the (Jfueou entered, mUwl in lilack satin, very low in the lieok, Mlie also wore vail, and a eoroniM ! of dnuuotiits. The Urim-e-ai Ismie fol lowe' 1 . Hhe wore a dreui of white satin, with white velvet train, a Honiton luee vutl, and a wreath of orauge flowers. Eight bridemaul* enrritwl Uie train. They were all daughter* of dukes and enrln, and tinsged iu silks, with ueek laees of wreaths and roses. They wore no vails. The Oueen and the Prinoemi Louise knelt at Uie altar for a few tno incut*, and Uien the Marquis of Lome advanced, and tiie Bishop of Loudon, assisted by the liudio|m of Wito'liester, W irceater, and Oxford performed Uie ceremony, ilie Queen gate awsy tlie; bride. Till- l'rilirtMSi s|> .e ber remton ses eltorly, but the nuswers of the Mar quis were inaudible. After the ww ' numy tin- Queen took Uie Princess in her arms and gave her s hearty kiss, while Uie Marquis of Lurne knelt and kianed Ui Queen's haud. The Royal )>arty then received con gratulations, and slowly quitted the C'kajNd. The erow d ehaerfid during tlieir (Ntoaage bm-k to the caatU, where aw ed diUf? breakfast was served to nil tiie guesta Tlie Royal party breakfasted alone ; Do speeches were made, but there was much hilarity. Two immense wed ding cuk were served, owl then Uie bridd retired. When alie i -sp]>eared she was in a charming trmveli ig coatuine of t'amplvell plaid. The bridal jmrty Unk carriages for t'laremout, where Uiev are to a]tend the honeymoon. The road waa lined with triumplial arches, and the |M*opie cheered the bride and bridegroom all the wav to their new home. rrorlamatloa from the President. Hf thr /'miilml r/ lif VH iter/ .St'ilto <✓ Am*rk*t: It is provided in the ConsUtu iun of the United States, Uiat the United States sliall jwoleet every Mute iu this U nton, on the application of Uie Legis lature, or of the Executive, " when the legislature cannot beconvened," against domestir violence ; and. H'Aereis, It ia provided in the laws of the United States that, in all cases of in surrection in any Stale, or obstrurtb n of the laws thereof, it altall be Ltwfnl f<ir the President of the United State*, on application Td the Legislature of such State, or of the Kxeeutive, " when the licgidatare cannot lie convened," to roll forth tlie miliba of any State or States, or to employ aneh j>art of the laud and naval forces aa shall lie judged necessaiy for the jHirjKwr of suppressing such in surrection. or of causing the laws to be duly executed ; and, IrHnaa I have received informa tion tliat combinations of armed men, unauthorized by law, are now disturb ing the )a-ace and safety of the citizens of South Carolina, and committing acta of violence iu saul State of a character and to an extent which render* the pow er of Uie State officers unequal to tlie task of protecting life and property, and *ecuring public order therein ; sua. lUAerras, The of said State is not now in session, and cannot be convened in time to uieet the present emergency, and the Kveeutive of said State lias therefore made appbenti in to me for such |<art of the military force of the United States as may l>c necessary and adequate to protect said State and the citizens thereof against the domestic violeucr hereinliefore mentioned. and to enforce the due execution of the laws ; and, HVievrrw, The laws of the United State* require that, whenever it may be ncconsary, in the jti<lf?ment of the Presi dent, to "use tlie military force for the purfMsie aforesaid, he idull forthwith, by proclamation, rommsnd such insur gent# to disperse and retire jwaceshly to their respective abodea within the limit ed time; Now. therefore. I Ulysses H. Grant, President of the United States, do here by command tlie person* composing the unlawful combinations aforesaid to dis perM ami retire jieaeeably to their respective nlwides withio twenty days from this date. In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand, and eatuwxl the seal of the United State* to be affixed. l>one at the City of Washington, the 24th dav of March, in the year of our Lord Eighteen hundred and seventy one, and of the Independence of tlie United States the Ninety-fifth IT. S. GRANT. By the President : HA MIL.TON PISH, Secretary of State, WOMKN IN Conrr.—The cause of wo men. in Wyoming says an Exchange, goes bravely on. At the last sitting of the District Court in Albany county, !oth the Grand and Petit Juries were equally composed of either sex. and Chief Justice Howe presiding, took advantage of this occasion to compliment iu the highest terms, the intelligence, discrimi nation, honesty, sad propriety of con duct with which tlie women acquitted themselves last session, saying they had gone far to vindicate tlie policy, justify the cx|>eriniciit and nxilize the expectations of those who hod clothed themselves with the right Tlie liar, and beach, and the intelligent men of tlie country had long felt that something was needed to improve and justifv our jury system ; something to lift it above prejudice and liassion, and iiubne it with a higher re gard for law-, justice, oath, and con science. His Honor then, expressed the opinion that tlie introduction of the new element furnished good reason to expect that to women we should ultimately lie indebted for those reforms which the unaided exertions of men had lieen incompetent to effect This is certainly a most flattering presentment of the results of enfranchising the sex in Wy oming, and wliat is better it seems to be substantially a just one. Is London, every eight minutes, night and day, somebody dies: every five minutes a child is born. The great city contains as many people as the whole of Scotland, twice as many as Denmark, three times as many as Greece, and 400 times a* many as Georgetown, 1). C. In its vast populntion of nearly 4,000,000 it lias 140,000 habitual gin drinkers, 100,- 000 abandoned women, 10,000 profes sional gamblers, 50,000 criminals known to the police as thieves and receivers of stolen goods, 500,000 habitual frequent ers of public houses, and 60,000 street Arabs. To keep this vast multitude of disorderly characters in something like obedience to the law, 6,000 policemen are necessary. Of the population of the city, only about 500,000 attend public worship, there being a million of adult absentees from church on every Sunday. An eccentric woman who had been unfortunate in two marriages, recently took a third husband without legs, for the reason, us she alleged, 'list he could not ran away from her. IVWNB MM USE VORT I>(I|IIII(IIII J The Sort kern I'aeiflr Railroad. nr M ITIN-XB COUTAX, nrn-niwunxirr or TKII I'KITKP WTATSa. Midway acr<OM the continent -at th Inml of twelve hundred miles of Lake navigation a tliouaand milea from llnffulo, the western terminus of the Erie Canal, and aa near to it by water aa Chicago a luuidred milea went of the longitude of Ht. lemis or Galena- -is j tiie young city of Duluth. the initial point of the Northern Pacific Kailroail. That great work, ao maguifleently eu (lowed by the Government, ia already l lining pusln-d rapidly weal ward, under ita energetic coiitrollera ; and liefore Uie auow 11 lea next Fall, it will lie eompleted to the West- ra line of Minnesota, where it eroaae* the Ib-d Itirer of the North- j which runs northward to lodic WinuejHg and one eighth of its distance pi the Pacific Ocean w ill have Imeu aecoinjdiah ed. Uotnnieneiug too, thia aeaaon on ita western line, tin- work will I* proas nited from ISIUI dirt-etiona, and long liefore the nation eelebratea its ('eaten uial Anniversary of Independence, the I-akea will lie united by iron lndn with j that Mediterranean of our Northwest, j Puget Hound. Of the auspieioiin influence of this enterprise.. which but a few years ago would have tieen considered iio daring, the moat (anguine of its friends have scarcely y#t a full realization. Even taking Chicago as a starting |>oiut, it will lie (e|<i Ht Paul, w here an arm of the Northern Pacifte lUilroul is reached i two hundfiod miles less to Pugt-t Hound than to San Francisco, lieaidea this, veaaela from the Golden Gale to China sail on what is called the grand circle, instead of in a straight line ; and any one testing thin by a string on a glolic will be surprised at the result, if they have not previously studied the effect'of the rotundity of the earth, and ita diminish ed pri itubcrauee as you go northward towards the Pole. Hence, when thejr h*i nulled eight liuudred milea from Han Franeisoo they are only one hun dred milea from the entrance to Puget Sound ; and tliia striking fact shows the advantage* tliia route will have in com manding the through traffic of Aaia with our Atlanta statea, of that portion of it which will )NIKS over the soil of that natiou on the mad to Enrojie. Nor ia this all. Development ia the great duty of the Republic, after all ita recent trial*. Resources are the gift of the Creator. Developing them depends on the work of man. Along the line of the Northern Paclftc Railroad, aa it fol lows up the water-courses, the Missouri aud the Tellowatone on this aide, and dracends by the Valley of the Columbia on the otlhT, a vast My of agricultural land is waiting for the plough, with a climate almost exactly the name as that of New York, except that, with less snow, cattle, in the larger jmrtion of it, can -rutwist on the open range in winter. Here, if cUmate and fertility of aotl pro duce their natural result, wheu railroad facilities open this now isolated region to settlement, will soon be seen waving grain fields, and bappv homes, and grow ing torn us ; while ultimately a cordon of prosperous statea, teeming' with popula tion, and rich iu industry aud cotiae uuent w eslth, wid occupy that now nn acvcl.qwsl and almost tnaoctaaible porti 1 of our continental ami. But Uii r>l U (urtaotk> *1 J in its jMUhwsv across the two range* of maun UutiH wtirh I (■►tod n severely the Ptrilif Kail mads Imilt on the central line, tod the overcoming of irhirh reflected neh wet]-deserved honor on their energetic builder*. At the l>eer Ixxlge Pkw, in M< in tana, where it rroai** the Rocky Mountains it# altitude above the mm l A,st<o feet leaa than the Union Pacific lUilnxul at Sherman, which i lutid to be the higi-ent point at which* locomotive can be found in the world. And on the Pacific aide of the continent it ia even more fortunate Prom Arizona up to the Arctic Circle the Columbia i* the only river which haa torn ita way through that mighty range, the Andes of North America. which in California is known an the Sierras, but which in Oregon eliangoa ita name to the Cascade#. Na ture has thus pn vided a pathway for the Northern IVific hood through tuear mountains, the acaling of which, ou the other line, at an eieralion of over aeven thousand* feet a moid wondertul triumph of engineering ), coat the Central Pacific com|Mny millions of dollars, and com pelled the m, for seventy miles, to main tain a grade of over one hundred feet to the mile— twice the maximum of the Northern Pacific at the most difficult poirt in its entire mute. It ia fortunate, also, in ita terminna on tlie Pacific enact. No one who haa not tieen there can realize the beauty of Puget Hound and its surroundings. One hundred miles long, but ao full of inlets and straits th.it its navigable shore-line measure# seventeen hundred and sixty miles, dotted with lowly islets. with gi pin tic trees almost to the water's edge, with wife anchorage every where, antl stretching southward, without shoals or liara, from the Strait* of Furs, to the capital and center of Washington Terri tory, it will be a magnificent mtrrpat for the commerce of the grandest ocean in the work!, the Pacific. • • The lauid Grant of the United States, exceed ing Fifty Millions of acrs in the winter wheat region of our nation (ten times aa large aa the area of Matt*), is doubtless sufficient for the completion of the road ; but, besides thin, millions of private means are already invested in it The btmds Iwsed on the Land Grant, and a mortgage on tlie rood itself in addition, are being sold a* rapidly as the money is needed ; and, an an iuvc#Lwenk yielding about eight per cent. jer year in cur rency. rank already with the best das* of ra&md securities. Ami thus the good work will go on with unchecked step to its final consummation, carrying the bleasiuga of settlement, developemenk civilization, antl Christianity with it in its progress, and literally causing the wilderness to blossom as the rose. Serlbner's Monthly far April. Smhtur't Monthly for Apnl is bright and readable. Among the articles that will attract immediate attention, may be mentioned Mr. t'rapsey's )pcr, "The Anthracite Problem?' presenting an in teresting history of the Pennsylvania cool trouble*,—iraeiuff tlie causes of tlie mvnt lirtke, am\ pointing out the means bv which such disastrous difficulties msy be averteL I)r. Holland discusses, in the •' Topic# of the Tune," "Pm fessional Morality," " The Temperance Question and tlie Pma" and " The San Domingo Question.' The illusirat ,Hl article* are " Life in the Cannilial Islands" (a second and exceedingly valuable paper from Mr. J. C. Bates) ; a curious microscopic disquisition on "The Fly;" an account of the recent " Discovery of Antique Silver" in Rmwxk and an article on " Children who Work." "A Breakfast with Alex andre Duma*." by Mr. John Bigelow. " A Gentleman's Prerogative a thril ing sketch of tlie " Martyr Church of Madagascar the beautiful closing chapter* of Hau* Anderson'* " Lucky Peer," and poems by W. 0. W ilkinson, (author of the Bondage of the Pulpit articles), and others. The publishers promise great attraction* for their sec ond volume, which begin* in May among other things a fine portrait of McDonald, whose " Wildfrid Cumlier mede" is proving so popular ; a new story by Mr*. Oliphant; some marvelous ehaptera of discovery ; sketches and portraits of American artists, Ac., Ac. Our renders should remember that this lively and sterling monthly is one dojlar cheaper than any of the other leading magazines. t'OMPUMKKTABT TO THK LAWY*BS.~A Lafayette, Ind., jury a few day# since listened to the evident* in n case on trial in the Common Pleas Court, on an action for debt, and then retired until the next morning, when the arguments of the counsel would be heard. They agreed upon a verdict, and the foreman put a memorandum in his pocket of the amount agreed upon, and were brought into court the next morning to hear the speeches. At their conclusion the fore man drew forth the memorandum and rendered the verdict of the jury, much to the mortification of the distinguished at torneys, and amusement of the judge and lookers-cn. Who Inanfc Their Uvea. I rnsa Uw ttlleaaha* Cvsslao Wlasaaa. J IJfr inauraaos baa beooms so gsnsrsi In Maw York Mi at if ia rars to find a maa of fcmlly. <* ens ha Viae wvbedy dependent njwa Ww. who has not laken ont s |Mittey. The fnttowlng art a few of the most |>roadnent merchants In New York who are Insured tor amounts ranging tram tM.OOO to WUO.OUO: fflp? iT-SST f '5S 25 .. p i. w!j >m, mm Ap4cCrv ,l '. S-2 i ivtim W.flU(, Mm ' WipSsmM Twd. Si 5, B I K tUsilluw, ino.w*- i: b-t.-eoo" (Sajj k k itaUM. kw.ws l.-is iwa.,. •SBL. si Why do theae aotid and eneeeaafal i-usiaaas men, who have proved their flnannal skill and uood Judgment by prsotiral roaalu, invest an Isrgtly in life insursoeaf IWcaase otpensaca ! lias taught them ita vatas tn guardttng sgstnat | Utigers arhirh aU men are lisbte -the danger 4 i ming sreumutsisd wealth by some stroke of ! wisfurtunr, and the danger of dying suddenly j with sflsus ao eaindiUoned thai no other hand ; can tarry them to a profitable Issue. Hut if sach men fi and acknowledge tbe ram j adntage t4 life insurance, how much mors 1 strongly do those t*-u* fits ronunend themsslrra to tb-sw of m-xWste means, and even still XHW> i to (hat large number whose furtunes are in the future, whose loved ooee srs dependent entire . Iv upou the eofituinsucw of the htalth and life uf the bead Of the family. ("an anv insurable man be said to have prow del for his family, who has left them to the riak of poverty in the event of Ida death f Life insurance ia a Msringa Hank which as citrea to everr man who mils himself if Ita betielteeni aid, that he shall Isave an inherit- MUS proportioned to tils prodtv-Uvti power, whether he dine to-morrow ur h*ea to axariiaa , Uist twodnctive energy for a tong life urn- Mo other institution can do this. There is no other way in whiefi a young man starting out 1 iu life, can be re of leaving his family provi ded for at bis death. Of every hundred who attempt to leave an inheritance from the sor <*s*ra of business, not five aueeeed. No man baa the right to expose a tenderly nurtured and deaiiv loved familv with no prutecuoo hnl the small .-hsnens, i.raeUraUv much lose than fivw in a hundred, that he will be one of the suc cessful ones. Within a very short Umc a well-known gentto tnan has suddeuly died, while in the midst of full health and apparent success, bv sa scrtdsnt. The gentintuui's success depended upon curry ing llirouith certain matu rs which he had in hand. His estate ia IwnknuK. Thanks to hia wise and loving fun-thought his widow aud children are in-ovidcd tor by the proceeds of his life policies. Not long since (ton. B. of our ar my, culling upon a friend to get hia pay for the coming mouth cashed, waa invited by thai friend, to insure his Ufo He was in splendid health and always needing alt his mousy, he thought be could not aSurd it. But. said hia friend, 1 will pay the first premium and yon mar repay me when convenient. No, he felt an fear. In three day- from that time, it waa too Int*, he was dead and hia widow destitute. Rvnrv one admits the advantages, the Mean ings conferred by life insurance, hot they com plain that the* cannot aflord tin rxprose sad so trv to excuse themselves to th< ir consciencm fir what they alreadv know to be a mglect of duty. But it ia not true uf any young man ra btalth and with the possiarion of his faculties, who is fit to have say responsibilities at aft, that he cannot insure for aomething. He may tM-rhspe not he able to insure for s Urye sum, cut certainly be can for s email one. How frw men of twenty-five there are who do not spend for nnnccrisesry Inxurirs, more than tweoty-fivs eetita i dt< ; jrt llul amount will tamer* i nut of tint i{r fur more than 91,000 in tlw Noam wumma Mittail Lira laarnanot Cowan, which la one of the Uet awl mat desirable in stitutions to be found in this or any other coun try. The nmat of this ootnjieny baa been trulr notable. It- growth ia healthy aa well aa (uanur. Ita poUrir* are not large. bnt are held by those wbo need aorb protection the moat and who are aieo the safest and beat riaka to be aasociakd with. The KotthwraUn ia a purely mutual can pent in which ail the mem bers are partners and all are equally ink-rated ta harm* healthy associates and ta baring the rtaka well aenttered. All thear things are im portant element* of strength. One oif the muat wilal potnta about a life flkturaoer company ia that of expeneea. Lame expenaea undermine a company, bat with small expenses, rare fully selected rtaka. and Iwjr interaat on invest ments, the wary beat results are obtained. The conspicuous economy practiced by the management of the "North western," ia beat shown by the "Spectator Ufr ("hart tor 1871," which give# the ratio of actual expenaea for the rear 1878 of iulmlm- bfe companies of the 'United Hutea. This ratio le .for nil amrfc. inj rrptn+r* of the companies, uirloding death loinea, ami of the enure hat. but three hare a lower ratio than the "Northwestern." This table glare the ratios time : Mutual Lab-of New York. MJI Economical Mutual 98.78 Charter Oak ..... Mil Northwestern J7J9 Bring a Western company they are able safely to lend moner an strung security at ten per cent, interest, while they keep a toeerre calculated at four per cent, interest. A sum of money in Tested for 90 tears at ten per cent, compound interest trill rleld more than six the amount it would produce at atx per c-nt , and nearly flap tones aa much as at eight per cent. Another essential point ia that an insurance company ahaO be well managed ; and in this respect no better can be found, and tbe remarkable growth of the society ia doubt less largely owing to tbe general eooAdcnec felt by the js-ople tn the managers. The total amount of losses paid Mnoe the or ganixalion ia 18M to Jan. I,IKTI is 11,899,858J0 of which 8177,085.11 were paid during the year 1870. IU total income f.r lIW VM $3,870,570,07. and its interval receipts were 3480,707 *. Pu nun the rear H loannd on real rotate security worth two to fire time* the amount loaned, 31.<00,000.00, at ten per cent. Interest. Ita as sets are nine million dollar*. Whatever aor plu* remain* after the expenses and kisses of the year are paid, and a enftio. nl amount re served to meet a'l folate luJabUos. cxlrtilated with interest at four per cent., is retained t the policy holders. This return of surplus, commonly called the dividend, is distributed to each member according to the amount which be has furnished toward making it- This is be lieved to be strictly equitable and is the plan slop:cd by moat of the <4.1.-st and best compa nies. A note will be taken for a portion of the premiam. or in ntbar wonls the ccsnpaay will loan a portion of their asset* to their own mem bers. such loan being fully secured by the sur render rahir of th. policy This is a very good investment foi Ihe company and perfectly safe, sn.l oftentimes it is an advantage to the insured. It enables the insurer to obtain a larger amount than his cash payment woukl alone procure. and if be die* early, the family gain by it. If on the other band, be lives loog and becomes able to par back the loan, supposing that it is not cancelled by returns of surplus, he can do so. There are many persons who need a large insurance at the beginning, and for them the note is an accommodation. Take it all in all. there la no company which offc-ra greater advantages than this Giant of the West and we advise everybody to examine oarefnll* its publication* where all Ibe informa tion is given which can only be hinted at in our present space. The San Domingo (Jne*tlon. Commissioner Wade has finished his rejiort, and submitted it to his brother Commissioners. It begins by detailing the work of the Commission, and goes on to describe the political condition of the country. Mr. wode tak s the ground that Bscz is the tir fortn President of the Republic, and that he is in full and pracefnl possession of the Government ; that Cnbnd is a mere bandit, living in a mountain district, where he ia sustained by Havti. The people of San Domingo, Mr Wade aays, are overwhelmingly in favor of annexation. They are describ ed as a quiet, orderly, industrious race. The charges of corruption against Uni ted State officers in the negotiation of the treaty of lfltat are branded a slander*, without foundation. The report, which is favorable to annexation in every par ticular, close* with the remark that " to embrace this opportunity to plant our republic institutions and cstaluisli civil litierty and American civilization upon that lieautiful and productive island, thus laying the ground work of a great free atid prosperous State, would add another to the achievements of onr Republic, worthy to rank with the great events of our history, and wonld be equally bene ficial to the people of both countries." Dr. Howe indorses Mr. Wado's report in eve% essential particular. Mr. White objects to the closing paragraph of the report, but Mr. Wade ia firm in his de termination that it shall not be stricken out, and Dr. Howre fully agrees with him and will sign it HOM.NAMPCL.IBM. -A young lady was addicted to this affliction. Knowing her failing, her friends made a point of lock iug-tlie door and securing the window of her chamber in such a manner that she could not possibly get out. One night these precautions were unfortn nstely overlooked, and in a paroxism of somnambulism she walked into the gar den behind the house. While there she was recognized by some of the family, who were wnrned by the noise she made on opening the door, and they followed and awoke her; bat such was the effect produced upon the nervous system, that she almost instantly expired. A storv is good until another is told : A Wyoming paper says that the people of the Territory will soon " abandon woman suffrage as both mischievious and impracticable." The Market*. raw roar. RRW C*TTUI ROW W> POM. TUM FCIAOO Bow-Lm M a .00 OrawMl re • .lib ■ fffw H!. II I. II ir inTTT-fT -ri 111 ,||Uf ,09 Omni tnemra • w ruxi.r.>in wniN* era • t JO ut,>sti are • ia OMM***aeiia. i.eo • *.J* w*t-~ whr wrao. i.n if* ** MM* I*l a 110 www a***■! lite* I*o • IJO •**—W**wa too • Ll* MM* ll# ll ll.fcl.tr -MM* JO • .01 MttJ WM*ra TT .01 ***!>.-Clovfcr llg* .10 fMI ■ o tu o***—W**Wm * • .Tl era* MM* 10JO *MJO Urn Ita* .MM Waufctr 0lb JO •cm*—aw* m a M ffcuw. B. SO a .10 -• Timer ... .00 • .11 WaaWrti '*<aarjr U a .10 hw*rln*l*M Man Crania MM I rWfcary .11 .10 aklnnMl OT a .10 (At* 10 a .S* aa** era* -SO fIICiOU. Barra*—Cpaini. flJ# ill 5i8n0.................... OJO it" rurtiffclM OJO a I.M ■formOram*—CMatara 4J# a 4.10 JafMtoe U0 UN *aa*-Uv* OJO • OJO Mill- !!*—Oun" to(Wfc 0-00 a OJO rvwm- WWW Wixw bin OJO * T.St but OJO a OJO hwrftwWM. an a on Car*- X" S .00 • J# BiiWf—•*. t *•• W a JO (M-5.5...i 00 a JO I Brr -Ma s 10 a .10 W*m efctwq. * i. **w ij* un " Mas. MW l. • 1.00 Stfe W Una—SleM MJ# esaeo MmiA DrC*m* an • TJO Kmr OJO a OJe .Hnfc-wi.. am a in aoe a 1.80 waaa0.............................. LSS a it* (Wo* 11 a -ISM oi Jo a JO H U0 a LlO tUsuar . a .SO Ltae M a .10 aijujv. fmi-*** * IJ* a LIS | KtU* LISa US Br* am*.. .00*1.00 II e JO kon -MM* 11 a Jo u*n-an** JO a .w iiuLtMCLraifc. Ku>t-a-r*ea. Kan.. OJT aan WMUT— w*nc* B*A... IJO a in www m a l.n oora—reww .n a oo Ma* Tt * Bum- ■* S*rr 10 ta* JS MmhAV ........... • IJI ; Jnni ran See*.'.'.!'. iiMem .ots B*s* Jl a JOJO OOOKT FOB Aran, well maintain* the reputation ao joetly due thia veteran. Ito platca are lib-like, while its foohions era all that the ladies can drams. Cruder kra been ao long in the front rank, that we always expect it superb and we an not often disappointed. We do not believe we shall be ao kmg a* L A. Oodey lives, and we hope be baa a long leaec of life and plenty of work in him far yean to come. A Tut OH OUR— A few days since, at High Pnurn . nmr LOMVMI worth, K*n ■m, while John OH wss engaged in r4.nih(t out a well, the walk oared in and barfed him. It waa supposed that be waa kilhd. and the digging him out waa not hurried. Fivedays after the koridrat he waa roadbed, and found to he alive. * Aa aooo aa he waa taken oat he dadsred himself all right. He drank a gtam of whiaky. ate aome food, and smoked a pipe of tohaooo ; bat several hours afterward be commenced sinking, and aoon died. Tbi purest and sweetest Cod-Liver Oil in the world ia Htnsn A CtsruA'a made on the sea-shore, from fresh, se lected liven, by Caswmx, HAZARD A Co., New York. It ia aliaolntdy port ond imk Patients who have once taken it prefer it to all others. Pfaysi nan* have decided it aaperior to any of the other oik in market. A XEBTor* man. whaae life was made miaenble by the clattering of two black smith*. prevailed upon both of them to remove bv the oiler of a liberal compen sation. tYhen the money was paid down, he kindly inquired what neighborhood thev intended to remove to. " Why, sir,*' replied Jack, with a grin on his phis, "Tom Smith moves to my shop, sod I move to hi*." Hungary has eight monthly magazines and four quarterly reviews. None of the latter has a circulation of over two thousands copies. IMPROVED TIN-LINED LEAS PIPE. Prior —■ no—lmOtnlllll To asMafr tba pteabr ■m tooaf lb- paaSafcli of doofca aa fpußcl . _ Mtoawateli—i bimbaaa WpAT&W'XfSZZ STS2l*is Vs-^r Iho mi i immw SrtSrta M* Is —a. W WHb too man— saSk, m l.aro ate nfmf th pw par mat paarti Ml' sab. Ifklia* jt <ne( aw Uajay jfog^btw rr.-SSrSKsrSsiS . la—i ate p-mmtoaa maM (all aito 1. Stote wMS 1 wma." St3s(smmtfm Bajalaw ate maanisnii ts bp aatea atefe arftei 1 liiaatiir'i aaMar, wMkasa tensawa to M apglb of tka pfp-L Tip-Lapte late Ftp* m U—a a voate far aS a-oa. Bi Ha ma Late ate Rtwr fa—war Iron fete an ■—fbnwaf Uk- "*l*"** torjawa. tar. CVnwlar ate auwsaa of *pa fnw WuntPd la ba tei—a. 1 ate am larabta abwa Late Plpoaf i niiwu"Wliwf aiia ate bona, ktow to I'olwells, Shaw A Willard MTp. Co* la. aia C awaa-a at.. Wear Tmfe. Ate, —wwla—anaaaf SteA-Tls tops, Bbill bate. . I—d Tip*. Satoar. Ae. OrSaaa ■ ilnlal Sa SalM by at bau rat a—w. ■wfaaa ratto." TaSWialib liba aab ate atom wwbanl- I, Iwro vbaa nWlas abal far tba a— af ralM. Itaf ipqwlra abal a waiSlCwa baa Aawa lor aabaaw. baian tba* la waa. Hoawator'a Sa—b IHlai aaato ba Mat —aa irtampbaatij. ate bawai Ma iwiuaaai |i*ialailM WW* raaiteaa. Tba aaSai t tewHwSlawaMaw M awn to jw< ii>aialby tba liwiai i siiabb in—ahla TbstSNtoi of laaar ate 11-ar r—ylalai. n laWlpit law, warawwa ! ar what tbla ataodate nnlaraUao baa iSanaai la aw— a—liar ta baa aaa la tba (abate WaaMaaaar to .to aai 111 wa IB Sad a aohnaa of proata af Sa -aaitoty pn> uaa adto aaastor to Uto bawl af tolwiiiiiiiiii to Ma ton* rMlinaaßy aa— ate -praada Cbarlataa- ate ifiaa tfWW, toOHMO of HMHW IfMMhl VBB haadi ate do— tba tbroa> of toaaMda. tob bapbaaanl I MuiWlaaa. aa aatoaUMMaa tor tba towlr wtoab Mr to ITtotodNMaak Bpaal.b Aaaarlra. Caaada. ate tba Waal : lad—. bat oafr awwiate to a aan baotodattowA IwtbM roaib daiaa iiar of Ibaaa m aSliwn. daebwa 'f—wiwsaf la>atnaa tea " PAIN KILLER. I'ERHY DATIb A SOS, Prsjirletsrs provednm, r. l 1840. 1871. The Most Popal&r Medicine Extant. OVER THIRTY YEARS ton TW* lirnmovcaoa or Perry Davis' PAIN KILLER. Aftor Ihtoto toa' Trial, tha "Palp ROtor" mar ba JwA tf alylad Um ra madietwa af tba world, far tbaaa ia we rtartoa of tba rloha!' wbieh H baa sod fa—dl Ida aiadso— whan ithaasM boan lai—b aaad and bi*h!y pnaad Moaaoaar, Than to— btowato to atoab itbaa mni pmaad itaatf to bo wall aitoatte for Ibo oaaa of i Bi •idwrahla -ao-tj of d—oaaa ; 'it la admlnbh teTad far arao raoa It baa loot woae el ita *aed aaaaee to rapeto te Trials, bad H aawtlwaoa to occupy a ynaaiaaatraaMma ia aaary lan.ilt malinn. obaa* ; sad la aMll late.lwd Tba moat anqualiA-d laatimnaiab To ita rbtaea, from paaaaaa of tba hbtbaot rh.taetor ate rasnwaiMßto. rhrsuan nt ih- Site laanaetabillW raaawußMte i aa a most atfaotaal oraimratioo for Urn artHtetgn of I>al; w not uni- Mm Mmsk oaar torni for Ibwiwa. Celo. *lV*"' ' or iT wrt *7 OT j ate I—toNraniab to for all sach mmiilainia. aa wall aa lor Drapapn*. Uaar isnts attolwte to aooh wabootete popwtei*. Tba win .11, tor whioh tha Paia Killar an anfmbnr ewiw. an too wU known To rn*<ra raondtnlatiem ln.ttoa adwrtte mant Aa an aitotial, and mtanial madioine lbs Pain Killar stands nnriaallad. UMsS—iof isg^g.sp&tefegig pn.parua. baaa Wn fnlhr tnatad all oaar tba world, ate it naad owl; to ba knawnto bo prate, an- Sold by all Draariata. J. I. HARRIt A 00., rrapciaton. CIMCtMMMtI, O. PERRY DAVIS A PON Osasiwl Agsmts, Demand for kmrkm Wlf*** If V* aend many mora Admiral* and (kMrib to I'lfi"' mnathe aunt olo onlT rich mm knivp* rroeut no il the capital* of thra® I*l™#" Htntra If man of note from the IJni tad Htotra ran be got bold of, WiraJJf it mar be, it ia the opportunity furawn td for the reunion of • wWf alitiee, repraeooited in * P"*** ssr ss^-^'£sS we now on the bunt for the ebej f f * life alliance with orara clmraotaK W> ter of the aovewogttt H rat I* l Atneri * it ha* km# been the habit to ray** voung mu m** worthleoi" when he doe* not apply hiwdf to even wrra, make the rale of hto!Kf> • daily indulgence ia tippKag eieitoOßrato. Of *ii% <<l fdmnii Ml I nation, from peranoe, or linking—th* withering enree of the northern nee. A ••worthlra*" Italian, toraevra long new he hie Wily * * Europe not Ira* in habita than in hiotory. tint there, with en abn*t opnefiural force, many b*lf-won.-out iUtinwm mo kept up. it to hMy. fay?-.**?™ that young Indira from of beauty and fashion. well akillad in the Ann art of dram, and with rich fathers to limit the golden now with which the world moves, haw# quit'' M touch aa hare any others a weoknem | for the firtitiooa appellation* with which, from the time of the jobber llarona, taaca j ra of aocioty hare oontrived to mpmmto ; thcmaelvm with more or lera towA ant highly artificial diatinrtiota. The ban*- j aume mtra Tibba. who dram* ami dene so wall, dora not find it at all difikwit, with a marriage contract, and the magic of a dowry, to be converted into the March >M* Pmrahpipeo or the Coostrao Pop i corn. One who bra long been the cor respondent of omr Government ta theee i*rU. tell me that the raqerat ia now frequently made that iaquirim mar be j net on foot to learn all that ia pomiMe to know aa to the penonal and aoeW al ltira of the praUmh-r. and the height, number of branches, and length of tb* root* of the family tone. The qneetooo ; ia naturally asked, "la the egg from, which omr ariatocracy ia to be bathed to |be laid ia Italy r Little ran be agaiaat the union of the two rama maO inatancra ia which aneh union ia the ra eolt of purely affections! innttncta, end j not of (ilw motive* of ambition. There are example* enough to proae that Amer ican and Italian marriage" may be ra happy aa any other; and. for the qnra taun f the mingbng of mora, it may be raid that the native languor of the one may beta to calm the cseesfEve reetlera nee* of the other. Hew te Act In CM* af PeJaenia*. The Jamntal tf Hmhk says; What ever k done moat be doneqoiekly. The mutant % person t known to have swal lowed poison by design or wondent, gire. wafer to drink, mid or warm, aa fast aa possible, a gallon or mom at a time, and aa fast aa vomited drink mora; tepid water is beat, m it opena the poem of and promotes vomiting, and thna girea tbcnedintmn to the pofeonoas article. If patina tiegina to he fed* in Ik Itowek, it ahowa at least that part of the poiaon baa paaaed downward ; then large and repeated injection* of tepid wntar should oe (riven, the object in both earn lining to dilate the poiaon aa qnfekiy and aa kirgelv aa poaaible. Do not wait for water—take that which la neareat at hand, eold or warm, for every aaeood of time nrad ia of immenae importance; at the aame time send instantly for a pbr nkian, and aa aoon aa he corona turn the caae into his hand*, telling him what yon hare done. Thia sample foot cannot be too widely pubtkhed ; it ia not meant to my that drinking • gallon or two of simple water will cure every caae of poi soning ; but it will core many, and henehta all by ita rapid diluting quality. " Fblix," in Jfomfs Otelk, writing of New York Reporters, says: " Many of our moot prominent editor* were saw reporters, including James Gordon Ben nett, H. J. Raymond, Chaa. A. Dana, Tbeo. Tilton. Man ton Marble, Jamea Brook*. David O. Oroly. and Joe How ard ; whik the occupation ia forever made honorable by the name of Charles Dickens, who was long a reporter for the London Morning Chnmiek, and gained much of his extraordinary acquaintance with the world in that poanfon." COOK'S EXTRA. 1000 r^i c^iy.%n r rV?5 r ■■mnw tobw wkw WM mm gHnHKwW <Qw eRNs mapat" COAL OR WOOD at —tr Mew mwtsa mm. ■ to*h la boas aa4 m towns b warns Ctosfcto Ustwn. —Wr adapted I*am emu or nam. rrm VTTlg.%■. how mods teMbaa—. wMbawt tows* V Miflm Win maw. V ftia* (Inamß. 0a— I Jng ucriEtof iaaa at A **•—. tar (9f—to. ikm,AaTOXIjUUH? V. _ SMi I*. (JL MfkSS. r* K* KRAL PrirßAillO ACKXri asgaoiTm TSOXTM. sra txz FRAG KANT BAPOLIENE (hat KtdGlean,ate all IMbf (tolitteat CtoShtot; nam num. Unan. Tw. St.. ' lit*. aUtmtt Sw a fc>wa St.. M—Toab. m dSaSa aa. Chi— A nvirr •*< aa ©—la Or fwm. /h if T MRLf gdwam^ji n Colorado TrrrHarr Bwt ▼ vtwagwr nte* (mm Wtno. ttorsfcwm. Cater wr Ho laamia at a aaat af onb Two to IV t Oners a aalUa. Aar tonaar, tonaar'a bar. w am aa* abwasa waiaMnn a rar. ia bmn tntHti. !to miaw panted- Fall and amlual atstb ivoderatand te Itf MR Mit *SOOO REWARD Ka • parlor artuli- H a* * par */ 4 m irk. wawt a aMwatroa aa aahaaaaa at or Baai koar. to laiiadmoat bob * Hand HTkbt Wr ■■ ifHi ttaa, ukaA aa B> aaar. JVm't mia lhk ctlaarr. Sainni* toaa. Mm ttoriam Mb Who Wi&iam St.. H. Jr.. "■ 1 IkaartKWTi St.. Oman. 81. NO BUtT. NO SALE! 4-TON HAY SCALES, 878.00. Rattonw Ufuattv Saari tor Ftaa Frtaa U Urn tot. uwau r. Lands ii Soliesiffiwi Tie Atlantic u4 Pacific R. R. To. Hare toaahMMa—■ of bam oaalitp. aa law atadM Tbaaa lands ara paot ktaalkl imto atarkst, honor baao KSrSuSTlaffi .^nof A*aat aatUar* ara coming in. and to than <•>..* ara sales mad*. Tha liaat Areata. with abort, mild o.ntrrs and hp from iraat jOor. Sixth and WabmtW, MrEmim. ton. mhmmlUH rfM THE WOKKIXO CI.AM. -Wa art A BOW praparsd to fwrnkah aO claiara with eonataot employment at homo, tha whoW of tha time a* tor tba amirs moment* Bwrinma now. licbt and prsMaMs. Vormmn of rithar ana aaao.v aarn from or. lo #tnor (rea ls in*. and a proportional aum br deeoting their whole tmototfaahminem. Bopaand (Hriaaan nearly aa much a < aaaat. That all who aaa thia not>ca mar aaod thoir o drear, and laat tba badness. wa maka tb ammraMled rArr: To auch aa an wot wall natiadi 1. wa will aaod $1 ISTt o SLK^SSV and copy of FA* Ps4e XMararp rtua,M<aw—ewe of tha largaak and bam family newspaper* pbbltabad-aU oret fraa b mad. Raadar. if yoa want paranasal. profitable E.O. AUm. tOa. Aw—to. Maiwa. RIBBANS BROTHERS, MANCFACTCREKB OF Priitei Wrtmii. Puir With tba Pnrabassr'A AdaarUaataant nail IT Printed on aaar? abaet, making It tba moat direct aa wail aa tba thaipaM adrtrt tarmaat aaar rat oaad. Aiao. .1 oh ban a< Hemp, Jute, Ootton and Flu Twines, A"- SIZES 25 FAIR 8T m NEWARK, H. J. OKAtN BAGS. All tba Standard Branda at rary loaraat ratoa. Oar hwar RIBBANS BROTHERS, T. H. D- Afrtil Ho H
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers