Sou* for My Lore. Tour mind is a garden of flowers, Tbr brightest that w could glow; Refreshed by the imtiniest shower*. Each drop tike a diamond doth grew ; And the breere, ** it plays through your bower*. Stays sighing, reluctant to go. Tour breast is the home of s beauty Delightful, and almost divine ; A wild and irregnhw beauty, Whcse softness and anger eomhiuo To tore all mankind from their duty To follow the scornfulcst sign. Your soul, as it wrestle* within yon. And longs ftw the time of release As it shrink* from the breath of the sin von Send, shameful sway from your peace-- Is an angel from hoaren to win you And carry whore sinning will cease. Farm, Harden aad Household. OOSKTIPATTON. —Habitual oostiveno** mar be nmatlM by omitting tea and coffee, drinking large draught* of water in th morning upon arising and at night before retiring, and the use of stewed pie plant as a sauce at meal*. To CUUW, CARPETS. —First avecp the caipet well, and scour with warm water to which ox-gall has been added, in the proportion of one pint of gall to three gallons of water. This will cleanse a large carpet, aud not only extract grease, but freshen the colors Gall is a liquid animal soap. Rump* FOR CORN STARTU OAKR. —The whites of twelve egg*, three cups of sugar. one of butter. three of flour, oue of corn starch. one of sweet milk, two teaspoons of cream tarter, one of soda (half of the ingreslienta will make a large eake.) Boat the sugar and butter to a cream, aud then add the milk. CCRIRO EOO-KATTNU URNS. —Keep fowls well suppli.sl with lime aad gravel or brick layers, rubbish aud animal food (frreh mivit,i in some form ; it may pre vent or cure hens eating their "eggs. Another nvxle is to place in the newts artificial or China eggs and let them pock at them to their heart's content C OLD SLAW.— Out a cabbage in half and with a sharp knife alia re it down ▼cry finely. Make a dressing of oue egg well beaten, half a gill of vinegar, salt to taste, and a teaspoonfnl of butter. Beat the eggs light, and add t it the vinegar, salt and hotter. As noon as the egg i thick, take it off the fire, set it array to cool, then ponr it over the cab bage. and mix it well together. Some prefer a little sugar in the egg and vin egar. AKHKS AND Hrx MANT RK —A corres pondent asks if he shall mix ashes with nen manure, for manuring corn in Uie hill. No. If covered with moist earth, the escaped ammonia might perhaps be cangfat and utililixed ; but it will be bet ter to mix the hen-droppings with plas ter for use in the hill, and to apply the ashes on the surface when the corn is eight or ten inches high. The nitxo geuixed manure will be sufficient to start the plants, aad the potash and silica will Wp it most when tut* stalk is gmviDg, FRICASSEED POTATOES.— Pare and slice, half an inch in thickness, into cold water, the required quantity of pota toe* and wash them well, put them into a clean saucepan, pour over them cold water enough to half cover them, close the pot tightly, and let them cook fifteen minutes ; drain off every drop of water ; have reaily half a pint of en-am or new milk, a large spoonful of good batter, a teaepoonful of chopped perslev, and aoiue salt; pour this over the potatoes, shake them around, aud jnst heat nv. Serve hot. ILLKBOWINO WTNTKB GRATS.—A writer in the Jottrnal of the Ftirm recommends a practice which we know, bv experience to be an excellent one— that of harrow ing winter grain in spring as soon as the ground settles. It is a species of grain culture very little practiced, but pro duces excellent results on heavy sofls, lv an excess of wet weather, and dried by winds and sun. The cor respondent properly says that "in all cases grass seed should "be sown before harrowing ; after harrnwiug. roll with a light roller.— Rural Xete Torlrr. BEES ADAPTED TO LOCAUTII®.— Fred erick William Yogel, a Prussian bee keeper, says "An improved breed equally suited to all parts of an exten sive country is an impossibility. Fo; each particular district an improved breed specially suited may be produced. In a cross, resulting from the Italian queen with the black drone, degeneration became apparent in the second genera tion, the hybrids divided numerically, one portion resembling the Italian, and the other the black beoe. In the fourth or fifth generation some of these hybrid* reached again the pure Italian, others the pure black bee." How to GBOW HOGS. - A practical breed er gives the following advioe, which, in the main, we think sonnd, for those whose herd is not too large, and who are engaged in mixed husbandry : "To han dle hogs to the best advantage, a pasture is needed of mixed grasses, clover, blue grass and timothy, and it is best if then* is no running water or stock ponds in the lot. Hogs do better where there are no branches or stock ponds to wallow in. In ' place thereof, have good well-water pumped for them. Have trough* made, and nail strips across, eight inches apart, to keep the hogs from lying down in the water; and let the hog* he pat on floors, to keep them from digging up wallowing holes. If any ft*d be given, it should be soaked in swill barrels for twelve hours before feeding—no longer—and ted to them as drink."— Gernumlorn Telegraph. POTATO BCO READY FOB ACTIOS. —While grubbing out an old fence row, adjoining a last year's potato patch, (savs an Ohio correspondent of the Rm-al Aw Yorker,) I discovered countless number* of this insect in bodies of from five or six to thirty of forty—in one case sixty ri"® were oonnted in one cavity about six inches below the surface ; being gen erally assembled in cavities near the roots of the hushes. As none could be found in the ground composing the potato patch, nor beneath the sod adjoin ing the fence row, it would be natural to suppose that they had used the roots a* s highway to winter quarters ; whether as an easier mode of getting into the ground, at for some other reason, I am at present unabfe to say. The bugs were of full size, and to all appearance readv for operation at the earliest opportu nit v. As soon as they were unearthed they . commenced their droning march, and did not seem inclined sgwin to take their position underground. There will be but few potatoes planted in this vicinity this season, and those will be of the earliest varieties. Some there are, who will not plant any at all, and, indeed I think they will be gainers ; at least, they will not be the losers. SWEENY. —In common parlance, a horse is said to be sweenied when the muscles of the shoulder appear to have perished away, and the skin seems to be attached closely to the shoalder-blade. These symptoms arise from chronic lameness in the foot or other part af the limb. In euch cases, it is of coarse, no use to ap ply remedies to the shoulders. Cure the foot, and the shonlder will come right, although stimulants and nibbing will expedite it. Bnt genuine sweeny, as I understand it, is auite different from the above, although the apjiearances are the same. It is caused by hard drawing in a collar that is too large ; or where no whiffletree is used, bnt the traces are hitched directly to the thills, as in "jump ers," as they are called ; or by jumping fences, or the like. Ileal sweeny may be discovered by moving the horse in a circle, or causing him to step over bars, when yon can generally determine the seat of the lame ness. For such cases irritants, with the proper friction, is the proper treatment Blistering liniment, or seton, or a piece of leather inserted under the skin, will cure, with rest. The writer once cured a horse by blistering, and upon turning him out, some time afterward, he jumped a high fence, and the operation had to be gontf through again.— Rural New Yorker. Boston girls, as a role, are the most intellectual, New York girls the most stylish, Brooklyn girls the most "flir tatious," Philadelphia girls the most la dylike, Baltimore girls the prettiest, and Chicago girl" the most extravagant. So says report. Summary of News. Firman counterfeiters have been ar rested in Pittsburgh. ' THR Maine Democrats will hohl their 1 State Convention on the 'l7th of June. 1 ONLY one-fifth of the population of ( the city of Naples can read aud write. Tm West is troubled with five ceut , piece* made of lead uwtod with silver, ] Trtowis MARTIN, tinsmith, of Clmrlre- i town, Mass.. was killcwt, by falling down l stairs. IN the Prussian army is a lieiitt-uant i who received thirty-three wounds in oue hattlc. * i B. Aco OSTEIN, of Goodhue, Minn., j diixl a few days ago from tlic cffivts of the kick of n none. THOMAS Mcl.Aiont.iN kilhsl at ( Koacndalc, Ulster County, N. Y.. by the breaking of a guy-rope. A FRENCH piqx-r says the tonqv* of the (\enmune do not now exered twenty- ( five tlionsaml in number. MARLON Wh.UAMSON. a r-tired dry i gomls uicrehaiit of great w<>alth and iu- < rtuoiuxs dieil iu Philadelphia. Tmk income from internal revenue, for the voar ending June Ik I, will l*c 1 fomi SUti.OOO.WO to sUA,tkM),(kk). THI RK were nearly eight hundosl bill* pesstsl by the New York Legislature and signed by tho Gowmot at the Ute sea- ] ! sion. THE . Preaident hue commuted the oeutamce of Charhw Perdue, for firiug a ship at sea, to imprisoumeul for twelve years. AT Hartf•rvl, Conn., Frederick C. Hall, (oolored.) convicted of murder, ho* been sentenced to be hanged on tlio Sd of July, lttTJ. THE pruieijval Ixorrioodes iu Pari* have been \uvcrted into strong earthworks. The labor on theae internal defense* stall continues. AN offieial statement of the loose* of the Communists in the late Imttle sums up kilhxl and wounded, besides 3,000 prisoners. A WAXIUSUTON dt*s|iateh to the TViAwxc jxvutively and enipliatieally denies tin current reports iu reference to pnqxsxxl Cabinet changes. THE returns frern the West Virginia deetiou indicate that the Flick amend ment, which removes political disabilities has been carritxl. AN army of caterpillars is on the more through Southern Illinois, devouring in its march louves. buds, and everything of a succulent uature. IT is expected that ten thousand Odd Fellows from all parts of New England will be present at the eelebrution in Bos ton on the 13th of June. THE sentence of William Schallenberg, . who was to le hanged at Cleveland for murdering Iris wife, has beeu eommut*xl ! to imprisonment for lite. J ADVICES from Pari* oav the Commun ists have, through mistake, attacked and captured a Prussian lattery. Its resti tution has been demanded. THE Vieksburg Beraki states that the entire tax of Mississippi—State, county, and achool—reaches nearly $12,000,000 ;: the schovil tax is less than S4,OOO,tXJO. THE reporttxl gains of the Baptist de nomination in the United States for 1870, are 2,602 churches, 2,031 minis ters, 7,623 baptisms, and 198,144 mem bers. FORTY seres of land in Lancaster county, Pa., containing a mineral spring, recently sold for 840,000. The water is said to possess extraordinary medicinal qualities. THE fnll censns returns shows the ex act population of the States to lie 38,- 104,840 ; that of the Territories and the , District of Columbia, 442,694; total, I 38,547,534. AN inquest into the recent sudden : death of Mrs. Dolly Freeman, alias lu gersoll, in Boston, resulted iu a verdict : that deatli was cause*! by the indiscreet use of mornhiue. A BILL has been introduced into the Texas Legislature to divide the State into three States. The px>ple are to j vote npon the question before the *livi sion becomes valid. Forß National Guards taken prisoners by Versailles troojw huving been shot, a proposal was made in the Commune to shoot the Archbishop of Paris in retalia tion for the outrage but it was rejected. THE Maryland Democratic State Con vention is to be held in Baltimore on I Wednesday, July 19, to nominate candi dates for Governor and other State offi cers. to be supported at the coming Fall election. A HOSPITAL Steward has been div honorablv discharged from the service of the Vnited States, for forwr-rding j money to purchase counterfeit U. 8. cur rency, in response to the solicitation of a pretended agent. THERE is said to be u serious autago-1 nism between shipjiera and ship-owners. The new bills of landing, upon which all goods are to be transported hereafter, cave, it is said, the steamship monopo lists wholly irresponsible for losses or injniy in transitu. THE local elections in the interior of California resulted as follows : In Gil roy, Htiisitn, Santa Crux. anl Pleason ton, the Citizens' ticket elected, Grass Valley went Republican. The election in Virginia City, Nevada, resulted in fa vor of the Ih'mocrat*. A FESTIVAL was given at Madrid, in commemoration of the Hpanixh rising against the French in 1803. The King and Queen took pert in the ceremonies A slight disturbance was creati-d by the republicans, lot it was easily repressetl. Several arrests were mode. MOSQCTTOES were never half so nu merous at this season of the year in Memphis, Tenn. Wide-spread, cease less, warm rains have lx>gotton conntless myriads of these troublesome insects. In place* along the river south of Mem phis, pilots have mistaken swarms of, mosquitoes for tempest-breeding cloud*. Boats have lost their way or " tied up " in terror. This is the aooount given by a Memphis paper. FOULOKN INDEED. —The Marquis of tsirne has laid himself open to sympathy, not bemuse his young wife is not lovely atul lovable, bnt because, as a commoner, though a duke's son, be is debarred from a social equality with his lady bride. At the. recent opening of the Atliert Hall the poor man was forced to content himself with looking from a distance npon the royal family in the royal box—the Prin cess Louise being with them—nor could he even join her in the carriage which . took her to and from the Hall. It has been suggested, since royal blood is of such paramount importance, that a few drops ef the Hanoverian stock be intro duced by transfusion into the veins of tliis fortunate and yet unfortunate Mar quis of Lome. WHAT A MAN DOER.— A French statis tician asserts that on average man of fifty years old lias slept 6000 days, work ed 6500 days, amused himself 4000 days, was eating 1500 days, and was sick 500 days. He has eaten 17,000 pounds of bread, 16,000 pounds of meat, 4t lo plminl liiui self, Ihr imsEeasfons, Mid In* energies ut tho disposal of the Diri* Free*. then IH< copied in orguuising tliat Ambulance system, the ramifications of which were > legion, and whose tin*? might have lieen nmi thmting in every quarter of the town. The Atnbuliunxxi dc In I'iww wore tho large*t mid most eomprehen give in tho city, and M. do la Griuigerie | wax nxxigniinxl iw the chief of tho Com- : uuttec. Wheu this unhappy civil war liegwu almost ewry private hospital hml Ixxui dismantled, mid nuti of the doc tor* luid retired io their respective homes. M. do la Grongene, however, called together as many of hi* employee* a* could be found, and unfurled tin-1 Geneva ti*g once more. A few da\ lach | he WOK driving his little ponies without J the walla, going hi* round* to see that j the wagon* were at their |*wU, and Ixuug j *topjxxl suddenly by band of National! Guard*, produoeil hi* card, announcing hiuiM-lf oa the head of the l'rt-ai Ambu lance* that hud come to beeo well known during the last eight month*. " liavo i voo got a juo from the Comuiane ?" iixkod one of ttio men rudely, intimating that if he faded to produce such a docu ment he would l>e arrested as a "Of course I haven't got otic, and do uot require one," retorted M. de laGran fu the *ame passage—old friend*, as it happened i —the Archbishop of Paris and the Cure ;of St. Sal pice. After lour days' iucar i ceratiou he was removed to La iloquette, where murderers are kept till they par the forfeit of tle-ir crimes ujiou the scaf fold—a miserable prison situate iu the filthiest quarter of Paris ; there he wits fonts! to go through the ceremony of takiug a bath, and would have I wen j clot In d in the felou's dress had there not been a difficulty as to titling hi* corpulent figure. Denied to his friends anil neglected by his guards, he ou one j occasion narrow ly esoajwd death by suf ! location from the charcoal iu liis stove, while ou another he well-nigh fell a victim to the explosion of a cnasaepot, ; the bullet of which, fired by mistake, jwnetrated the grating of his door aud tiuttened against the wall opposite, lie ; Hi's there still, in spite of the efforts of | his relations, mid it is quit" possible ! that his fete may be tragical should the . Versailles party force an entrance into the town. Specie* of Seals. There are four species of seals in our seas. The bay seal lives on the c*ast, frequents the mouths of rivers and har- I bora, and is ucver found among the ice. The harp mud, so called from having a brood curved line of connected spots proceeding from each shoulder and meet ing on the I tack above the tail, forming a | figure like au ancient harp. The old ! male animal alone ha* thi* figuring, and j not till his second year. The third va j riety is hooded mull, and is much larger tlnui the harp. The male, called the dog hood, is distinguished from the female by a singular hood or bag f soft flesh on his nose. When attacked or alarmed, | they inflate this hood so a* to cover the ■ fact' and eves, and it resists seal shot, i It is imposible to kill one of those orea i ture*, eveu with a scaling gun, so long as his head is toward you ; so that the | only way is to aim at the aide of the head, so as to strike at the base of the ■ skull. The hoods bring forth their voung ' two or three weeks later than the linrp*. and keep farther north than the others. The fourth s|>eoies is the square tipper. It is largest of all, but is rarely taken on ' the coast. -The white coats, the voung of tho harp*- ftrp the most derivable for j capture, their oil and skin K ing the I finest. HOUSES SIIOI LD STAND on a perfectly I level floor, this being the only means for securing perfect comfort and rest. No ! thing would bo more fatiguing to a man j than to stand with hi* toes even slightly I elevated, and the ]>o*ition becomes even more unnaturAl in the case of a qurnl j raped, as an inclined floor obliges him to keen his balance by assuming au un natural position. At the same time an , inclination of one iuch in a length of six ' feet can do no material hat in. ami i* quite sufficient for perfect drainage. The Kst , wooden floor that we have men has in elination of one and a half inches. On this are nailed slats two inches wide and j one inch apart, two inches thick at the { rear and ouly liaif an inch at the front These should K> made of hard wood to I stand the wear. Bv this arrangement ' the horse stands level and the urine flow* ; off through the spaces lietwecn the liar*. No horse-stall should be less than four feet wide, aud five feet is much I letter The drain, which should 1* shallow, ought to be atemt one foot behind the heels of a full-sized liorsc as he stands at his feed. NARROW ESTATE. — Prof. Torrey made a balloon ascension fres from tlie car. At the height of 1,000 feet the tire blazed around tho balloon, which, with the cooling of the hot sir, caused s rapid decent. Fortunately the burning globe came in contact with a willow tre*e, when 1 Torrey, leaping into the branches, broke his full by snapping a large limb, and sustained no more serious injury than a sprained ankle as he fell uptsi tho ground. The ascent, or more properly the descent, is dcMcrilmd as the most exciting exhibi tion of the kind ever witnessed in Mont goineiy County, A GRAIN LAW.—A law possessed by Illinois in relation to the trarnqtorlntiou of grain requires railroad oomjamieq to give full and accurate receipts for all the grain they receive ; to deliver the samr quantity of gnun and the same quality a* shipped at the destination intended by the consignor; and to transport all grain offered, "without distinction, dis crimination or favor between one shipper and another, and without distinction or discrimination an to the manner in which such groin is offered to it for transporta tion, or a* to the person, warehouse or place to whom or to which it may lie consigned." If the transportation com pany fail to deliver the grain at the point on their line designated, the consignor is entitled by the law to recover of the eompimy the full value of tho grain at the point where it was shipped. WHAT DID IT. —To a correspondent who auks why so many more French wounded died in the late war than the German wounded, a New York pajHT *ays: It is said in explanation of this, that the Prnsaian bullets contained a lit tle mercury, which is inserted in the I sue of the ball to augment the explosive jiowcr of the cartridge ; and that by the action of the ga produced nt the time of the explosion this mercury is converted into mercurial acid of the most deleteri ous nature, the effect of which is to poison the blood if it remains in contact with the ball for any time. A QUESTION. —A young man recently wrote to a paper, asking whether it would be advisable for him to marry a ' ''young and tender angel, who had nev ! er done her own washing or dress-mak -1 ing." In reply, the editor advised him ! to do so by all means, and mentioned a I similar casein his own experience, where j the bride had never done her awn wash- I ing ; but after marriage she became so ■ fond of the wash-tub, us apt only to ! work for her own family, but for several I families among her acquaintances. Hon Winter tlrnln I* Invoking. The Autumn aeaaon *m generally faro rattle for geruUitaliott and vigorous growth : the WntU-r ha* been coni|utr tivehr inihl uiut uniform in temperature ; the freoriug weather mainly occurred in midwinter, ittul found the wheat plant* protected lit Sufficient covering of sitow ; the Hpring W* Iteon unusually early, ami the growth of grain ml vanned two to four weeks beyond its accustomed statu*. There in no State in which Winter-killing in not exceptional, ami in several it in almost entirely unknown It luny tie tliat future report*, an the neanon pro gresses, wiil tie less favorable ; they cer tainly cannot lie more fluttering. In the following digest of the returns almost every unfavorable statement in pre sented : .Vcie /iWiMi/, lu Maine there has liecii considerable loss from Winter-kill ing, esjMH-iully in Uieoounttea of Oxford, PiNCutaipus, ntul Cumls-rland, during the variable weather of February ami March. Winter grain looks well in York, ami rye is m line condition in AtulrvMKHiggui. The o|m-ii Winter and light covering of suow has left wheat uud rye iu unpromising condition in Hills tniro, Strafford, ami Belknap, in New Hampshire ; while Merrimack report* Xi proapeet above the average, and the tirlds look well iu Sullivan. There is htUo grown in Coo*. Vermont grains liave suffered somewhat from open Win ter. The ap|teoruuoo presented in Windsor County is pi j*-r cent. lnjlnwan average upon heavy soil*, but vary £air from Mavtaehuartt* ami Ceroeut better ilinn l*tSpring." Threc fourtlis of the returns indicate merely an average prospect. 11l Chautauqua the crop is promising, what there i* left of it after the Autumn's work of the Hes sian fly. In Onondaga the plant wns small iu the highland* in the Autumn, and weak ami unthrifty iu the Soring, but looks well iu the riclieai aud lieot lillcd fields. Of fifteen counties rcjvort itig in New Jersey, none present discour | aging account*, but three limit the pros }*ct to an average, two estimate an advantage of It) jut cent. three of 'JO |cr i-ent., aud one of 25, while others return 1 the crop " better than for years," " look ing remarkably welland ill Burlington one correspondent makes it "the strong est and thickest stand he has ever accn." Forty counties iu Pennsylvania send returns, of which only tins*' from Tioga and Union represent au inferior pros ; jsvt. aud fully three-fourtlm report a more tliau average luxuriaixw-. It is stated of Cumberland that " there are no poor fields and wheat could not look better;"it is "n-marksbly fiuc"iu ludiana i "though the fiy ha* destroyed part* of fields " the fields of Is-high present a finer ap{v*rantv than for *) years," due in jmrt to the fine weather and olisetnv of cold winds in Msrch ; wheat in Beaver is "quite promising, rajiecially the drilled fields, and those uijurtsl by tlie fly have recujßTHted and may yield welL" It is stated in the latter returns that a few fields, on which straw aud long manure were spread, were completely destroyed by the micv, which were so abundant that pastures wen* injured by them. Wheat and rye look well in Delaware. Every return from Maryland is favorable in coni|vrison with last year. The crop is generally mora advanced than nsttai, and in Washington County it " never j ln-fore, witliin the reeoUiß-tioß of the oldest inhabitant*, had m> proiei-rag a liKik." Of 3cct is good j in Fayette, Lampasas. Fulls, Bexar, Bell, j and Anderson ; and very promising iu Dallas. Fannin, Gi]h*s|ii\ Lamar, Travis, Collin. Grayson, AUuicasa and Kerr. — Rrport of the Ayricult'trtil litirrviu. Saturday Night. Saturday night makes people human, sets their hearts to lx-atiug, softly, as they used to do before the world turned them into drums, and jarred them to pieces with tatoos. Tlie ledger closes with a slash, the iron-duortd vaults come to with n bang, up go the shutter* with a will, cliok goes the key in the lock. It is Mntnrday night, and we breathe free again. Homeward, bo 1 The door that lias boon ajar all tho week closes behind us ; the world is shut out. Khnt out ? Shut in rather. Here are our treasures, after all, and not in the vault, and not in the book —save tin? old record in the old family bible—and not in the bank.— Maybe vou are a bachelor, frosty and forty. Then, poor fellow.Saturday nigh is nothing to you. just a* v<.u an- notb ing to anylxnly. Get a wife, blue-eyed or brown-eyed ; lint aliove all true-eyed. Get a little home—no matti?r how little ; H sofa, just to hold two, or two and a half. And then get the two, or two and a half in it of a Saturday niglit, and then read this paragraph by the light of your wife's eyes, and tliank heaven and take con rnge.— Exc/u t't'ff. Cnrnjcoto CANNIBALS. —Some white settlers at Viti Leon, Fegee Islands, lately administered correction to several of the natives who refused to give up land which belonged to them, liy flog ging them severely, and then rubbing the juice of the rod-pepper plant into their wounds. On another occasion they cut ofl a woman's great haw with a hammer and chisel byway of teaching her that she should not enter their houses without permission. If these simple folk* do not eagerly embrace the ways of a people who try thus to make them long-suffering, It is certainly dis couraging to send them missionaries. A TOWN FRIGHTENED BV LABORERS.— Five hundred workmen, who were em ployed in digging a cannl in the Forest of Hertogonwahl. marched in a body to Vcrvieia, and demanded the payment of their wages, for some time over-due. Their appearance caused much excite ment and apprehension. The gens darnies proved untrustworthy, and were confined to their barracks. The town finally paid the workmen their wages, and ail fears of a disorder were allayed. THE FENIANS. —lt is said that the U. 8. government is about to take measures to secure tlus release of Uie imprisoned Fenians in Canada. There are over twenty of them who are still imprisoned there for participation in the last Fenian raid. In the general settlement of our international differences with Great Britain, it is argued that it would be a most fitting time to interpose the services of tliis government to secure their re lease. " FATHER CLEVELAND," the City Mis sionary of Boston, who will enter his 100 th year in June next, was lately visited by his sou—a stiiplingof only 79 —whom he had not seen for 20 years. The Demand* of the t'nmmnne. (Fena. U J~m*l OJHtitl of P*rt. 1 It i* the duty of the Commune to eon firm and uncertain the aapiruiioii and wishes of the people of Pan*. The pre cise character of the movement of Uie |Bth of March i* miauuderetood and un known, aud is culiiuiuiateit by the poli ticians at Vernal He*. At that time Paris •till laliored aud suffered fur the whole of France, for whom she haul prepared, by her battle*, an bthlliwltwl, moral, sdininistrrttive, and eeononiia regenera tion, glory snd prosperity. What does she demand ? The recog nition and consolidation of the Itcpuh lic, uud the absolute autonoiny of Uie Commune extended at all place* in France, thu* a**uring to each the integ rity of it* tight*, and to every French man the full exereine of hi* fucultir* and aptitudes n* a man, a citizen, aud a pro ducer. Tha autonomy of the Commune ho* no other limit* but it* right*. The autonomy i* equal for all communes who arc adherent* of the contract, the asso ciation ot which ought to secure the utu tv of France. The Inherent rights of Uie Cooitnuue j ore to vote the Communal budget* of receipt* and ex)>enditures, the improv ing and altci ntion of taxo*. the diraotion of liMvil serviiwa, the orgamration of the magistracy, internal police, and educa tion. The administration of proiierty belonging to the Commune ; the choice ! by aleetion, or coni]vtition, with the res|ionaibility and {•ermaiieiit right of ; control and (evocation of the Communal luagistraey, and oflieinls of sit classes ; tlie aWolute guarantee of individual lib erty, *nd hlierty of conscience ; the |M-r --man.-nt intervention of the citizen* in Communal affairs by the free manifesta tion of their idea*, ami the free defence of Uieir interests ; guarantees given to those manifestation* by the Commune, who alone are eharfiißl wiUi scottruig the free and jnst exercise of the rights of meeting aud puhlieitv ; the organization of urtaoic defeuce and of Uie National 1 Guard, which elect* it* chiefs, and alone watches over Uie maintenance of order in the city. Pari* wishes noUiiug more under the ln-nd of local guarantees, on the well-understood condition of regain ing iu a grand cent ml administration and delegation from Uie federal communes the realization and practice of those princtples ; but iu favor of her autono my, ami profiting by her hlx-rty of ac tion, she reserves to herself to bring utxuit, a* may acetn good to her, admm iatrative ami economic reform* which the |'ojile demand, ami to cn-ate such institution* a* may serve to develop and farilier education. Produce, exchange, and emlit have to universalize power and proja-rty according to tlie necesaitie* of the momeut and the w ishrn of those i ate rested, ami the data furnished hy ex|wrieiic. Our enemies deceive them selves or deceive the couutry when Uiey accuse Pans of seeking the destruction of French unity established hy the revo lution. The uuity which hn* lawn im jKstrd njKii u* up t<> the jireai ut by the empire, the monarchy, and the jiarlia meiitary government i* nothing but o-n --tralizatlon, deq>tic, uuintelligible, arbi tparv, aud ouerotis. The political unity as desired bv Paris is a voluntary association of all the ini tiativea, the free and spontaneous y the Commune, will remain wiUi the idea and vritfi the right We spical to France, which knows that Paris in arm* po—rOsrs as much calm as bravery. Where or der is maixitainctl wiUi n* muoh energy a* enthusiasm, who is ready to aacrifice heraelf with as much rtwson as energy. Port* only in arm* in consequence of lwr devotion to hiwrty, and the glory of all in France ought to cause this bloody conflict to ciase. It is for France to disarm Versailles bv a solemn manifesta tion of her irrc*l*ti\de will. Summoned to profit by our conquests, she should declare herself identified with our effort, -she should W our ally in the couU-st which ran onlv cud in the triumph of the (Vuutuuuai ideas or Um> ruin ofl'an*. As for ourselves, citizens of Paris, are have a mission bv accomplish—a modern ' revolution the greatest ard most fruitful of all those which have illumiaabui his tory. It is our duty to fight and conquer. A Komanrc In the Orient. A singular story is told by tlie Lrvamt //(TOW, of tVinstan tittople, as follows : Home ten dajs ago a couple of wealthy travelers arrived in IVra from Odcasa. aud look up their quarters nt a private hotel in the (irand Ituc. Thsy were, they said, a Prince and Prince** on a travel ing tour to Europe. The Prince lost no time in calling on bis Atnbaandor, and at the interview expressed his becoming desire to present the Princess to Madame Ignatiew. Something aliout his visitor, however, appears to have excited the suspicion of the Ambassador, and ho ac cordingly pnrned the suggestion, saving that he would first do himself the pleas ure of visiting the Princes*. He did so the next day, and found the couple sur rounded by all the evidences of great wealth. The liulv was young, hand some, and perfectly well-liml, but some further conversation with her husliand confirmed (leneral Ignstiew's suspicions that he was not what he represented. The telegraph WAS at once set to work to Odessa and Ht. Petersburg, and in s a couple of days abundant evidence was reoeived to prove that the fellow was a low Georgian Armenian, who had made the tour of Russia under various uliase*. marrying no fewer than four wive*, throe of whom he had in turn abandoned, after obtaining possession of their dowries. The fourth WIIS the lady who aceompancd him to Pern. She was the daughter of n rich landed proprietor near the Axoff, and was married to him only three mouth* ago, bringing a dot of 80,000 roubles, the whole of which the fellow realised liefore setting out on hi* present tour. On receiving the intelligence, General Ignatiew took prompt measures to rflect his arrest, but the " Prince" got wind of the danger, and. abandoning nearly all his luggage, decamped writh the lady to Rodosto, whence he made for Adrianonle. He was, however, tracked, and on Monday last n telegram to the Hussinu Consul secured his arrest SH he was on the point of starting for the fron tier. He is now on lii* way back to Constantinople, and on arriving will lie sent to Odessa, to IK? there handed over t-o the Russian |ioliee. WONDERFUL THING*. —Lewcnboek tells us of an insect seen with the microscope of which twenty-seven millions would onjy equal a mite. Insects of various kind* may lie seen in the cavities of a grain of' sand. Mould is a forest of bcniitiful trees, with the branches, leaves, flowers, and fruit. Butterflies are fully feathered. Hairs are hollow tulx\-. The surface of our Inxiies i* covered with scales like fish ; a single grain of sand would cover one hundred and fifty of those scale*, and yet n single scale covers five hundred pores. Through these Darrow ojtcniugH the sweat forces itself out, like water through a sieve. The mites make five hundred steps a second. Each drop of stagnant water contains a world of animated beings, swimming with as much liberty a* whales in the sea. Each leaf ha* a colony of insert* gracing ton it like oxen on a meadow. ACMICCLTVRAL PBODUCTS OT MAINU. Tho agricultural returns for the State of Maine, tdiow that the number of acres of improved land is 2,917,793, value of farms, 8102,961,951, and of farming implements and machinery, 81,809,113. Tlie total value of wages paid during the {ear, including the value of board, was 2,903,292. 'The value of live stock in the (State is 828,307,128. What's the difference between a chilly man and a warm dog ? One wears s great coat and the other jiants. Prorlawiallun of the PreaMenl. The Preaident of tlie United Htate*! haa iaaued the following proclamation The Act of Ootigre**, entitled. "A Act to Enforce tlie Provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment U> the (Vinsti tutiou of the Uuited Stale*. and for other porjawea," approved April 20, A. D. 1871, 1 icing a law of extraordinary ; public im|H>rbuiee, I coiiaidcr it my duty to ianue thin my proclamation, calling the attention of the people of the United Htaten thereto, enjofuing upon all good ciliaetiN, and ea|ie<-tally upon public offi eer*, to he zealoiu in the enforcement thereof, and warning all panooa to ab stain from committing any of the acta thereby prohitiiUxi The law of Congress applica to all (>art* of the United HUtea. and will la* en forced everywhere to the extent of the (Miwera vested in the Executive. Bid inaautuch a the neeesnity therefor ia well known to liave been rauaed chiefly by |M*niiteiit violation* of the right* of citizens of the United State* by mtn binatiolia of lawless and disaffected lier : sous in certain localities lately th tlies ! ter of insurrection aud military conflict*. I do particularly exbort tlie people of those part* of thw country In suppress all aiK'h oombi utiotu bv their own voluntary effort* through Uie agency of loc.tl lawn, and to mainUiu the right* of all citizen* of the United HUtea, and to secure to all auch citizena the equal pro* taction of the law*. Fully sensible of/tlie re*ponsibilitv im |mmml iijmiii the Executive liy the act of Congress to which public attention is now called, and reluctant to call into exorcise any of the extraordinary powers thereby conferred u|mui mo except in ease* of inqierative necessity, I do never theless deciu it my duty to moke known that 1 will not hesitate hi exhaust the power thus vested iu the Executive whenever and wherever it shall become t necessary to da so for the purjinse of securing to all citizen* of the United State* a peaceful enjoyment of tlie right* guaranteed to theui by the t'onatitution and law*. It i* my earnest wish that peace and cheerful olmdience hi the law may prevail throughout the land, and that al trace* of our late nuhappv civil strife rnsy be speedily removed, riieoe j end* can lie'easilv reached by acquies ' <-enoa in the results of the conflict now written in our Constitution, and by the du* and prrqver enforcement of equal, just and impartial laws in every i*ut of onr eountrv. The failure of local communities to furui*h such mean* for the attaiumeut of result* so earnestly desired. im|Mises titMin tlie National Goverument the duty of patting forth all it* energies for the protection of it* citizen* of every race and color, aud fur the restoration of peace and order throughout the eutire country. Iu testimony whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and aaused the seal of the United States to be affixed. Done at the City of Waahiugton this third day of May, in the year of Our Lord one thousand eigfit hundred and seventy-one ; and of the Inde jiendenee of the United Hiatus the uinety-fifth. U. a GRANT. By the President: HAMILTON Font, Secretary of Bute. The I'ablir Debt Statement. The following is a recapitulation of the Public Debt BUtetnent of the United BtaUw, May 1 : Ib( Pt | ("■ I'A Prta< ijal. Infernal Cknwto •< * par *nt lI.SSI.WU ,SM no lu>oJ M * par MSA 114.MT.500 OB iu.iM.osso* OrM bf ' Ist IS t*s fl UJOJMrj t Osfi'a of lndettod'a at 4 par rreA Kan Kwm Fv4 al 4 prtiaat. .... H.fW.iWW rtirw p. e*. IVO'i . ss.au two oe An'l ooUfecdin*,.. lAI.OMOOO 00 IJN4.IM.U I<*M as whirb HI haa < wiai J Sam MTj Aat'l cmlmtasdl&e.. fA.aOA.OIAM fMO.MOOI Iwtat bra o> U l OM KRA I S LWL , r~t*lar K0fe0.... fSM.OWMWI M rranmeal CnrtMK-r 40 XM.WT W ' Coin t artiSmlna ... 10.4*1X0* OS ma-nsi 4lT.iM.ss* os t'ccla auM iDUiol aSR.II Total nun ... rtm.s.a*o s* oi,m T"tal fltn.SS4.wa.lt Caafc in lh Trmaury. IM.MI.OTO. *4 , ii tßsmu Total UMfMfMt Ub t *■* c'ab In Iba Trraa'j Mar 1.11 LSRMVAS 14 ] Ot>T Iraa • b tn Traaa y April I. ISTI ISOO.MT.MS IT K iwr o< eeu abandoned. Delegate* of the Free mamma hate gone to the provinces to agiUta in favor of the (lomraune. it. Fsvro mid l'uuyss Oner tier liave Fine to Frank fort-on-tlie- Main to meek riue* Biamarck. The Ihily Ntmf apocial despatch aaya the Veraaillca foroea are abclling Antenil from the 1 mttcry at M outre lout The Priiaaiana allow proviniona to enter Paria, which ocerm*ion* unoaaineaa at VrrauiUs* The ItejMibliran Union I/age* de mand* the negotiation of a truce for twenty ilny*. Tlie railway aUtion at Auteuil haa linen ilamaged by Uie fire of the Verealllea Utttcriea, and the inhabiUuU of the place are flying from the botnl*rdment. Hince Friday last Uie insurgent* have hag two thousand men in killed, wounded and prisoner*. The Aaaembliat* have unmasked a for iii.dable battery at MoutreUmt, near HA ! Cloud, which menace* Auteuil, Pout dn Jour and I'muy. Hi. tier main haa been taken puma *ion of by the VeraaiUra furosa, who have established a liatiery there with which to shell the insurgent gunlioata in the Heine. A naval cwal*t i* expected. Fort Montrouge and and Haute Bruv ere* are constantly bombarded by toe Versailles hattehea at C ha till on, but without important result. There have tieen several engagement* in Uie trendies, and Mine pnaooen were taken. All mean* of eommuniea tion between the insurgent* in Fort* dTray aud Vanvrea liave been destroyed. The" Government work* are lending despite the heavy flre kept up by the Conimuui*t Ivatterie*. The supjilemen tary election* to fill vacuum-* in the A*- ae til lily have been poatpoued until after the surrender of Paria. There was also a sharp engagement in the trenches in front of Forta d'lasy and Vanvrtw. The Versailles troops turned a small redan, defended by a furee of the Communists, who wera taken prisoner*. The*work waa, however, afterward evac uated, in consequence of ita exposure to the fire of Fort Vanvrw. The Commune of Pana has ordered the immediate releaae fron confinement of the commandant of Fort Vincennea, who waa recently arrested on aoapicioc of disloyalty to the Paris authorities. The new "lVri* Minister of war, Gene ral Itoaael, is unpopular with the Com mune. The Prussians will intercept provisions intended for Paria, and refuse explan ation aa to the cauae of their action. M Blanchet, a member of the Com mune, has been arrested bj order of hi* associate*. General Roeael in his operations against the VoraaiUiata avoids all useless destruction of property. The Commune has suppressed no less than six Paria journals. Gen. Hostel has been intrusted with the direction of military operations The expiatory chattel is to be demolished. The lstmdtm DnUy T4tyrpk has the following special despatch from Paria : A aortic waa made on Saturday in the direction of lmy The insurgent* were repulsed with enormous loss, and (led to Paris. They fired on their friends, who refused to open the gates into the Van pi rani quarter. There was a panic at Vanvna. where the Nationals deserted their positions General Rome] has ordered the right sleeves of their uni . form* to be cut off aa a punishment Itiamarck is inclined to give up the forta, but insists on the atrict payment of the war indemnity, for the purjKiae of which be suggests that loans be raised by the French government. The main points of a treaty of peafee havs been agreed on between Bismarck and Favra. A NOVEL RKTEKOB. - -A depoaed United States judge in Idaho ha arrived in Washington, to learn, to his very great surprise, (hat he waa sujH-rvdcd by hi* own alleged letter of reaignation. which turns out to be a forgery perpetrated by aomc one to him unknown. His succes sor had leen appointed and confirmed, and the first that waa known of it in Ida ho was the appearance of the new Judge. The President has not decided what ne do about it. THE ALPHABET. The 'M> letter* of the alpha! wt may tie trouspoiw*! G30.44M01,- 733,239,430,300,000 time*. All the in habitants of the globe, on a rough cal culation. could not in a thousand millions of Tears write out all the transposition* of the 26 letters; even supposing that each person wrote forty pages daily, each of which pagtw contained no loss than fort; transpositions of the letters. POUTH AU—A caucus of the ltepubli oan members of the New York Legisla ture was held at Allwny. The remit was the iasue of an address to the peo ple. in which the action of the Democrats in securing an illegal majority in the Assembly, by depriving Mr. Twotubley of hit seat, is denounced. An appeal to the Republican Party for combined effort in the future is also made. Naw YORK HOME MARKET. -Among the aslea of horses in the New York mar ket, we giro the following. fimurlawm. HmmJk. JW Brown mar* 16 < 9950 Tiara dapplerm hum* 16 S 4*7 000 Hark brown bone .16.J 9 ISO Brown mare 16.1 6 160 Bsy horse 15 7 900 Bay borne 14.9 ISO A HINT.—An Indiana }atier feels call ed upon to rebuke the youth* and maid ens in its town, who Itiock up the side walk in front of the drug-store* while they count up their cash in hand to as certain if they liavo a sufficient amount to purchase one gloss of soda for each eon pie. Fashionable garters are of blus vol ret geld mounted. The Market*. MR TOSS. Burr CATTLE— Fair Is prim* 911 OS rtll.SO Mites Oor 40 00 4*o 00 Ho-U*o 07 * 061, DrooMl 00 u* 10 s Smtxr 04 to .S Corvos—MKMUits..... U to ls ru'ci-KiimVotwi m a is Stato Extra SIS (a 6.40 WEEAT— Amber W'wuro I SA a l.ss '■ Stale IST AS 1 SS White Oene*ee Eitr* I3 I.SS Rrs—Welern 1.00 to L9S Baut-Sua T9 M .94 Onss-Mixed Weelern. 7* to . SEED—Oo*W (A .fIH ore—W'eeicra II I# M IWU-Moes IS 00 Ml? 00 Use It to .11 ICTTEE— Htato M t. .to Okie W R. W to •*> •• FLQCT .............. M D M Weelero artßsary IS | .1* IVmwjflvant* Sne M to .17 Csssss—Stele Fwtary II to .It " Skimmed 07 to .10 Ohio lo A .IS Fxme—State .16 .11 runes—Saperttae INf' A Sl4 Kxtre 0.7k to 7.00 COBS N R OS OATE MM 71 CtSAS PS* 11. SO MM 00 ijksi 11 to IS?4 ltemm—Common 14 * M Cbntee Lote IS * .41 t Rim IS M .IT Booe—- W eetern IS OS .IS Ke-tern IS to -IS OKAEE hup- Clover 10\M rr rmU. of the total valuation, which valuation ia any *herr from a third to half the auction value. The " 894 cento" ia a tax of about one per cent, of the value of the taxable property in the town. A CASTArw A*D HIM BOAT'S CBSW Mtm r>E**J> —News has lieen reoeieed from Pun to Arenas of a terrible tragedy near that place. The captain of the British •hip Alexandria and a boat's crew went ashore, and came in conflict with the Indiana, who murdered them. The In dians then put off in oanoea for the v easel, but those on board alarmed by the yells of the natives, made mil and saved themselves and ahip. The body of the captain had been seen. There were two woonda in the body and the lags were cut off. No trace baa been found of his companions. T* Duuaras TO TUB Fnwwuom.— Allusion has been wade to the disastrous gale on George's Banks, in wliich forty one lives were lost The Otp* Amn Ad- T*rtiarr say* that thirteen of the men loot were married, leaving thirteen widows and thtrtv-flve children. The total number of lives sacrificed on the George's thus far, this neaaon. amounts to sixty-four, the galea previous to the Jd baring been very destructive among the fishermen. The result of these losses is twenty four widows and fifty fatherless children __ A Houunui Mrnnm—The Moberly Mo.) Mtmitor says the particulate of a horrible murder in that vicinity are being bronchi to light It appeal* that two travelers passed through MJddfcgrove, Monroe County, last January, and it ia believed that one of them murdered the other in order to obtain possession of his propertv, and burned up hia body, as some small pieces of tame have leeo found in the remains of a fire, and the property of the supposed victim has been discovered in the possession of the man who was with the missing man at the Grove. FEE* ADVEBTMUWO. From family to family, (mm city to city, from state to state,' the fame of |>B WALKER'S VoraaaJt BITTERS as a specific for all derange ments of the stomach, bowels and liver, ia eontinuafly extending. Every invalid who tries the great wotontive, every in - Moasrt sad las trwJr. on una indium! and BP sas •koala tried an stir tssss or tfrsn without M PAIN KTLLRR was the Pint, and ts the Only Permanent Pain KelieTer. Siaes Iks PAIS KII.I.KR ass Snd ißtsadaosd. sad mot with saeh eaaurpaaaed sals, many Liniment*. Re lief*. Panacea*, and other Rrmsdtm ksss bssa offered la ths public. ha not on* of Ihera baa eeer attained lbs truly enviable standing of the PAI> KILLER. WHY IN THIM EilO"? It Is bossass DAVIS PAIR KILLER k srhai it , rial ins to ho. a Reliever of Pain. , Its Merits ore Tmamrpaaard. If m in rahriai from In torn al Pain. Twenty bo I Thirty Dttwi ia a Little Water will almost ua Usably ; ears yea Thsrs k nefhtas to equal It. In a fsw am- 1 moots it surra Colic, Crsap, Sysnt, HoArt-bnrn, Diarrhea, Drtentery. flax, Wisd in the Bowsk, Sosr Stomach, Dyipopaia, Sick Headache. U asctloas of lbs country abets Fever and Airue Proralls, there k DO isiaadj hold ia greater ceteem Parsons (caroling ah (mid keep it b, ihrm. A faw drops. 10 water, will prrooat airknesa or bowsl troubles tram chan*water. .. _ _ __ Prom foreign countries the calls for PAIR KILLER are ft sat. It is found to (hire Obolera, When all other Remedies Fail. ' When naad Paternally, as a Liniment, nathiac gloss i quicker esse in Bariw, Outs. Biuises. Sptmint, Stissa from Insect*, and Scalds. It remorse the Srs, sad the wound basis like orditu rj sores Tbos* auEsrias with Rheumatiem. (Jcmf. or Neurnlsis, if Bot a poailioe cars, ' they Bad the Pain Killer sire* thera relief wbea so oth er remedy will. ltd laws Instant Ksllcf fVwm Acblnc Trcth. Prom IMO to tkia day. Km. iorer Thirty Yuri!, Party Dnria' Pain KiUer hsabad no Riral Every Houes-Kseasr ehould keep it St hand, be apply ib oe the drat attack of soy Pain. It will firs mdiafir toro relief, sad s hours of eulferias. IVi not trifle with ysuiaslvc* by tostias nuWisd_rem ediee. Be euro you mil for sad set the seuuine PAIR KII4.KF, as many worth lam nostrum* are attempted to be ccdd so Iks great reputation of this ratasble medietas. > A#- Directions Mwompsoy t-aoh bottle PrietSMa,MeU..aadtl per Battle. F*r Sale By All Medicine Dealers. Tn um oiu> P" *• *.*£' !lT If'r'o. Co., No. 918 Centre Street, N. J. There www five snicidea ia Ran I roc. two in two dij* . CilArrßl> iMuxto aw very pjMnanwHh thg* who have their hands much in water. A dmp. or J-i—. * ever the hand, twoorthree tbnwadsy, wUI keep them soft sad white . rwfa * rtp f c : .Tl. on, and other. wIU do well to rem*'nb* r h • viMKASifsrsr MBSSSDS 1 gasig^jSgEg Agents! Read ThleT FRAGRANT SAPOLIENE 'tee. Kj. OW Whitney's Ke*te Foot Hgroesa Soop. IT-je <1 WWmr wr.a Irr . PUTCHKIt* UOMTJMM flt KILLER AW* von BMP BUeß' Tr, teem. se fen w Pewee t Lands in Bsslirsst Missouri The Atlantic and Pnelic B. B. tto. 1 He, far ate. teMUtoWf. sn I SHSSScsg® lss ® •4 A UNEt tare. AnvcnTuueiuvTiß 400 NEWSPAPERS waw owe. *se wea. .* wx ssuewsa sw *n ■aaiim : t : ""HEW TBBB; XBWsrAran WBSBB. ia r*w Pew. a. t cnicAse iiwirArni i **. ciisui.n lOßratrwmv xxwsrtrßß cm*, RIBBANB BROTHERS, HASIT juTranxs or Primed Wrtiiiif Pijir' ISXeSesiewe. ah. MW. Hemp. Jute, Ootton and Flax Twines. 55 FAIR N. J. oxuirr BAO. *•*• Stotoate W~4 ** ttuua jetta Bar GfcZLXZSXLVr*"" KXBBAVS BBOTHXJta, aa rAm ar.. n. s. CSABXXS A. DATA, unsr. Ju §pn*rWftkfc g:\ foil he reepli new ee Earsfc. NaMw Tawt us *to Ml ■>'■ to Mss-i nrntott.www.aiw.wsn M iiinMa—m. OXLT own MLUB A TIAB t ox* ICID COFXBS ron aao Or 1n I 111 i■ On Pal a Own- lnartta§flrt aew Wwa OWoa TBI MBI.WKKKIT STB. BS A TXAI, SSESSg fisnti w. tmoitot II fiMMf tmee • weel twfi—q el eeee •tor. TOE BAILT SVS. M A II AWL a■■ inn.nrmow wnws,*m> aiiiji. pm. jtofariUa TERMS TO CLUBS. TBK BOI.LAI TOUT BVB. fHei eejAie* P f ,ei i ll' baOSe.Xe Tw NEW BOOKS. A It oral by Emily H. Boor. A. LOST"LIFE. JOT rvauwunx A LOUT urx bMMI th* iMWMaskCTnt MJVOW •rnttrn. and mill ofiieniivtd e toHkl# IAI* tJiroufoool tlso ratunuitf. OrSw. .re pocuia. ia fro* wnrr saarWr. — M j*.lKin n■ m ~ A.. , t .. m . n A MOV Am We MM tttonaano* PI raaom art WVBI cnai ii'uu wna i.. m aa. Emu H M B man Dos. Bus a Maaocw Beoos. Owm M.rpa _ Eamjaa Oarn.n*. HoMMrraasoM JkUMbt HroH Wwramimn. Tas CAHXBOH nuua. DtsutM !.i> D.ruuwr. <** N.Tran. Ermo'i Mauu. BeaaUfitUr printed and bound. PrKW #IW. Kf Th. abort book, an tod tiwjiiiwi, to net by matrtow Am oa rtetopt to prie*, by 0. W. CARLZTOH A Co., PufcUthm, MAIWOH (Kiraam. K. T. WW. • HAND-BOOKS OF SOCIETY. Th* llabHa to to *aaltj | ain ft* to Th* Art to rrrtobU wort, far sarafer "" - —• ™>- cr 0- Tba abwn book, uo to mrrwbwc, aad tea mial, rtto A*, aa nwtept to frm. b 0. W. CARLZTOH * CO., PabUahars MajewH Iqium. n. T. car y.Eo.mru n."