Three Swuuins, "A cap A* bar*she said, la spring-time ere the bloom was old : The enwaoa wln was poor and cold By hAonth's rirtuir red. "AcapßjrpcvsH hew low. How sonnjft W • rda 1 ad sit the wtitte Her hhiNbwwsvii'ptttta with a mUr, Like fiUUfcer aner enow. .\ i - "A enp Sne memory!" Cold cap that one moat drain alone ; While AIITUUTN wind# are np and moan Across the barren sea. Hope, memory, love: Hone for latr morn, and kens for day. Ana memory ftr the evening gray And dove. ""! ..Jill.- t J Farm, harden and tlnnaeheld. CALVES fattening for the butcher should Hick the cow, and should ho tied Up in a warm. thy. well-ventilated apart ment, that in not" too light. Keep them as quiet aaWqihlc, niwl feed the cow liberally. After the Uiirvl day there is litUe danger of milk fever. Is TKK nrovtsoe among oattle-vaccin ation is a *ucvs*. When the disease breaks out in a herd, take a small drop of the virus which is found in the tangs of a deceased animal, and in noon late this vims in the tail of the animals which arc still sound. In every esse, without exception, this sort of vaccination has ppvwrved the remainder of the herd. IMPROVEMENTS or TJIE Bgyoo CATTLE. —According to Pfofosaor Schmied, a permanent improvement of tlie hreed of cattle is inseparably connected with the following proposition, namely : That calves must ho nourished with a sufficient quantity of thou toothers milk for a much longer period than has hitherto been the custom ; all other method* having refer ence to this same object being insufficient without a proper adherence to this fun damental commit"ration. At/ru-ttiftrtil Junta ROUJXM ORAJX nc THE SWaa.—lf farmers would loe4 at the theory of roll ing tlie wheat and rye held* in the •spring, says an exchange, it would be re sorted to much more frequently than it now is. Ikvasiv uallyr the winter and spring have Iveen so favorable to these crops as not to render it neceaaarv. But in three seasons out of four it is neces sarv, and doobtkas adds considerable to their product! vereoa. The thawings aud freezing* of the ground, throwing or spewing out of the roots and exposing them to the drying wind* of February and March, very seriously affect the grain. Passing a roller over aa soon as the soil is fit to enter upon, presses hack the roots into their bed*, and gives them a fair grip again apon the support oa which the crop must depend. This must lie apparent to every one who will at its operation. We have uo doubt thai rolling clover fields that have been badly thrown np tv front, would also have a moat Wmeikaal effect. Gumma Fqnnn FOR DOMESTIC AXI MAI*. —The practice of grinding or crmh ing hay and straw, instead of the usual method of chopping it, as an article of fxHi for ilommU) tummils i coming ▼erv much ink) favor. The digratibilitv of these substances, is is well known, is much increased by steaming and soften ing' with water ; but a very marked im provement in the condition of cattle, it is said, is speedflv observed in conse quence of the adoption of the process referred to. It is maintained, also, that horsey fed with ground hay are mnch lew liable to suffer from attack of the colic than when the food is chopped, and that an appreciably smaller quantity will supply sufficient nutriment, loss passing off in the form of undigested fiber. The operation of grinding is effected by mill, stones," or any other conveniently-adapt ed arrangement, a very soft article of food being produced, which is extremely acceptable to the cattle.— AqricUnrril Bmnau. . ORCHARD GROSS.—A correspondent of the New England Fttrmrr says : " The more I become acquainted with this grass the better 1 like it. Not the least among its merits is its hardiness. It stood the hot, dry weather last summer better than any other valuable gnat with which I am familiar. It should be sowed thick. I think two bushels not too much seed for nn aero ; and it must l>e cut esrlv, before it is full bloom, to have the hav of the best quality. On rich, moist land it is as snro to yield three crops in a rear, as is rod-top to yield one. Unlike elovfr it never im-Ltoee to blossom but once in a season ; the second and. third crops are mostlv leaves, and the best feed for cows in winter ever grown. It is a good grass to sow in early spring with clover, but without gram. Two good crops of leafv kiy may be counted on the first vear, and three crops a year afterwards, as long as the land will carry it out. I believe it the best of grasses to sow where I intend to keep the crop up by top dressing. The dredging should be spread immediately I.os* of Lire in War. The fearful losses of human life, in curred on I Kith sides, in the eon flirt which lias just been concluded in Europe calls to reflection the number of men who have been wurifirrd to the demon of destruction in the wars which have been wßsed from I*ls to 1864. In these wars 2.762,000 men have fallen; of whom 2,148,000 were Europeans, and 614,000 from other parts of the globe; which gives an average of 48.800 per annum These figures do not include those who have died from disease during the differ ent campaigns. The Crimean war cost 508.600 men, thus divided: Russians, 256,000 ; Turks, 08.000 ; French, 107,1 W0; English, 45,000; and Italians, 5,0-0. In the Caucasus, between 1829 and 1860, 330,W0 men lowt their lives. The Indian rofr.lt reckons its 196,000 lives. The Knsso-Turkish war, from 1820 to 1829, 193.000. Tb Polish insur rection in 1831, 190.000 men The French campaigns in Africa. 146,000. The Hungarian insurrection 142.000. The Italian war, 129,870; of whom 99,874 died in the field or from their wounds, and 33,000 from varioiia dis eases. The total number of lives lost in Europe, during the war* from 1792 to 1815, amounted to 5,530,000; which gives, for the twenty-three years, an average of 240,434' deaths jer vear. Onr own recent struggle has left equally appalling results. From the last census of New Yerk wo get a slight idea of what the whole Union—North and Bonth— must have hast in men. In 1860 the population of New York was 3.880,727 ; in 1865 it was 3,831,777. This great and prosperous State had lost during the war 48.950 persons. , During the recent engagement of Mr. and Mrs. Barney Williams in Philadel phia, a woman with an infant, attended one of tlie performances. The baby kept an incessant cry. At the end of the play, Mr. Williams was called before the curtain. The baby wan bawling lustily. Mr. Williams looked around for a mo ment, and then said : "Shure there's a nurse wanted." A roar of laughter followed. When the mirth had subsided, the woman with the infant arose and replied: '■ No Irish need apply." There was a tremendous buret of ap plause, amid which the woman, with her musical baby, triumphantly retired. THE Mayor of Worcester, Mass., pub lished this brief card in the papers of that city on Easter Monday; "The ap pearance of several young* men, and one or two not so vely young, about the streets yesterday afternoon, ; that some of the drinking saloons might I have been open. The undersigned, in a spirit of Christian love, rather than in any authoritative form, earnestly requests all keepers of saloons to be carefnl how thev break the law of the Sabbath, as well as the law of the land." CLOSE VOTING.— By a vote of 99 to 98 the House have concurred with the i Senate to repeal the law establishing ihe 4th of March special sessions of Congress, j The Speaker could have made it a tie vote and defeated the measure, but de clined to do so. IT is reported ,that not less than sevue women have appeared in different parts of Great Britain, each of them claiming to be the lawful wife of the late Earl of j Aberdeen. j>v" *rjr >* Hnmmarj of New*. GENERAL SHERMAN is on a trip to tha Indian country. Tttna are 15,000 Italians in New York, and SO,OOO French. THE West has been viaited by a severe storm, doing immense damage. THERE are in France at jireaent fifty nine persons sentenced to deatli. A M Aiwa farmer, whose bog caused a runaway accident, had to pay SI,BOO damagee. TttK fireman, John O'Brien, who lost hia life at a fire in Albany, had an imjioe ing funeral. ARRANOKMEKTU are on foot for an ex {svaitiou of woolen fabrics in St. Louis in October next. AOAIM the rumor lias Ivecn revival that the Kmpreea Eugenie will occupy a eot tage at Saratoga this Hummer. A NASHTA (N. H.) paper has jmt the tuune of Schuyler Colfax at the head of its columns for President in 1872. ITONRKT It TRKAOWAT, a Chicago mer chant, fell down the hatehwav of his warehouse and was instantly killed. A COMVa*uos of Uie Oernvan teachers of Uu> Unites! States ist< be held in Cin cinnati during the first week of next August. AT the charter election in Albany, the IVmoorata elected their ticket hv about the usual majority of from l.tbki fit 2,- tk*l votes. THE Apache Indians have again gone on the war-path in Arisona, and have captured a large wagon-train and mur dered two men. THE domestic relations of Prince Xa jxileon and his wife are so inharmonious that they will not even reside in the same hotel in Geneva. A Bosroji pajver is authority for the story that John O. Whittier never eom jHmtHl a stanza without bringing on an attack of neuralgia. THE remir of the SingajH>re and Batavia cable has been eff<- prietoro of all the dailv newspapers in Cincinnati, for advertising a grand gift concert by the Milwaukee Musical Socie ty. IRISH immigation to this country, which wis formerly the most extensive, is now rapidly on the decrease, and the English arrivals arc becoming more numerous. BUFFALO gusts are killing large num bers of horses, mules and cattle along the Missouri River. The recent overflow of the Missouri has made them and mos quitoes very numerous. A REVEXt'E return resolution was offered in the U. S. Senate by Mr. Sher man, of Ohio, favoring a reduction of revenue to the amount needed for actual expenses. It was laid over. The late editor of the London Obtereer, who recently died in his 99th year, is said to hare been the oldest journalist in the world, baring been an active mem ber of the profession for over sixty Tears. A STOCIHOL* correspondent writes that not less than 50 persons are suspected of hsving poisoned the King of Sweden, but no one of them can be sufficiently implicated to warrant arrest, much lew trial. THOMAS HODO.ES, the noted desperado, horse-thief, and murderer, whoshot and fatally wounded Whit look, at Staunton W. Vs., was token from the jail, and hanged at a place about one and a half miles from Staunton. J. B. BKKWKH, editor of The FuirJUld COHH'V (Conn.) Democrat, while attempt ing to get on a railroad train at Bridge port, fell beneath the wheels. His leg : was broken, and he was seriously injured about the body and heal. THET have a new style of temperance society in North Georgia. The members may drink anything they pay for, but pledge themselves not to "invite any one else to drink, nor accept an invitation from any one else. The society has regular officers. THE cotton crop now arrived at the cotton porta of the South, promises to lie the largest since the famous one of 1859- 60. The Savannha Republican, baaing its [ estimate on the number of bales already received, savs that the crop will reach 3,750,000 to" 4,000,000 bales. 1 T HE sal story of the two little children of Brunell Bonaparte, Wickford, Rhode Island, who were buried alive by the falling in of the wall of a cave, has a sad sequeL Mrs. Brunei], who was ill, died from the shock, and Mr. Brunell, the father, has became insane. AT the funeral of a lady in Newburg, there were present two couaina of the deceased. Boon after their arrival in Newburg, one of the ladies, of Brooklvn, received a dispatch announcing that her little son had been ran over and serious ly injured, and in about an hour, the other lady received a dispatch informing her of the sudden death of her husband. EX-GOVEHHOB Leland Stanford left Albany, N. Y., about twenty yean ago, and went to California, taking with him great expectations and almost DO money. Fortune favored him, and now says the Trot/ Prett, he is worth $10,000,000, owns a line of Pacific steamships, three lines of stage-coaches, thirteen gold minea, nineteen factories, forty-five farms, and 1 several first-class hotels. McnnoTA RAILROAD BOJTDS. —On the 2d day of May, 1871, the people of Minnesota are to vote upon the adoption or rejection of an act which has been prepared by the Legislature with a view to terminating the controversy long waged in that State on what are known as the loon amendmr nt bonds. As origi : nallv framed, the Minnesota constitution forbade the loan or gift of the credit of the State to any individual, association, I or corporation, but by an amendment, adopted by a popular vote of 25,757 yeas to 733 nays on the 15th of April, 1858, I an issue of $6,000,000 of State aid bonds wss authorized. Under thia authority ; 82,295,000 of bonds were issued, and by ! another amendment adopted November j 6, 1860, the prior amendment was ex punged from the State constitution. On this, long debate has been had, the Stale authorities denying that the State is amenable to the full amount of the bonds issued, but offering to give the bond holders in return for a quittance certain ' wild lands belonging to the State, and the bondholders are insisting on the face of their bonds. To terminate this dis pute the election above mentioned is fixed for the 2d of May next. Too MUCH DOG.— An lowa editor lias got himself into difficulty. Some time 1 since he advertised that he would take "a good dog in payment for a year's subscription." The neit day twenty j three dogs were taken to his office, and two days afterwards a score or more of farmers, living at distances from eight to ; twenty miles, appeared to subscribe for the paper, tendering dogs in payment. I And to cap the climax, the Mayor of tnat eity has notified him that the tax of 81 must be paid on every dog owned in the place! He is in despair. As long as mankind shall continue to bestow more liberal applause on their destroyers than on their benefactors, the thirst of military glory will ever be the i vice of the most exalted characters. A Western Western papers are always ahead ID the wav of romance. Of all the stories wo have lately soon, the following baa the moat clear and easily detected ring of the dime novel about it: 'there lately ni>|*aml at one of tlia jiolioe station* of Chicago, asking pite ous]* for aid, a sun-burnt, trawl worn, ragged, bat not mwonob woman, who, if her biography i true, u a fair exam ple of tht tuipoetical romance of modern Indian life. Hrr fat bar, she navs, waa a Wraadotb chieftain, but Uvoraing par tially civilized, lie married a white wo man and adopted civilisation for a polite lising and an earl,* death. Ilia daughter, the relator of her c, alie wa for a time degraded to tlie rrk of her captors as general cook and drudge ; but preNtttly Little Crow, a great chief, raw Unit she waa fair, and invited her to lira wigwam aa hia wife. The newly made wife was not within reach of the law which should aid,her fresdotn from her husband, and it occurred to her that there was certain subtle liertw, which, being deftly infused into a husliond'* drink, or food, are eminently calculated t) give au unappreciated wife Uiat free doiu from domestic slavery which in requisite for the finer development of her intellectual faculties. Consequently, after a rather hearty dinner one day, LitUe Crow couqdsined plaintively of a curious sensation in his dejiartmeut of digestion, which so intensified presently that he indulged in a aeriea of involun tary athletic exercises all over the wig wam, and tiually died. This d< cease of s great chief causing some comment, the " medicine-man" in the "fashion" in the matter of hair-dresaing and Uiuuet-wear ing. I have no idea who was the genius that invented and introduced to polite society that unsightly sliomination the db<7o ; but in a person of such etqui aite taste, there would doubtless be found the most delicate sensibility, and list a terrible shock it would cause him ftp aee his idol crowning the sconces of these poor dust-begrimed scarecrows! Not iuod<*t little hunches of poddixl hair, but enormous protrusions as large almost as the head they encumbered,and secured from falling off in consequence of the violent oscillations of the young sifter's bodv by means of a "hair-net," the inenhes "of which, crusted with ash, were as thick aa packing twine. I think I never witnessed so strong au instance ol the delmaing influence of fashion, except it was some time since when 1 visited Portland convict prison, and noticing a difference in the trousers of the close cropped ones who attended chapel on Sunday, was informed that it was not at all uncommon for priamier* to somehow procure a needle, and with fine strands of oakum for thread, remodel the legs of their unmentionables, tightening tlieni at the knee, and making tiiem "act over the ahoe," as was the faakion in the free world when they last experienced the felicity of treading its path*.— Stud in of Sirttl L/r. Fxrcutiort of aa Arab. X correspondent writing from Algiers give* this description of an execution : While waiting in an inner eonrt, and outside the door of the justice cHkmlwr, a tall, gaunt Arab waa dragged in to re ceive final sentence from the Bey. Hav ing been already condemned for mur der, the dragoman of the consul-general, who accompanied me, told me that if not pardoned the execution would take place immediately, and hastened me out of the (Mtlace to take up place* in the open space in frout. We had scarcely done so when the crowd isaned forth ! from the gates, headed by Bady Sehafhar, the hereditary executioner, "in friendly conversation "with those nearest him. This interesting old gentleman wore no disguise of snv sort, as his office is not held di gra*Wnl here. Immediately af ter him came the condemned man, struggling in the hold of a few Aral*, while a handful of officials vainly strove to keep lack the crowd. The party catue up to the very spot on which we were standing, cleared a little ring abont twelve feet in diameter, nulled off the victim's turban and clothes, tel his hands liehind his lack, and blindfolded him with a piece of rag. The* then forced him on his knees, aud Balm Sehafhar drew his *old wooden-handled scimitar ; there waa a pause for a few seconds, then the executioner raised hi* nrm, and, seemingly without any exertion and with one stroke, the head rolled clean from the body and a fountain of 1 toiling blood gushed forth. Death must have been instantaneous, tor the lxxly tumbled on the ground without a quiver. As the prisoner was dragged forth from the justice chamber he waa followed by an Arab crying out at the top of his voice, " Live the Bey 1" "Live the Bey!" On inquiry I found ho was the brother of the murdered man, triumphant in having got " blood for blood." He had juat refused 50,000 piasters (£850) from the friends of the prisoner to let him go, and I was told thai the Bey himself had offered a large sum but without success. THE OLDER TIME.—At a meeting of , the Now York Lyceum of Natural His tory, Professor Newberry, the President, J exhibited the anterior "portion of the | cranium of a walrus which had been | found during the summer at Long Branch, by a gentleman whose foot struck against it while bathing. It was ; a< rongly silicified, but exhibited no ajv i preciable difference from modern sneci ! mens. The precise age of this fossil [ could not, of course, be ascertained, ol | though it is well known that its range was formerly mueh south of its present habitat. It is not unfrequently brought down on floating ice off the ooast of Newfoundland ; and although Labrador is at present the southern Umit of its residence, it was once very abundant in the Gulf of Lawrence, slid its remains have been found in the shell heaps of the Bay of Fundy. It is probable that the specimen exhibited by Professor New berry is a relic of the glacial period, al though it was suggested, that it might hare been of the tertiary age, which probably can not be verified. Other specimens of simikrjcharacter are record ed as having been found on Martha's Vineyard ; in Monmouth County, New Jersey ; and in Aocomae County, Vir ginia. Chisago doesn't like the milk it get*. It prefers the udder kine. Isi teat frota Parts, A deputation haa gone from Paris to Versailles to propose measures of concili ation. The members are instruct#*! to insist on the maintenance of the Repuh lie and the continuance of municipal franchises, and to demand tliat the Na tional* shall alone gourd Paris; and if Thiers reject* these tonus, to inquire what terms the VeraaiUe* Government lua to prtipoe#. The insurgents an* suid to have iua.lv a demand upon the t 'liu'eli for one mil liou trance, and avow that they will ini mediutoly kill the Arehldsliop of Pans if it is not paid. M. Favrv, in a *|taarh to the National Assembly, said tliat all the |xiacra hod expreeaed their svm)ietliies with the Government of Versailles as the only legitimate Go* erumeut of France, lie also Stated that the Germau Administr tor iu Prance, Herr Von Fabric#, had de clined the overture* made to him by the t'.umuune, winch he tn-bcvcd must short ly succumb to the power of the Govern* tnetiL Twenty-five thousand French regulars are expected from Germany on Wednes ■lay. Ilie Prussian garrison at St. l*eu is has Is-en reinforced by five thousand Rovai Guarvt*. New efforts for conciliation are making m Pans, rightccu mem I MOW of the C*im tnnne having dix-lered tliemwlves dis |MM*d to with tlie Versaillea Gov ernment Marshal McMuhon lias gone to Villr j neuve, snd a decisive attack on the iu surgcut |Miitions ia #x|ie*-to*l. M. Thiers, iu a circular Waring duto ' of tlie evening of the 12th, deacriiies tIP | situation as iu the mam unchanged, and says: "The Government will act at the proper time. The Commune no counts of a victory at Paris are as false as they or# unprincipled. Our victory * will come tiloudle*n]y. The Paris delr gatou have arrived, and were received, noLbecaiic they are Communist*, but j be*-*use tlicy are Republicans. My auswer to them was th*t 'no one menaces the R#|iublie but aMuoasuiN.' Tit# lives of the insurgents will lie spared, but Uie workmen, tomporarily subsidize*! iu farm, must return to their lalior, and seceasiou he sup]mviae*l, as it has been in America." A dispatch from Marseilles aays the city ia quiet, and tlie police fore# ia re i organising. Gen Ikinibroaki rejairt* to the C*im uiunal Committee of Paris that the trtaips under bis c.immand are doing excellent scrric#; that they already hold three fourths of the town of Neuilly, and liope to have pxeacaaion of the lindge across the Heine to-mght. The Cri eeu much struck with the cxtranrdiuary onward progress of the Equitable Lift, of New York, and the marked micceM which linn sttoudcd the management of ita affair* ; and we feci that we are tfuiwj/ <1 pmUire goad by giving in brief detail the point* which entitle it to the first cuunidcratiou of the insuring public. Tlie Equitable nok occupies the lead ing jioaitioii in rrejH-ct to the amount of new annual bustiem, aa will be aeeu by the following table : KKW nraiNßMt, 18TU. TheKqniUbte tto.2M.7W The Mutual Lift*. 3S.tW.il7 The Connecticut Mutual 31.707.707 The Mutual Benefit 11907,110 The hew fork Life X7 ltl.Wt The JCtna. U,700,471 The New England (1,979,301 The Knickerbocker 15,111, ti1t The Charter Oak 90,U,ifi5 By thia we observe that ita business for I*7o reached the enormoua figure of •40,21*5,799, Wing 97,(100,0(9) larger thou that of any com]mm in the worhL The Equitable ia a mutual company, on the cash basis, making annual returns to ita policy-holders of all the profits which aline in the course of ita business. The mention of one very favorable fea ture timet not be omitted—we refer to the ability of ita agents and the rourtrey of ita officer*, by which every required information connected with Life Assur ance can lie tcadily obtained. The e&arative of thia cuni|tanr can always be raeily approached, and thia toll da much to ita popularity. It ia thua easy to understand why the Eqtt .table low reached ita present pre-emi nence. Starting from the first day of ita organisation, under the best auspices, ta IMSO there were but rora remqsuiifts that wrote a larger amount of new insur ance ; o. IHG7. but TUSKE ; IN 1868. but TWO ;IN INS 9, the Equitable*• Umnaac tioua were the largest, and ia 1970 it still luiuntiunod iu supremacy, aa the table given above show*. By thia time it had issued over 60,000 policies, insur ing mom tlian #250,000,000. We sre not swrare whether the Eqoit able Life Assurance Company ia repre sented here, or not, but we would sin .ug ly recommend those desirous of working in the field of Life Assurance, to ]daee themselves at ouee in communication with the home office, with the view of acting for them aa agent, aa there ia; perliaps, no other company that could offer I letter inducements. Rulioff, the Marderer. Rulloff, so says s letter from Bingham ton, ha* made a full and connected state ment in regard to the flight of himself and his accomplices, Jarvia and Dexter, after the murder of tlie clerk Minck on the night of tlie 17th r. Canmulcgo, chief civil officer at El Paso, Mexifxi, haa recoirod by movntod (sjurw-r, from Cbdtauhum tha following report • " Col. Terraaas, oomandrr of tlie Chihuahua frontier troopa, iiuranod tlie Indian* (tlioae who oomuittod the mur der s)M>kcn of in the annexed slip;, acroas the boundary line into the United Htataa. j The Indiana were from the Fort Good- I win reaarvauon, and tried to to got back , i there, in onlor to he protected from the Mexican troopa In the pursuit aome 40 | Indian* were killed, and aa many motv were captured The commanding uflkwr II at Fort Goodwin, hearing of the sflait from some Indians who had eaoaped, 1 sailing out with 40 men to urotoet the India-is, ami while doing ao, he eame in i i-ollision with the Mexican troona A >! fight ensued, and resulted in the kilting of tlie couiuw tiding officer of Port Good win and 40 American soldier*. Col ; Terraaas had out about 2tW uu-u." 1 *WE*AE* R-SOSALEF TO CVWS, W-E. ASOTHCB OHIO NTTMEBT. From M F. Herring, conductor on the 1 Northeru Rood, we learn tliat last week j the train of Mton Heart * Miller was on the route from Chihuahua to Fort Bayard, loaded with haeoa. Before 1 reaching the boundary line, Mr. Chartea Keari aud wile, with six other Amatri j cans, urtwreh.l in cdvanoe of the www, | and when about five mile# from it, wore attacked by a large land of Indiana. Mr. 1 Heart, bis'wife, and five others of the party were killed on the spot; the other two" succeeded in eaeai>ing, lmtti lmdly 1 woundtid, but one lias since died. The 1 j liodie* of those slain in the attack wore ! hornblv ainttlsted. the hands being cut off and plaood hoaide the bodiea, and tha head of Mr. K*rl was placed by the body of hi* wife, and bar bead upon hi* bli.mldcra The attack occur***! brtweeo Coma Grandcs and Gavittoa. The names of the killed, as far a* Uwrned. w Mr. and Mr*. Heart, Gus Hcpner, Mr. Huth- I land, and Charles Delano. THE RxonrraxTiox RETOHT of the State of Massachusetts for the year 1869, gives arm# curious marriage stotivtica, from which impatient youths and deao latc old maids and bachelors may both take heart During the year aeven maid eut were married at the age oi 14, and no fewer than 41 at the oumfiaiwfrvely mature age of 15. The lads are not ao vrntunwouie aa the girts, the youngest hosheud having wedded at 16 a wile of the same age. On the other hand, an old maid of 78 found a husband, and four other women found husband* after they hud paused the age of 70, One man of 92 was married for the sixth time to * maiden of ; afro, another man, for the sixth time, to a widow of 1 62,' it being her second marriage. The ages of the oldest nartiea married fur the first time were the male and female of 09 yean each. The greatest disparity in the" first marriage was the male 67 and the female *l. Forty-five males were marriud during the year who www over 70, and one widower of 80 was united for the second time to a widow of M, it being alao h.r second marriage. A wid ower of 30 was married for the second time to a young widow of 29, it being her fourth marriage ! But one marriage ia reported where both parties were mar . ried fur the fourth tune each, their ages being 78 and 61 There was also one marriage, the male Wing 78, his fourth marriage, to a widow of 57, her third marriage One male of 29 waa united to a widow of 30, it Wing his first marriage aad her fourth. A widower of fifi wa* united to a widow of 52, it Wing her fifth marriage. The sixth marriage of s male ia reported at the age of 82 to a spinster of 30. A second marriage of a rnSfi of 56 i* reported to a female of 51 it Wing her firai veatar?. TW Market*. rnusaMu. ' rxara-feas. EM.. S.7S a 4.SJ ' - Wamr— tuna ik># .............. l.tti ins I wmte - LS> t-tn Ousa—leUosf 7 a 77 Miwwi . .n • assa-.never. ,%• -4 TUa-Uiv.. .. aIJS rsvanuK-s—evade .ITVBcOaed SVi B-rcirrtA *r * .esq! XBW troax. Bear C*ma-f*lr to |*te Ill** six** , ga-lm -• s tried .• .Uli j ism .#4qs MK Oorros —MtddXas U • MS run-s-Kom fate*. tM • d.M Mate Xitrm AW AW OeneeKstra I.SS • AM Was* iStabw Sstsa azt •l - Stole I-ft s AW Whlto flu Kllrs A* AM tvs-wn I.M a 1.14 Stole AW • AW lain Hi W Jt > Cos* - Mixed Westora .71 s JS Saas—mover W s -Wt TXtootty • AW a>i*.weim w • .n Ni-Zto W W eIAM Use HNS -UK WMtoxirf AS* At j Bcmts— m W • -W \ ObtoW.X M m M - rory W s .! Wertrra nrdlnerr 1* • • j Fvosexhuh Baa M m AT { ' Csxxas—Stole Factor? U a IS , - Skimmed ST a .W 1 Ohte * W m .W U .W GBBQMMK BHTM-TOAter It W 7.7 Mm- SOS a AW f*lr tirade* 110 • ATS OmxCims-roasM AW s ATS lalerior AW s AW Boo*—LlT* AM SAW j Mue-U*-Sd to iThlm 4.W a AW rtors- Wktto Wur Extn AM a T.9S ! ttt rtubta 4-SO AM Builtosl, 4.TS i from the 4th of September in the 17ti of . October, end jet Buffered acveiely fmm I nmra, I>r. * Msrr-Durund Bttrttrotua I J hi* di*a* to mid sad dsmp. to the I i wniit of fresh vugctnhl**, to cmnimisorv drill, and, ntmvn ell, to mtufflcietii food, II He also considers nosUdtos a powerful I! adjunct to these mums. The hearings of ■ this mental affection on the disease have I (been plainly visible In the Pruaahm army and among the Breton Mobiles. The • advice given by the writer to soldier* ; j returning home nnj. rfecU? cured of the *! scurvy is to use the in ice of hertw, water- crews, ra-liab, and horae radish, to eat i j roast meat, and drink good wine and r j quiuyir. and to take ail poaalble means >i to ensure a speedy recovery on account , 'of the danger likely to aria* from any j ordinary illness snpervsataf on such a i state of health. Tit* attention of the musical world has boon lunch attracted by the improve meats in organ making introduced by f) nonce Woona * Co., in their new styles of Parlor and Vestry Organs. They in vite the attention of *ll interested, in mnsie. and the elevation of all that per tains In it; to their advertisement In '. another eolumn. All organists, toachem, ' and atuuc dealers are iuvitad to ernmins into the marita of their inatnuu>-ii'..-. imrtii ularly as shewn in their latest style ' of Mumtar J%irineH Cetmle Organ. | Ban customers have always been tha ' bane of tailors* existenm*. sod the knights of the goose in Philadelphia have ' j formed a mutual po/toction society which ' i gives some promise of doing away with. ' them. A register is to be hup* of aff > customer*, classified under three heads, ' " objertiunaldf .** " and ' " tronhhmum*-" From tins it wonhl appear that " prompt paying'' is a clcsa 1 of enstoewm sfcttasy unknown to the I tailor I ! "" ■ """ 1 111 Per Pytpepsl*. , Indigestion, depression of spuria, and ' general debility to their various forma ; ' also, as n preventive against lever and and ague, and other utowtiptant fevers, • 1 the " Ferrti Phoenhonitod Elixir of Cal way*," made by Caswell, Hazard A Co., New York, and sdd by drußgista, is the boat tonic, and a* a tonic tor patients i recovering from fever or other atokneaa, it baa no equal. Mr. McElaey, of West Windsor, Conn,, , waa struck by lightning a few days , since. He dearrilv* the sensetion as r ! ** lying i luseerwe on a iwl beta taove and unable to get off." Jousaas'a Aimn Luwor may be ad ' mlaistoei to children with perfect aucmn, In ; and almost any of the dbmena to which ibey ■: are liable _ A Kentucky woman lately demanded a divorce from her husband, hew principal grievance being that be had too nuinj ' names, and she did not know which wan hie true aaa Oi i ■—m> after eating, bssdadbe, nervous . (tobitttv. are the effects of fn4%aatloß. One, or two'at most, of /Wmt ."wyiau AB■ will give immediate ret let. Tut Maiaiium>. <4Bjm Tata,hat clew'*— etas* > j eMfe tseitoS eWWto Sw. nr. thattaypafas|Wto ajUjatV ! odhsr In** y—^ II Mk MfILML Agi MBIM WNMB SRtaWf WMNH wiwtlm to tautottor't Cil.tottod atotoec* BUtoto. Ilktoeltor St i* i> 11*1 es aunt it tescMsei la asm smss et Uw 4rse a*Stoet Ua> rtfUwtolto - —e < roue ea touetocet, rdciiStoUsratSkaer ssitt ttoMe ettoecto. u4 wuntoetoe Uttttrto ereiiTi'Uto mli n • onuchir. n altoratCw, aad tetatol ia"Waa. Hutotu . Tfcnwi an MnuSto to an ataeUlaUMia. aaS ' at* at uTOaikS to tSa Sawaatt nei CUtaaSMtot 0 tat ' > — tl " — a i Quito at aw. ! PLATS.—the iargeet assortment toafflHto- of nys sad Dramstk Wuthe is Pi feeajfy ibe wurtd, prepared f.* Exbihotona yWfV ef ah latidt. and Hoaw Antuee -1®! meat. Shadow PsatomiiMa, Cba radea, fteeitere, fNatogucw, Tableacx, Amateur liotdt, Etbiopiaa Prsmae etc., fit* A tifw i&d rxplirit Pcacrtptive liet of etl Plow mailed free. MWIII. PrXNCH, Puhbsbar, IS3 Neseao BL, New Tori. JUST PUBLISHED DOWN IN SALOON. to a aaMhor at Uto art tarn ptoa hath. *' BOTH 81TMBB OV TVS SMUPW." ThahttaeC •* eusy, Sjh* latfedaeti torn eeesto rLu r , , (^2wtomas2rto m Utt tngijta_rotsa ai>aS- . to aaSLfraiTßa I hrt I '*'' HENRY UOYT. laXtoaMß. ■attaa. New Arrameießts! Fresh Attractiees! Ta* Mll atiean. a# n*a Tnrh, aHhaata msmia a - aasto. k aewtoMt toal iMteettnt—mQnfsng . _ as- Tae Mrito.iwiw sUMMsttM tat.tafc.ee ! itM ito"< at hr itiaina, at.tto pt% I. pa Wi* ear Taamiatgai hat mm tmtfc a lassrt tonii ; nto Tni MgTMMT wifl m-wm hamjm n tawwei itniw at araat (■> to Mr*. Mm wSuae. toctfiisaa a Mr t tar, rtfto at a wrltoraad t'tahto. ejr fat Mt.'t twt hat t croat tattaw tt naiSne wtil iS* llwejw* wmm wg* HoKTtu voa iad to ilwiaiito at an lata- j inttom, tor al 18. , as- Tax Mane toft to takes to cam ttopsiia. < WooMf aU Mtthodix tolatotoi. mitt mtot taWrtp- j tSmt'na ' UuL-TjUrrH**** ** T*tototo*. dtoaet. | as- Tax MrrwnmiiT taay he wtint to ih* wata t j PAIN KILLER. PERKY DATIS A SOS, Piwprletnn, fROVTDXRCI, X. L 1840. . 1871. Mr A DOZXN RJtABOHB 1* war rtra Pain - K.lll©r MAKuricnmm at PERRY DAVIS A SON I IB TWO BEST FAULT MEDIOIBE of Una AGE. irt. tto* Itoetota ear* T 1 * \ H-PanKllltr will tro Oianptto fifßjW part t tat titltoa. A ainctr daw atadb Smtto a !>.'""?1-Kinar trill tare Pttptmlt tot ladistt aevw-taffiae earn to* 2SS "J rT^ 1 hmwToMlbrfltnia SwelM JotohounicraSet lw 1 In It rttof and romlorU t".nßwt'^lhtoStmoto tad ( BtarUr mn Cooato* State Keeper and Greoertareaeß- j Mato -dtoar. I vmtsi3isr?ytai!~E?® c ' iissasas^S; i "^wSassfc. ' FEAOEABT SIPOLIEHB I : To'ggiw DAY *Mg ! E=^l^SSrSisfis^' Agent. 1 Road Thl. I f I C3F __ _ . tot m A Mfc W | STEEL NiUH STAMPS • tjtsaggfe ; CDT THIS OUT! s jjfd IYOUNGMEN^i i *??*. JKL *!!SS£!rf : .JgJr Tl %ifc|BPtV T1 li ■ -II - w# ?jm m i * VtfSwmiM, nrt> wv.. | j todAemsAs Itsfciifetaiimam 1 iWBI AiWhL fc3BTßnae. : lt Mill I MMII ;jf|x> run woHixa cjUMm. -Wo c*j 1 *- c UJM* *cXK*m—M*~ . r The AUaatin and Padlt Lift ' SsnsaS^Sst'AsShr ifvSSijfLs B! AN<.f Tl vE ■ tmmA wifciiijiwifciinr J ■* * H* fg" attor . ). |||ia ,. I . ' APPBR^faß jffkm 3QjtM3KT3EI'p * ijdo oVEW t pa PE r S, * j wataeawanecmm. etu emwaouaaaenew - 1 alto I"*' 1 "*' AiMhw " { xtw Yens rawwAm vnwan, Mawaitw,!. v. wfcHSAtata wmmrnr— nm. x oßTmrnrmu ***•■"*, namrnvhPKfc rwton, rua ! Hand and Machine Sewing. ' j . Jab COATC' • Wt wr m I w B ggg SIX-COEB or ALL IUIBEEB. From Ho. S ta Vh 100 helustvu. roa SuAIUB WW i 1 All Deahm in Iky Okioda 'and Sutinan, RIB BANS BEOTBXBB, ; Printed Wrapping Paper, I ""JME ee i! Hemp, Jnt% Oottei aad Flu Twiam, I : AU UEW 25 FAIR ST., KEWAEKf N. 1. _ grain' BAdB. t -1 ASrnaiSa^ ■ miml eaf wMßptte ewlnffhe SdML mnmsim BBOTHEBS ' I __ tal fAWiaT. fcawaefc. . J. DEO. WOODS' ORGANS. , u V: " 3 ' *ko Them I Hear Them I Sew mjrim fcvr r—fcilr OhrvtahMNi iwiMiifleieiiiwi acw wc , MR. *rw> wft Aef®mwh JRWw.eC' latafcilflCß, tm j ' . ORO. WOtaW fc Oh, Wmatßto. reteiet g. BaJTA, Mtier. felu §itlw Wftklg Jkm. 1.11..., Mr ,1 H |m M tan,, laotodme ransanb Mtrhtatoa Miiwilinsli, tontttuai. Maa. Workart, Thlilaa as* H Mtasir f Bosa Vena, ead th* Wtttoi, flaaa. sad Daaehtonof aßiseh. WIT OIK MIXAB A TUB I , OXK Bt iiui (urm com nan. OrtowtaaaOMltoaeaOep,. LMtaarehesMtaOtota at atttf Pant Otaaa. TIE tEMI-WKEKLT '*, m A TUB. frathstoa. baotow* It ewstotatto a ttoak lattoad 3 mm •rat railt SVX.ma ybul AngsLßejSStaSrHgegg eepgr: to aufl. M eaato a aaavta, ar •# a pmr. TERMS TO CLUBS. TUX BOIJLAfc WEEKLY in. ritoooptot nw jeer tapt-atat, aUßiiaiiiA fear JhtoUatw Tea eotota. on# jiatr. tapitaitoly adSreaMd {sad es ealre aoee la taa gattor ap at dab . TwtoW Wtta> jma year, aaparatolj tßlnana (and ta axtoa copy to tha fatter ap el etab-. rtftcgi lltatlwrwu rtfty cepha. aa year, to out adtataa taod Ilia Saou- WMktyoaeyeac to tetter ap ef etoto, Thlrty -Uiraa Ballan 1 ntty utoa.M yaw, taparatoly aditrataiJ uuul taa Srmi-Wwkly m year to ettot ap of . Ur J . ■•** fctahetw, WH IMLWUKLT WPX. .nJCfere oof>idM, mm innby, rrfrwipily adkliweedL ' !T?1 jggf** lr newSssto PafitoraJ •HI YOIB MOHKT I. w KWiitLure fahltihi, ■ ataaa. KM Ta-b ST. N U. Aet f M w m