Trust. The chil>t lcsns on its parent's breast. Loaves there its cams, ami la at real; The Writ aits singing by its neat. And tells aloud Tta trust in God, and so is bleat 'Neath every clond. It hath no store it sows no seed, let sings slant and doth not heed ; By flowing streams or grassy mead. It sings to shame Men who forget, in Pear of need, A Fathc rs name. The heart thst trusts, forever sings ; And feels as light as it had wings; A well of peace within it springs. Come good or ill, IVhate'ar 10-dav. to-morrow 1 wings, it U Hia will. Farm, Garden nntl Household. Nrrn JOHNNY CAKE.— One pint of sweet milk ; taro eggs ; a pinch of anil ; a tea spoonful of cream tartar; half a tea spoon of soda ; two-thirds of a pint of Indian meal, ami a largo tablespoon of wheat flour Bake forty minutes, and serve with butter. . SrNFLOvnraa. Plant sunflowers, if there is any p'aeo about your house where water is thrown out and likely to become malarious. This plant has the power ot absorbing malaria and purify ing the atmosphere. The advice ia meant for country folk. Arri.s FLOAT.—One pint of steweil and wvll-mashiHl apples, whites of three egg*, ami four large spoonfuls of sugar, beaten until stiff; theu add the apple, and Wat all together till stiff enough to stand alone. Fill a deep dish with rieh cream, or boiled soft custard, and pile Ihe float on top. This is excellent with other fruit* in place of apples. To IWEYKXT HOUSES KICKINO.—A cr reepondeut says : " Having a horse that would kick everything to piece* iu the stable, that he could reach, and hav tug found a remedy for ik after trying many things, such as fettering, whipping, hang ing chains Whind for him to kick against, 4c., I send it to you. It is simply fasten ing a short trace-chain, about two feet long, by a strap to each hiud foot, and let him do his own whipping if he can not stand still without it, and he will not need to have boards nailed to his stall every day." WRTTRWAKHIXO TREES. —Don't white wash the hark npon the bodies of fruit and ornamental trees. AVc are at a kwa to know for what purpose some persons thus coat the bark of fruit and shade trees about their premises with lime, un less it is to make them look niee. It certainly does them Wore harm than good, as it serves to olwtrtiet the re spiratory organs, and in a measure pre vents n thrifty growth. Should the bark become diseased anil rough, or covered with moss, scrape it thoroughly with a hoe or scraper of some suitable description ; after which wash thorough ly with a strong solution of soap and water. If this is done properly every season, it will prove a great benefit, by destroying the insects which prey upon the bark, and otherwise promoting a healthy condition thereof, and increas ing the vigor and vitality of the tree. Farm Jottrmii. THE MILK CCRE. —Some years ago physicians had a habit of recommending every consumptive jwtient to take cod liver oiL The incredible nastimwa of the done must have constituted its pecu liar merit; for. as a matter of fact, any result accomplished by cod-H ver oil would have been attained by the patient, had cream instead of oil been prescribed. Suddenly this idea seems to have dawned upon the medical faculty. As a conse quence we now have the " milk cure" announced as a specific for consumption. Patients who formerly pnt their trust in cod-livers are now told that the cow is their oniv hope. They are made to drink vast quantities of pure milk instead of frequent doses of the unspeakably vile cod-liver oil The effect is all that can be desired. The patient who tries the milk-cure finds himself rapidly growing fat. and it is also said that he becomes gentle, child-like and bland in his de meanor. The advantages of the milk en re will doubtless make it extremely popular among those who have tried in vain to swallow cod-liver oiL Ttbdet RAisnso.— Mr. H. Reade presents the following paper on turkey raising : "For the last ten years, a mul titude of farmers east of the Hudson, and not a few wast, have made more money from their tnrkeys than from any other one kind of stock. Ten well managed turkey hens will give a larger net profit than U>r cows, if, in addition to good management, the fanner has good luck. The first six weeks in the life of the young are the m<*st perilous. After that time, they are comparatively safe. Some men out of a btt'ch of a hundred never lose one—ami this is the way they manage tbem. Cet the mother of the new-born choose her own time to leave the nest Taking off is always had policy. A a soon as the nest is left* make a yard, twelve feet square, ly setting boards edgewise. Remove the turkey and her brood into this little pen, where in they should be kept for at least six days. After which they may be let ont in the middle of the day, and permitted the range of an acre ; but tbey must al ways be gathered at least an hoar before sand< >wn into the jiens, to remain until the dew is off the next morning, and all the day, if there is the least appearance of a storm. First time the mother leaves the nest, wash the naked parts of her body thoroughly with tobacco juice, to kill the inevitable hoe ; and at the same time dust thoroughly the yonng with some vermin-destroying powder. No one thing kills as many yonng turkeys as these parasites. As a preventive, sulphur and snuff, mixed in eqoal quantities, and dusted on the nest after the turkey has been sitting two weeks, is recommended: but nothing should prevent the washing of the mother, or the dusting of the yonng, the day the mother leaves the nest, and two days after the young have left the shelL Young torkevs require bat little food, but they need to be fed as often as once an hour for the first ■week. Coarse-ground Indian meal, mixed with sour milk curds, and fine chopped hard-boiled eggs, is the best feed for the first month. After that, the eggs may be left out, the meal ground a little coarser, and the curds, if yon have them, used in larger measure than at the first As soon as they can swallow whole grain, give them that, and then all trouble in this direction is at an end. Until they are two months old, they must be driven to some shelter every night, and never be allowed to remain in the fields'through a long or heavy rain. Even when one quarter grown, they will die from ex haustion, trying to follow the vigorous and unreasoning mother, if wet with but a heavy dew. Three rules, then, must be observed if those who attempt to raise turkeys would secure success : First —Be sure to free both old and yonng from lice immediately upon the old ones leaving the nest. Second—Feed fre quently at the beginning with strength ening food. Third—Never let the young turkeys get wet, either with dew or rain, until their feathers afford their bodies if not complete at least partial protection." THE USE OF OPIUM. —It is a startling fact that there are thousands of persons in New Ycrk who are addicted to the habitual use of opium in some form. Every druggist almost has customers whom he recognizes as opium-eaters. In many cases the habit was formed by taking the drug to relieve actual pain ; in other cases it has been deliberately formed. When the use of opium be comes a habit, if it is not taken at regu lar intervals, the most dreadful spasms are experienced, the functions of nature are suspended, and the brain fearfully affected. It is a matter of extreme diffi culty to break off the habit when once formed; and persisting in it causes one to lose his self-respect, his ambition, his health, his friends—everything. All the noblest qualities are lost by a slavish use of this ding. The first step toward such a state is to be shunned. THE CENSUS. —Some of the revised figures of the census are as follows: New York, 4,374,703 ; Pennsylvania, 3,- 529,601; Ohio, 2,665,011; Illinois, 2,- 538,408; Massachusetts, 1,457,351; all New-England. 3,487,469. Nevada has but 42,491. Two Territories, Utah and New-Mexico, have more, and the latter outstrips Oregon also, which has hut 90.963. Nebraska has 128,150. Sew* Summitry. THE State tax of Boston this year ia 8W3.775. Fiours and skirmishes occur daily iu the vicinity of Pari*. THE vintage of California is estimated at 10.UW.000 gallons. IXT KEN At, revenue nvviptu thus far for the fiscal year f124.t100.UW. A PsoWETANT church has been dedi cated in the City of Mexico. THE market price of awl in New York ranges from fit to $lO per ton. A KVMHEK of eases of n>k|llg fever have occurred in Philadelphia, BASK ball fever has broken ont this season more vigoroualy than ever. THE Commune of Paris has abolished all |H>litieal and professional oaths. A URRHAX woman was gored to death by au ox in the suburbs of St. Louis THE insurgents captured the city of Lima, the capital of lYrti, on the 28th. The maiu portion of the town of Fol •ou, CoL. was lately destroyed by fire. Cor XTKKTKIT twenty dollar bills, well executed, have uimle their appearance. Font parties chsrgvd with murder are now awaiting trial in Queen* Co., New York. NEWARK. N. J., has voted to expend $2,500 in the celebration of the Fourth of July. THE hospital at St. Andrews, in San Francisco, was burned and two lives were lost. A MAX and two women were badly injunsl by the explosion of a gas stove in New York. QI-KKX Victoria hxs had nine chfldren and twenty grandchildren of whom only cue is dead. tlwrxo to the condition of the crops the California grain market lisa consider ably weakened. MARTIN WORMS, one of the three men ordered to be baugod in New Orleans is a raving maniac. Sixes the Ist of October last, 12,763 hogshead* of tobacco have been inspect ed iu Richmond, Va. A riKS-it Ludlow, Yt..destroyed Hun raoud Block and several Adjoining build ings. Loss, 830,000 ADVICES from Valparaiso to the 17th of April state that the vomito was mak ing frightful ravages then-. A HOT 13 years of sge, fell from the fourth story of a new building iu Cincin nati, aud was instantly killed. MAXT mam of insanity through fever, are reported in Paris. The victims arc generally women and childreu. AT the charter election in Morristown, N. J., the entire Republican ticket was elected by thirty-nine majority. THE emigration from Ireland this sea son is large, every steamer Wing filled and thousands awaiting passage. JOHX (JILL was instantly killed, by the foiling of shore-timbers iu the Yellow Jacket Mine at Virgiuia City, Nevada C AURAL and Caperon are reorgauixing their shattered bunds for another attack on the f >rces of Baex in San Domingo. THE coming season promises to W an excitiug oue on the turf. Trotting and running races are anuounceil at all the courses. Ax attempt was made to shoot Mr. E. H. Gregory, city editor of the Albany Express, as* he was sitting in the office of that iper. IT is dated that order* from the West and Santh for boots and shoes will keep the trade in Massachusetts busy for a mouth to fill them. IT is anticipated that a definite treaty of peace will he signet! at Frankfort as soon as the mode of payment of tlie in demnity is settled. Au the eligible berths in out going steamers have been taken up for weeks ahead by tourists who propose to pass their summer in Europe. THE cities of Cambridge, Salem and New Bedford, Mass., voted to prohibit the sale of beer, and Lynn, Lawrence and Worcester to allow it THE Massachusetts House 'of Repre sentatives has passed a bill forbidding the employment of minors or females more than ten hours a day. NAPOLEON 111. has been offered a loan of $150,000 by a lady. Th- London Court Journal sars he can easilv borrow from 81,000,000 to 81,500,000. THERE is a woman who has becu voluntary prisoner in the New York Tombs for over thirty years. She chose this plan to lead a temperate life. WESTON, the pedestrian, has just com pleted the feat of walking 2UO miles (two of them backward) in 40 hours. 50 min utes, and 45 seconds, at St. Louis. Fom children of J. N. Owen of Wolfe Creek, Outagamie County, Wis , were jx>isoned last week by eating wild para . nips, and three of them have died. THE medical convention at San Fran cisco, had a stormy time on admitting female M. D.'s and finally, indefinitely postjximd the matter aud adjourned. A CALIFORNIA Chinaman has applied to the U. S. Court with a view to testing the right of the State courts to deny Chinamen the privilege of testifying. Br an accident on the Bella Vista Railroad, canned by a collision with a train conveying 2,000 kegs of gunpowder, one man was killed and many wounded. ACCORDING to reports which have reached tlie Indian Bureau from all points in the Indian Territory, there an no indications of a rising among the red skins. A PARIS paper says that the fortune of the ex-Emperor Napoleon, at the smallest estimate, cannot be less than 20,000,000 francs enough to meet all ordinary wants. THE steamer Carrie, from Augusta for Savannah, Oa., with 800 bales of cot bin, was burned twenty-thri-e miles below ; Augusta. Three jKMsengers lost their i lives. THE Democratic State Convention of Kentucky was held at Frankfort. On ! tne Rixth ballot, P. H. Leslie was nomi , nated for Governor, receiving 638 votes, I to 432 for J. Proctor Knott REPORTS from Buenos Ayres stab that the average of the death-rate from vomito is 250 daily. Five thousand persons died in fire weeks. Sixty thou sauds had fled from the city. THE Coroner's jury in the case of Isaac M. Ruth, at Lawrence, Kansas, returned a verdict that Ruth died from the effects of poison, supposed to have been ad ministered by Dr. Mcdlicott. WILLIAM R. WARXOCX, a detective, was shot dead at Piache, Nevada, by a party holding an intrenched position at a mine the title to which is in dispute. He was merely walking in the vicinity of the mine at the time. THE wealthiest citizen of Louisville, has recently obtained a divorce from his wife, who has been for flfb-en years an inmate of an insane asylum in Massachu setts—reported to be tlie first divorce for such cause ever granted in Kentucky. RECENT official statistics show that 434,074 persons, or 73 per cent, of the agricultural tenants in Ireland hold less than 30 acres of loud apiece ; 296,988 persons, or 50 per cent, hold less tlian 15 acres ; 125,289 persons, or 21 per cent, bold less than five acres apiece. THE Earl of Carnarvon, in London, said that the last few months had shown us that English security lay not in alli ances with the nations of a continent honey-coinbed with secret intrigue so much as in the free confederation of the English race in every part of the world. 555 THB NEW TREATY. —The London Timeft is.convinced that the basis and essential provisions of the treaty of Washington will certainly be adopted by the American Senate, and therefore believes that the treaty is virtually concluded. As for the treaty itself, it is the result of mutual concession, and the Times finds in it Hothing inconsistent with the national honor or that England is not ready to sacrifice to restore amity between the branches of the Anglo-Saxon family. Hall's Journal of Health says a sixpenny sandwich, eaten leisurely iu the cars, is better for you than a dollar-dinner, bolted at* "station." ' An Indian Fight, liMt Sunday morning nav* a letter from South Paw, Wyoming Territory, the citisens of Wind River Valley, iu HUH Territory, wero startled by the cry of " Indian* !'' Aat rutin war party of hos tile savages, aup|>o*rd to be Sioux, had come into the valley, ami, under cover of n dPDM fog, iiail attacked the settle monk An 01.l Snake Indian belonging to Washakie's frn-mlly tnlx H on hi* way to tho Agency, ami the hostile aavngos |x>nno i down ttfam him, took away Ilia ponton, and carried off one of his wives Til a tqtuw kicked and strug gled ao vigorously tliat she tin oil \ got away, and her Ini-iuuid coming to lo>r a* swtaucc wit It a revolver, kept hack her captors until she cseap. d into tin* brush and hid. the Indiana thru rodo up to Ik* house of J allies Roger* and drove off Ilia rattle, earning away with them all tho old Knakr Indian's roW* and hnffalo moat, and tho two pomaathey had cap tured. Mad of Uio settlers worn inclined to keep close to thoir houses, not t>oiug aldo in tho fog to aacortain how many Indians tlioro were iu the hostile jiarty. As MHIB, however, tut it U> known that tho savage* wore falling hack to tho hill*, four frioudlv Snake* ami three w liite men mouutod thoir homoa and went in pur snik When the Muff* wore reached, above tlio fog, the savages were IHHUI, about 25 in number, drit uig off tho stick k> the northward. I'he Snake* and white mon fMlowcd rapidly, ami com pelled tho marauders to abuuiou the cattle. The savages, however, aoon afterward showed light, and a council of war having Itecii held by tho Hiiukes and white men, it was decided thut aevoii men. however brave, should not attack 2ft wurrhirsa* brave us themselves und far bt tier armed ami mounted. The t'hiof of the Snakes, W'.udtakie, was ou hia way with tho triW to the Agouov, und could not thou W< many miles dis tant. The four Indian* ami one white man wont iu search of Washakie's camp, ami the others returned to Little Wind Hirer settlement. The rest of the story I shall let my informant relate in hi* own wav. "It was near nightfall, aud a heavy snow-storm had wt in, when, fortuuate hr, just as wo wore aliout to encamp, we heard tlie trump of u multitude of horse*, and saw the friends we wen* Marching for toiling alowjy along through the storm. To hnil them, fiud Waidiakic, and acquaint him with tlie oeenrren .v of the morning, was the work of a few minutes. The Chief, without saying a word, ordered the alarm to he sounded and the war-drum to Ix-at. The warrior* wondering what the matter could bit, came rushing on their swift puuica from all directions, and swarmed iu a dcuse mass around their venerable and beloved Chief. He ordered tit of the beat mounted men to fall out and prepare for war. This preparation consisted simply in pauitiug their faces, and in 15 minute* they were mounted ami ready for their Chief's further commands. Asking how far it was to the trail, aud turning over the care of the village to a sultoroinate Chief, Wuahukic put himself at the head of his warriors and galloped away to the West. As it was most important that the trail should IK- struck before dark the ride was fast aud furious. It wasalreadv growing dark when a shout announced the fiuding of the trail, aud each warrior ludted to rest his pony and examine the sigus. • Forty track ;25 soldiers,' said Washakie, in bis sententious way, after a cart ful scrutinizing of the "tracks. Presently he added, 1 four or five hoars' old, pLuu, plenty, good ; we catch 'am.' I'o this remark all the warriors solemnlv answered 'L'mph.' The snow, whieii had ceased fulling for a time, commenced again, and the trail gradually liegan t disappear; still the Indians pursued long after no sign was visible to the eye of a white man. About midnight, however, a halt announced flint the trail was lost, aud it took considerable examination in the grass to And it again. At leugth we were once more on it ;aud now Wasluikie Ivgau to anxiously scan the elomls. •Bud. l>ad !* he muttered. The night grew blacker and colder, and another halt told us we were again off the scent. Dismounting, a part of the warriors started on foot to follow the trail, the main body keeping close in the rear ami leading tne ponies. All night long we toiled on, the guides at times following the trail through a heavy storm on their hands aud knees. It was near daylight when again the night became pitchy dark and the trail was completely ]>,(. ' Good,'said the chief in a cheerful voice, •we rest now ; 'urn not far off, aud we get 'am in the morning.' 80 w< all lay down, holiling our ponies by the lariat rojx-s, and had an hour's good slwp. "It was hardly light wlien we were arc mud by the guides, aud, cold, stiff, and sore, we rusunicd our jouruev. The trail was n his warriors. It is marvelous tlmt tne brave old man was not killed. Washakie at once set out on his return to the village at the agency, and entered his camp auiid the plaudits of the whole tribe ; the greab-st of soldiers in the esti mation of his jieople." The following day a party of Snake warriors went out b> the battle-field and brought in six more scalp*. The de feated Indians had hastily decamped, leaving their dead on the ground. This was most uusual, but as they were dis mounted tliev of course could not esrry them off, ami probably thought they bad no time to spare to bury them. Wash akie lost in this affair one man killed, and had three woundad, of whom one will die. The Indians he fought with, who * were at first supposed to lm Sioux, turn ed out to lie Northern Cheyennes. They numbered 27 men, and lost eight killed aud all their sbick. The defeated In dian* retreated in the direction of Big Beaver where there is at present a column of cavalry scouting from Csmp Stambaug. It is believed that those who escaped from the Snakes will fall into the hands of the cavalrymen. Of courae, being off their reservation with out authority and on the war-path, these Cheyennes, if found by the United States troops, will lie treated as hostile. Col. Bartlett, who commands in Wind River, is of the opinion that this battle will lead to a general war lietween the Snakes and the Cheyennes and their Sioiu ulliea. It in i1 highly prob able we shall soon have sonic more lu -liou fighting ill Northern Wyoming, out! the Indian Agent, Dr. Jit*. Irwin, fit']* no uniwijr Unit he i* urging (Hn. Auger, wlmc miinaitd* Uu> Department of Uu Platte. l<• wml n ooinpony of cavalry to protect tlto Agency on Little Wind Hi tor. IVrlb of the lining. lu a lecture oti tlu< perils of the young in Hrooklvu, He v. 1 k-witt Tuliiiage said : One chub* of teiiiptaliou conn from the dishoiiest or loose employers. What hope i there for a boy who learns iu the store that a be is excusable; that im-ii ought to Is- Inmost—when it |wys; that it is wrong to cheat unless you can do it well. The hoy soon Icarus to cheat so sharply that he is finally promoted to W head clerk. Due morning the em ployer comes to the store and ttiels thut the safe has teeu broken open. Has the head clerk lieen here f No; ami lie never will be there again, lie lias acted on no new- principle it was taught in Uie store. There is a cheat of young men in New York ami Brooklyn who are called " drummer*." They have a legitimate business -there is a lawful way to trans act it, aud an unlawful way. There are members of this clans who take merchants from the West, ami the country round UIHMII, through all the dregs of the city, showing them " sights," introducing them into the ea-uuo* and hells of vice. There is a private drawer iu the store where money is kept to pay the expense of these private excursions. Tlie pro prietor is,|H-rllupA, II professedly religious man, and may tie in a pruvvr-im ctiug while his clerk is st work. Vvltat will be the result of tins dissipation to the clerk? Home day be will come into filestore ragged umt drunk, and then lie will Ik* called " n disgrace to thoestablishment," and he will lie kieketl out. Yoiiug men of this Association stand round these clerks ! F.ucotiruge thorn Ui lie houest, and if honesty loads them to wunt, put your hands into your pockets au l h<-lp ihem. .Many a young man commences his dissipation lu a fashionable club house ami ends in ihuuuatioii at the Five Points. A Frlxhtfal Turnatid. A tornado swept over Baton Rouge and vicinity, causing groat destruction of property. Trees wens uprooted, and brick* and plank* wre whirled in the air. The north aud south walls of the IVuitcntiarv, the naif of the shoe factory, and the cells in the south wing of the building were blown awav. The whole second story and naif of the store-house of the Uuited State* Araeual, with 300 feet of the laboratory, (a frame build ing.) anil the naf of one of Ulo powdiT magtixine* were rent in fragment*. The naif was torn from the Catholic Chureli, and the cemetery fence was demolish ed. A large uiiuiber of frame houses wen- unroofed, and sustaiued other damage*. The *ugar-huue and a num ber of cabins ou the plantation of Joseph Bermud wen* blown down, aud one negro wo* killed and several were wounded. The sugar-house, gin-houae, and cabins on the plantation of Jauie* Mid'ollen wen* all destroyed, .Old in.mv colored jiersons wen* severely uijup-<{. The sugar-house aud all the cabin* on the plautatiou of W. 8. l'ike were blown down, aud two colored men were killed and a uumbcr were wounded. Many Unit* an I Huts, laden with coal, were sunk. The loss w ill reach £4<*>,<*Jo. During the *torm some of the convict* eecaptNi from tlie prison, but they were speedily n*captured. THR TREATY WITH FRANCE. --In ihe German Parlinni nt Plioee Ht*mare-k gave the |Nirtieular-< of hi* recent visit to Frankfort, t confer with M. Favrc and M. Pouyer-Qnertier. He said (hut if the object sought had not been at tained, the Germans would luive reoceu picd Pans,aiul demanded the withdrawal of the Versailles forces lelnnd lb** Loire. The treaty which was concluded ba*t. n the payment of the war indemnity to Germany. Half a milliard of frwnca are |o 1H paid by France thirty days af ter ilie entry of the Versailles army into l*aris, and a milliard more before the end of Di-o-mlier of the present year. Bm only will the Germans ev.ictiate the I'urit forts. A* to the abrogation of the commercial treaty. Prince "Hi -anarch stated that the witiidrawal of France from the maintenance of tliat instru meut was merely for the purpose and iu the hope of increasing the customs du ties, with which to liquidat her indebt edness. The rutifiiwtion* of the treaty are to lx exchanged at once. SAD ACXUDEXT. A terrible accident occurred on the Eric llailruad at Gria wohl Station, a few mile* thia ride of At tic-a. A houvv freight trniu. 7"itli en gine, cur, ami CIKH>NO atbtchixl, while going down n grade, tinnmplral. leaving the car and cnboo-ve IM hind. The train was recoupled, the signal taken in, and atarted on the ascending gnule, when the eoupling broke a second time. While Wing reeonph-d, mid ln-fore the *ij.-n.il Could be re:*<'t, the extra fn'ight train came thundtring down the grade, and ran into the emigrant train, crushing everything before it. Out of thirty paie M-nger* in the ear, five children were killed, and nltout twenty adult* more or le*H injured. The Coroner took jmaacs- Hion of tlie killed, aud the wounded w< re ta' en to the hospital of the Si*ti-ra of Charity, and it is said that everything possible for their aid and comfort was ordered to l>e furnished by the Snjwr iutendi-nt of the Erie Itailwsv. XoT TORE FOOIXP WITH.— -An exchange snys : "The worst joke thnt was ever |*r|>etrated ou scientific moll took place recently nt Louisiana, Mo. A man was airk with rheumatism. or something, snd a follow wont around to the doctor# end professors ami things, unci told thorn thnt it wiw the queerest rase on record. He said the man had no feeling. Von could stick pins in his body all over, and he paid no attention to them nt nil. He was perfectly ntunh. Ho the doctors got together and called on the sick man to experiment AH nrrivud with pins and needled nnd bodkins. The mnn was asleep nnd they pit arouiff! him, ami eneh one stuck his pin in the patient. The sick innn Tolled over nnd looked at the crowd, and thought they had come to dissert him. so he took a chair in one hand and a bed-nost in the other, and drove the crowd thence. They are Around with their hciuls tie.l up, lookiug for the man who said that siejc man bad no foeling." CORPORAL Fncmmrrvr.—A few week* ago the Hoard of Aldermen of Washing ton imwt'il a bill atxiliiuiig cor]>ornl punishment in the jmblic schools, and many exertions have Imen nindo to have the (Vinimon Council concur. That IHHIJ ha-* jsmtponed the consideration of the bill five weeks, which has the effect to prevent its becoming a law, sinec the new Government is inaugurated before that time. The teachers of the district will, therefore, for the present continue to stand toward the pupils in htco parmlit, and use the rod when they think it need ful. WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN —The New Orleans lUpuhlirrm. in an article on the crevasse in the Mississippi which has caused so much damage to property, says the disaster was caused by the levee being cut through to liaul wood and not properly repaired. It odds that the en tire cost of repairing the levee where it was cut through would not have exceed ed flv ilalUir* / SEVERE PUNISHMENT. —In Ireland a man has been sentenced to seven years' penal servitude for carrying of! 150 yards of telegraph wire and three insulntnrs. The Postmaster-General prosecuted, and great stress was laid on the calamities which might result from such a crime, the telegraph being the medium of life and death communications. There is a sylvan enriosity in Georgia. Two pine trees five feet apart at the base, come together thirteen feet above, then separate, join again twenty feet above, forming a single top. A young student of Heidelberg recent ly committed suicide, because one of the societies of that old university town re fused to admit him as a member. A lU-unlt hirst* Women. A woinun named Ague* Nortnun, oeem* to have hud extensive but iH-oulior . perieuoc iu mioai jiart* of Loudon. )t appeared reeonUy it a itimnit'i iiti|Ut st that about * year ng<> tbo child of * lady visiting in tin- houxv win re Agnes employed wo* found dead in bed, under inyitterioiiH circumstance*. In her next tilner, Amu * one duy brought it child home inacuniblw, *v inn that it had fallen from her arms, 'fho iufniit rtsurmd, a fid within three week* ahe bxik it out iiKuin uud brought it biu'k dead. lu her third KituuUon, a boy of aeveit awoke with a eh.'king M timitiuu, and utterward told Ilia father that Agile* hail placed her liuud over hi* mouth ami given hitu money to any nothing ulauit it. At 'another house where site wu employed, a child woa found iusciisihlu in lied, and on recovering *lmw< d great terror at the tight of the gul. Atailotlier, "lie liM'ked a child up in a wardrobe, took it out ami put it to )>ed, where it wax found dead shortly afterward, birds and domestic antmala died suddenly and atrnugely na j children in hrntww where ahe lived. FIIIUIIY ahe wan employed by Uie fiuuilv of a Air. llecr, who three duva after*aril, returning with hia wife from u dinner party, heard violent ac run ma in the utir serv, nnd rushed up ataira to find one child I ying on the tliHir uud another la-tween the bed and the wall, dead, with two eompretiad inarka on it* lip*, l'lio verdict of the coroner's jury WHS " Death from snff'ocatiou, aeculentelly caused,'' with vrbielt, as we lead iu tlle l.omlou pajs-rn, "the father said he was dissatisfied ' The iti.se is to be further investiguti-d A mania for munler is u reooguixeil, though happily not u coin- j mou form of mental disc ie. The eoju of a female Ulllse in onu of tin* ooutinen t.d hospitals, who COllfosoed tliut she had la-eu in tin* habit of killiug her patients, with no other motive than an insane eagerness to see them die, is fresh in our recollect ion. We are not prepared to say that women more frequently give way to such horrible impulses than men; but we recall at this moment several iu-tancos given by the laaiks, iu each of which it was a woman who f*lt the insane desire, and generally a child that she ' wanted to kill. Fxpeuditures of the boieminent. The following is a statement of the receipts and ex|a*mlitun s of the U. H. Government for the fiscal quarter ending 1 March 31, 1871 : aauHVi*. j Hrl iwrifto law aiOuw FM.JT7.Z3I.T3 tllloriMi rtlruuc JF.JII"HI iislM eut4tr IsuiU i 'i. itrj.*>i MlMsllsuo-a* aeurcr* 6.IMSU3.JS T.iUl iwclgu |*U.3z3.|01.3T t IMUu,. IU If-rorjf In 31, IsT 1 130.311.T1t5T I l'u>* IsUle UelUI TrrSnUtrr 111!. I "lusrirf J.KTS Cirsntl leul f XIO.tM.TO* ID ■*t orunmu Iteoguata. It MJI ITCM : rail ,i. l nonlluiuw. li (W.ol 3J War |V|o3tlurul Ihn. tuxwM! luctiou, 1 o-l.rwu u tauM*.., T.TJT MM 43 i lui.fvl ua pabik- Sri uMtiasrj vxgvnauarts T*.iU Tal.la iluUetupUua ol l.w led Tawarjr o, *.t*ITMI6 CurxhSK of booJ. _ ll.uuo uwiuu ToUl OH n| udltuir. flu* sIA.MT.M Itslssre U> treasury 3jartl I. IMI .. I.V .* 1.*3 *. Tutel tZM,iMX*XM runintiirrrtut I>UI. im.-uui oauundiuv IMe. 11. 1570..|1.t3.in.aM 03 Ihik. duriDi ijiuiiFr al.w* ToWi ...|),MC*TaM3 Kntuied tuu| qorttr :i.VT3,T*i l i .\IU'* A RIH W i* < vsttp gfc <>l3>, <*lt^ The j. i iwl rsuir l.r< .u*bl. .10 ftlS 1° *ll I r XMM 10 ~IS IT WLJ, i i(.,a*b ri h T i ' j lilf*. L dr, M T>, t T|* ( The average price ill the c im*jml mg week of 1*76 was 15j evil Is ; in that of 1869, 14] oeut* ; ami in that of 1868 15] cents. TIUKP or IT. — (ten. Rooael lias sent a commuuiestion to the Commune tender ing las resignation a l.'umuuiuder-in- Chief of the insurgent force*. He way* : " 1 ciutuot endure to hold the n*q*-uM bility where every lowly deli In* raTcs, where IIOIMHIV eiU-ys ordcis, where notluug is 1 organised, and where the gum depend for service upon a few vobiiiteer*." In continualion. the Genera) complain* tluit re-enforciment* have not lieeu grmnUvi him, when urgently needed ; and that in )>oirit of fm-t the Commune was iuea- I-utile of the discharge of the dutiea per taining to it He, therefore, retires from its service. The document concludes as follows ; •* Two course* were open to our force*, vix.. to break through the obstacles which environ Paris, or to retire. The former has IK* n found to be impossible, ami therefore we Hav re tired. I have the honor to asK of you a cell in the Mnzas priaoti." BEVESI-E MATTERS. -A camparative statement of the receipts from several sources of revenue, taxable under n-rtaiu law*, for the first nine months of the fiaeui year ending June 110, 1870, aud for tee name period of 1871, shows, for the former jieriod, aggregate receipts Sliil,- 58.85,710. and for the latter |>erii*l, 8108,- 51*),094, an aggregate of decressc of 918,430,616, or eleven per edit. The decrease in the receipt* from all sources, exi*-|t spirit*, is eliH-Hy due to the m-t of July 14, 1870, which released a large mimW-r of articles from taxation. The atabmient shows a falling off of 94.4^9,• 140 in the tax on spirit*; ?5.5t.'V28!> in incomes ; B'Ji>n,:t6o in *jM*-inl tax-s, and 95. 392,9*25 in nr(ich*s and occttjsitioM formerly taxed but now exempU'd. Then is an inereuse in receipt* from tobacco of £1,704.459 ; from fermeuUsl liquors, £805,408, and from |M-naltic.*, 912,400. THE COTTON MOVEMENT. —The receipts of cotton at all the jxrt* of tlie. United Slates during the |W*t week were 51,432 hides, ngi)in*t 56,685 boles the previous week, mnkiiig the total re-ecipt* since the Ist of Sepb-niWr, 1870, 3,623,373 bales, agnin*t 2,637,252 lales, for the eorres|N>tiiling time last year. The total export* of the week were 71,087 bales, against 36,275 lust year. The total ex ports for the expiiv-d portion of the cot ton year were 2.687,962 belt*, against 1,790,606 in ]H6S)-70. The stocks atoll the ports are 426,944 bales, against 358,- 068 last year. TRADE BTATISTII-S. —The report of Mr. Young, chief of the Bureau of Statistics, shows that for the eight month* eliding Feb. 28, 1871. our exports cx"cded the import* by £7,26(5,103, while for the cor responding |H-riod last year the imports exceeded the cxjwirts by $2,578,345. During the twelve months ending Feb. 28, 1871, the tonnage entered was 9,409,- 024 and cleared 9,-'507,404 -, of the former 5,782.024 were foreign ; of the latter 5,706,316. The figures lire u little in excess of those for 1870. corros|>onding time. WALKINO TO Cm nrH.—There seeins to be some trouble with the lutekmen in Montreal, as one of the pajiera there says that numerous wedding parties have walked to and from the French Church during the past two days, determined not to [NwtjKine the ceremony for wnnt of a carriage. The paper iidds that the brides and bridegrooms do not seem ta object to it, and their friends seem rath er to like it, and that it in also a great saving of money. A FIRE was discovered in li house in the upper end of the town of Fagundus, Ponn., and in less than two hours the whole town wns destroyed. The losses are not known, but there WAS little or no insurance on the property. Alxmt 50 Imildings were burned. There were no lives lost. DANIEL AUSTIN was TA tally injured by August Belmont's imported bull His co-laborers had to maim the animal with Eitchforks in their efforts to save Austin's fe. UM I'arU Xrw*, Dispatches from Versailles announce the capture of Fort d'lssy, ami slate that the fort is now in |MM capture Mouhn-Kagui t, in each of which they were repulsed. Tlu-ir losoe* Is-fore d'lssy and Vauvres have la-en heavy. There wis a review of troops iu the Place tie la Concorde previous to their departure for the front. A general attack was expected. The investment of Paris from Geitue villiers to F'ort d'lssy is complete, and a general assault is imminent. Chitaart lias In-come so unlienltliy from the presence of iniluiricd IMNIICK of the victims of many engagements, that the Versailles trisifm have been obliged to evacuate the place. The Government relieve from service aliout Paris, and send to the dcjiurtiucnta, all soldiers hav ing relative* in the capital. The battery at Moutretout recommenced firing upon the insurgent positiuus at Point du Jour and ilaeahw. The t'omiuiuust gun boat on the Heiue has beeu disabled. Thr Timrx' sjs elul dispatch from Pari* says the I\d- rahsts. recaptun-d the l-ar ricade in the Hue Peyronnet The eom luamhait of the National* was idiot during the tight by a Cure. Thr r*x,!y AVvi *|>eeial dispatch from Yi-ntaille* rc|M-rte a great concent ration of troop* at Neuilly, nd say* ail attack is auticiiiated. A cucuUr from M. Ptaanl order* that a strict wutch lie kept upon the tnoveluriits of th- Bomqun tists. Ibe Prince tie La Tour d'Auvwrguc ia reported as dead. The elections ill Lyons |anaed off tpiit-lly. Thr Tr!r*irh's special dis |sitch from Yei sailleii nay* it is officiallv reported Unit JTiuee Vou lhsmarrk will come to Coinpiegue ti hold an interview with M. Thiers. The Prussians a! Ht. Delii* have arit-sh d aliout 150 fugitive Nattonol Guarxls. It is i*MU\ely denied that the dispute between the Central Comniittee *ud the Commune ha* beeu healed. A powder tuagajuitr near the Maillot Gate wa* blown up by shells from the YerafiJlt-* lotteries, ami several p*r- MIUS were killed. A Communist deenn* fixe* the price of bread *t 50 cent* |s r kilogramme. It is rejx-rted ut Brussels that Prince Mu rut i* now in F'ram*c. A disiwteli from Frankfort announoe* that a definite treaty of peace between F'rauce and Geruiauy h Uvn a-'gned. A duqiatcti from F'rankfort to the Pro rturiai Carrrtp uulcxitn of Berlin says th<* negotiations completed will nwult iu effecting a re I and durable peace, and will uot m- rely remove temporary difli cultiea. It i* also believed the Pari* fortification* now 0.-cupicd by the Pinssion tnsijis will l* delivered to th-* Versailles (it-ycmim lit ev*n la-fore the {laytueut of the first installment of the war indemnity. The Subcommittee of Organisation -if the Commune, iu a proclamation, or der* the m*t relentless measures t<>- wanl the besieger*. No soldier will be allow-.I t. -l- puit in the slighttwt degree from hi* duty, and all the troop* are for bidden to cease tiring u|am the Veraaille* troops who may attempt to surrender, while fugitives aud straggler* are to be sal-retl wlicu c.iught. or if tbey ore in numerous laolieo, ore to be tir-vl into m-*rcil- solv w itli canuou and niitrailleuaea. A P.iri* -lisjwtcb say* that F'-irt Vaa vre* was captured by the Versailles trtaipa, aud wo* held fur a short time, w hell it wo* recaptured by the Commun ist force*. There ho* la-en deajien-te fighting th-rr. The fort is in a very dilapidated condition, and it will soon la-come imfx-rative upon Uie force* of tin- Cotum-iuc to evacuate it. The Gov ernment tr-Mijw make daring attack* on Ncuilh* and Anian*. The ttrrril sava G--u. Cbarette -s-miiunnl- the troop* in Uie Boi* de Boulogne The Governnu-ut tnaip* carried the iKurica-h* in the village of Bourg-la lleiuc, killing and wounding 160 of the insurgent* and capturing 4-' i The can u or Amerie*. Hiieh a trilmnal, so oompoaed, of so much elevation and character, is without example perhaps in diplomatic history. It is a signal step iu the line of international arbitration and the consequent iulerest cf universal |M-oee. lly its organiaation and charac ter it is competent to satisfy the susoeo tibiliticsof Isitb nations, and to do ample justice to Uie pretensions of the United Htates. • But to pn-cliide all eipiivocations iu this resis-et, the trcsty establishes -q*-<-t*J rules of neutral duty and obligation in addition to the generally received public law, which rules, although not admitted by the British Uommiosionera to lour lieeu iu force at the tuuJ, ore -yet, it is agreed, to retro-art, and to govern the decision* of the tribunal of arbitration. This tribunal may either award damages iu detail or in gross, st its discretion, or it may refer this duty to a Board of As sessor* sitting iu the United Htates, who shall report from time to time, with pay ment to tie mode accordingly, and in tlic generous sjnrit of a power conscious of its eajiaeity to speak as well as to set in dependently and rightfully at all times. The British Government frankly exores ses its regret for the occurrence of the incidents complained of by the United Htates. It in agreed thai, iu addition t the lilwrty ult> adv arund to thin bv the Tmtj of ]H(K, the fiaheruieu of the United KUtni ulill have the liberty to Lake new flah on the e roast and shore*, and in the Imji, harbor*, and fiwki of the l'mvinw* of Ouebec, Now Scotia, and Sew Brunswick, and the o|ony of Prince Edward's Inland, and of tlu utlauda adjacent without being re stricted to any distance from the shore with permission to land u|*n such roan to, •hurt-a aud islands, and ahto upon the MagJah-u laland*, for the ptir)toae of drviug their net* aud curing their ft-h, subject, of roarae, in thia reaper! to the local right*'of the private property ; and the Name liberty ic granted to British -übjeet* on the eautern sea-coasts and ahorea of tlie United ,State* north of the 39tb )>andlcl of latitude ; thia lilwrty not to include, on either aide, Nhell-fiah or the salmon and aliad fisheries, or other liaheriea in rivcra and the mouth of rivers. It ia further agreed that dab oil and dali of all kinda, except dah of the iulaud lakea and their rivers, and exevirt d*h preaerred in oil, the produce of the fishere* of the United States or of the Dominion of Canada or of Prince Edward'a Island shall be admitted into each country respectively, free of duty, THE xturrii TURNOUT BOITCDARV UN. Of the ]M>uding subject* of controversy ' letweeu the two Governments, there remains to be considered the question of ( the North-Western Boundary Line. It it to be remembered that the* line of the Treaty of 1H46 runs by the middle of the i channel which separatee the continent from Vancouver's Island ; but several such t Itauuela exist Great Britain con tends that the channel of that treaty is the Hoaario Straits, the United States that it ia the Canal de Hero, the two channels I wing *i-paratrd by the Island of San Juan. This question having once lwcu reported on by a mixed CVimmia rion, that for the survey of the line, the U nsted States are not content to refer it to another such Commission. Nor has it 1 been deemed convenient, even though < | uch tribunal be appointed bv a friendly j sovereign Power instead of thia. It lias j been agreed by the present treaty to sob-; mit the question directly to a neutral i Power, and the Emjierorof Germany ha* 1 lx**n selected for that purpose. The Government of the United State* has in its hand* much documentary evidence in ; MIMMH of its pretensions not heretofore made use of, and on that, as well as on other grounds, ia confident of the la tter reason on its aide to assure to the United Statea the {xutaeaainn of the Island of Ban Juan. The river St. Lawrence, and the rivers Vncan, Porcupine, and Stilline, are de clan*! forever free and open to the citi lens or subjects of both countries, bv providing for the equal use of the Wcl land and St Lawrenee and other canals in the Dominion on the one hand and of Lake Michigan and the St Clair flat* and canal on the other, by providing for tlie free transit of merchandise to and fro an well in the Britiah possessions as in the United Statea. and altoliahing the provisional export duty on American lumber on the river St John. THE THKATT IK THE SHEATH. Upon the asncinbling of the special session of the Senate to consider the tn-aty. Gen. Porter, arrived with the portentoua document in his poasemkin, and njon its receipt Senator Cameron at once moved an Executive Heaauon. Tlie treaty was at once read, and then a mo tion wa* made to remove the injunction of secrecy from the text of the document HO that it might be given to the public at onec. It is understood that the Preai ilent Miiggcsted that atich action be taken HO that the public might know at once tlie ciiaracter of the document. Sena tors represent that the impression pro duced by the treaty was verv favorable. The general cxjieetation ia that the Hcssiou will last two weeks. The Markets. m* max. Brar C*TTU— Fair to prinv fU 00 allU lliu i Cow*. a08 *A.oo Hw— Lrea an # D***-d .OS a .Its Hurxr * at a 16.00 a 4.75 Estra a7l a TOO (Vox a .04 OAT* 48 a .73 CUU M 33.M a33.00 I ASI. U a .131, Berrra-Common 31 a .38 Cbolre Lola SI a .13 Casta* IS a .17 Eiioa—Wealere. .11 a .14 Eaatern 18 a .18 ox*a fnn-Ckmr to, .13 Tlni olkr 8 .Mi a 400 KM Top 431 a 4.M HAT—Cholra 3*oo #30.00 Common 30.00 #32.00 CBICAOU. Bssvsa—Chotev 37.00 a T.7S Prime 600 a 6.40 Fair (trade* ISO a 1.74 BTOCSCATTI*— Common...' 1.00 a 7.11 Inferior 3.80 a 1.00 Hooa—Lira 0.30 a 6.85 NaKKr —Lira—Good to Choice 1.00 a 4.00 Fun-a— While Winter Extra 4.10 a 7.31 fq.rum Extra. 1.71 a 4.71 huoXarhstL t.TS a 1.73 Oaaia—Corn— No. 3 SO a -M Barley—No 3. new 90 a .91 Oat*—No. 3 16 a .18 Rye—No. 3 83 a .90 Wheat—Sprln*. No. 1 1.23 a 1.34 No. 3, 1.18 a 1.30 USD 10 a .11 Poas—Meaa 17.00 #17.40 SCFTALT, Bc*R CATTIJC 5.78 a 7.50 HNKEF 350 a 6.81) Hooa—Ura 650 a 8.00 Pboeß 5.90 a 7.35 WBKAT 130 a 1.31 Com* 80 a .65 o*7* 58 a .60 Rvt 90 a 1.00 Basest 75 a .83 LABK 11 a .tlx ALBANY. WHIAT State J. 60 a 1.75 Extra 7*68 a 1.6S RTS—Btale 1 15 a 1.18 OOBM— Mixed 78 a .80 BABLST—State 90 a 105 OAT*— State 80 a .70 PHILADELPHIA. FLOCB— Penn. Extra.. "1 a 7.00 WHEAT— Weetern Red I-M a 1.60 White 1-86 1-85 0oB!—Yellow "1 a .78 Mped 78 a .76 JOXa • Timothy • #3B ! PETBOLEUB— Crude 1* Refined ,33H BEEP CATTLE 07 a I. Ir A L'rt HKtnwnia roriT*.n, like tin* nought tor by l)t> Hato, nhouitl burnt from (lie furth of < \crjr man'* door, tiiutimnd* would turn their Whfi no the healing Hpriug* within nrnu reneh, to rnn nfLr pretoixliMl rwmMtim. The ohnerrant, 1 everywhere, "crept lit. WAMEHb'* V WH OA* HITTER* m* the grmtent medirirud , hhwntng of tiKMlern time*, but on the i oilier bund multitude* dose themeolre* i' with poiaotui, while the wrllrapring of • heelth hi *,<*•—tible to all. It imriftee the animal fluid*, regulate* every func tion of the lately, t-alma the MPT**, in vigtarahw the vital organ*, and la an uufailiag ]ieciftc for inaigeetion. The all-gone feeling which people •one , time* *jM-nk of, i* canned bv want ofpop ular action of the liver and heart Tlie*e may be aanuted,and the bowel* regulated, by I'AMNINH IVHOATTYR PILL* in email j ■ doee*. • 111 1 11 L Th# hitrf l mtnifli tia* tun >ti $ nit tacwfuUy uiq—. nrt w—a time mbmm brme *Mto—ma* 4m>r aw yeai—rd ea iwe dwa— * * a— *■ gatelng u4 Maou drag* la nta a rate—a* tham. I ••* literally menu* tham wm the bead' ad thorn who . adaUai-sra* the— They ware I—* apse It a— ae* ' wa until it. ads—t pew— *a thareegbly drewaha* ' j ml at It " TV* wrat* wtear awe Urea U we* m thet draeus era, •hn (em, aefMlw ae* m>i—liel aaUaaUaa eaaa ' whet Art*taw* War* waaM tor* mU*4 tha "aiu Mt' | ad the toeeHy. to"—•• ad */iapelaee* li—teampialet. ! TW. yeast m—rea wa*i tor ladi—allna aa* hrtleoe a HalaMe ihtaua faaw, a pre—rati— egi"* km U a merit al mmtoeiaa a palataMe Has— en* MM* > I aaa, i in al aa* eattbiln— 11 gi Ulu. aa aara ear— . hanlotoi* aalla* Hi aa/ mad—m i ha* baa* d—raced. M laat. dial —* pauper ara a— . liU the totted Titan* whe (aaa* pruru-atto* aa raftrafc ' tag that, atmlaodd*a. they —team the earth tare* aa aa bed—a Wb— aa mealed la yeew lieil bt qaaaifal Mfl't.na draaw. ha la apt to ataa . ' f aatiriiid; ae* lha drtaliuted hr—* aeaaa a* tha dam, , j pralat tha teatta* cp the t—today —.tarn "* U—tr-ttec'e Rittrae eueeto tha ret/air—teoto a* tha ra urael aaa*Hai yhitiiaryhy wtuah at /nae yea—On. It ) j Urn lraperl.nl pwpsrtea* a* a pre*—U re. a toate. ae* , laa at—rate**. It terteO— tha Ml aialae *taaaaa, la- Ifaraiaa ae* ae-rtlolt—e tha url aaaaaaah aa* torer, ' aa* *te— a a—to raiutecy chaogr >" A rrfl Vila uaa at Wn4 |i|a w Miiew ak "• I U' br M taaar • al l AlatM >ah paiafal eae|riaraa> *Wh >K/*ae altitMi aulaij I to the aeaaa. Oar *• e head ► etth r. aa htoMt Via aa* ae hm*h ■"'< ie u lla I),uaae af aiaaatartorr aa to br la fan ' ; ato rv* Water Oaea thraaet Ibe a|> aa qara aa H - ! : E-TitH-5P" r ' "I as rAUm . M. 8.. Mae Tarh. . t* T W Ma*ioaa; JaetoaK Weo*. W D eU bmi "rtxit .... TW Wfflk Sb I 1 iftwi rft ft. l> t aartra t- tw T'eefc. mitXE IStUXt a** la* JibST Hf Agents Wanted Everywhere. BKuaAra^AWK* ™~ -rs'KAEa'Sr.'tefK now TO MAKIIirBtKAM.-favW ceat. f el* qir-Tal: tMnrli <, Htoklß* • e n t'rxxl j At MI .t \ Hiiip Dr JORS if. HOCLL 4 OOt, <> Hrt wta. m—. . KBAOHANT SAPOLIENE p IWI.I *. >r. VaA. ee I- MWia iw—ga. Agents! Read This ! Il't WII.I. r*t AOKXTW A HAUIT t ef ••• poe Week aa* ea* ar ahne a I 94 A LINE, far aa ADVEnTIREWEJtT ia 1400 NEWSPAPERS, vamrata>twa.oM.T*tth)nMTß Far ÜBte. aal—alto, ae* taathar lartkahn, A**nae XEW TOH hEwertrr* rxiov. ia rem *.*.* ( HI( A0 SEWIPAPEI VIMI Ihkaca. ia hoTHW rerrw* hcwhrArn r**. RIBBANS BROTHERB, I uAjrrrACTfiuaa or ! Printed Wrapping Paper, l With lha rarrhaarrS AdwrttaaOMet —atly Prtota* < every Bheee. ewkte* tt thr moat AOaet aa a-aU lha (haaprat adaemeeot m—■ yet —a*. Alan, J.Mim <* 1 Hemp, Jute, Cotton ud Flax Twmen, AU riekf ' 25 FAIR NEWARK, N. J. aRAIN ItAOS. All tha MaaAaM HraMr at —ryley—l moaa. Om Ma—Maaralhr baat —* wrH— laeaat IB Ihr laai—A. ■ Sand fur Saaipha aa* PmelaM. RIBBANS BROTHEBS. U r un eT.. Srear*. I *. I .tree Bimt • orakd cirr OOWOSBT aim BtuWM I roe ran a*rii . n ' 1 A" Rawdaeor aaarOa i —haihiaa eu—n ite ■ WJ>aeah. fnOt OWM —P"% KMBMSIS RISMN MM LIPSFM . twr mli mm it •t,ot [}. K eaaOA. kww K. C. ' fiteto Honda lie Shane >.(*.! U* Malta.. MaSuea* Oth— WaMoaal Baat. Bah*. P* HHaiar Morthrra twiOalß.*. MO ae Ena BJfc fn Share* Ball.. A Ohio B. R_. W Rharr- Phil* Wp ■al—aoa * Ba'to R R. WtWTtraJrraadlyai* baaaU assrt arm. t C., Ho* Jml A. Si*W/. Pittobare. fa_ Eto* ssc; sss-ssrsr?*!. SfSra.v% '"oatha l ilTwr' lha (Wart, thr aoeip>|—a taWeah laetaaeUi aa aim nor thr aamar o tU Ml—aaa wha will hr teoorat a* a OaauaMtaa at OUlme*WlWrttatj—. Ch^;L b rajj aborr Rralßtoato twO>* ha ooaoM. ia thr hM— ad Ihr Tra-teo. T-K-T in* t'irrehe* O— taha* ad I P. t Ja:nj .N. UaaarU Aaanc Stationer an* Priahw. *M- OrSarJha luSTaill taootra prompt aM—Uoe. Time Taate the Merita of aU Thlara. FOR OVER THIRTY TEARS PERRY DAVIS' VEGKTABLK "PAIN KILLER," Ha boon l~ted ia arary rariatr a 1 'h—ta. —* hr h rnoal orory Eatioa known to Amnai . It H tha almoa* comtant ootniMiaim and tmaUmnhlr'frmad at tha taia- Monary ud tha trnndra. a— aad Mad ami no ont -honkl tram! on oor lakaa or rtrar* without it. | PAIN KILLER aa the First, and i* the Only Permanent Pain llelietrer. Slnor'ba PAIR KII.LER ena Otto in—ntaaad. u* mot with moh omnnaoril alo, man/ l.inimont, Ro lint*. Paaaeeaa. aa* othar Rrmolir. ha to —on oArtd 10 tha put-lic. bnt not oaa ol ihrm haa—or attai—d Abe trvljr rnrlablo Mudlx od tha PAIN KILLER. WHY IH THIN SO? It h baeauaa DAVIS' PAIN KILLEH ia what it ciaimi to bo. a Raharar of Pain. Ita Mot-It a ere I'lean-peeee*. It /an era .uSaHna (tarn Internal Pain. Teant/ to Thirty Itona in a Uttla Wator will altcoat inatantly can /on. Thrtw ia nothina to aqnal IA In a toe mo ment* It eni— Colio. Cmeme. Spa*m, Heart-bora. Diarrhea. Myg rater/, Klai, Win* In the Bowel*. Sear Stem aoh. B/apopala. Nlrh Hradarhr. In eaettoiu of the coon try when Fever and Ague Preenita, there ia no remedy hold In aroaaer rat ram. Pataooa traaelint nhonld keep It hr them. A fee drape. in enter, will prevent nrknrM or bowel trouble* from \vmi'f<"n cenntrio* the collate PAIN KILLER are arret III* found to Oura Cholera, when all other Remedies Fail. Whan oaa* Externally, a* a Liniment, nothina aive* K'sar mm In Mnrna, (hit*. Brniaee, Rpraina, SUM* Inaaoir. and Scald*. It rem—oa the flra. and the wound heal* like ordinary aorea. Thoea nufferina with : Rhennaatiam. Onut. or Neuralcia. if not a poaitive cnra. they find the Pain Killer five# them relief eh— no oth er tamed/will. ; It eivca la*taut Kallaf tee Arh las Troth. From IfidO to thia day, 1871, fovar Thirty Yaarai, Pert/ Dneit' Pain Killer haa had no Rival. Every Hcoae-Keeper should keep it at hand, to apply it on the flrat attack of any Pain. It will five aatiafac tor/ relief, and asve hour* of tuffarinc. Do nottrillp with yourtolvm by teetinc untried ram ediva. Be enra yon call for aad art the genuine PAIN KILLER, aa many worth—a nostrums are attempted to be aoUoB the great reputation of thla valuable medicine. aW- Direction* tocompany each bottle. Trio* MS eta., SO eta., en* HI prr Mettle- For Sale By All Medicine] Dealers, i |||f . I i.r 1 MILlJttR* **r Ihmdte-ed • ,hr * W.edrrfal CM**" • They ara —d a *He Heeay Brtefci Meek Whtehe-y. * m * **i*, .. Lie a era -*u,tot. wdre-i 1 uato.—l—l "Teotos "Apaeatawn. Celif-woi*. frrtr free, *]l *'"*^l" ' Inula Thry ar. w di*KAT lll.dOI *'* • riuJia mv. I a parte* ttmomM "> " f _. ] 1 r Tl TTLg w diraeatoea - fe- •"•f --, l*w .r- ■ -a. -a—l- Ti qeevMM we" . lk - lu .i unfnu* warl , patoeeor ot— w1 ■ TirnT- p*pwi"~' i VTi afea. }****— * "■*" * . FEW ALBI OH PI-AI NT*. '-W-J the torn af Ufa.Uw 1- ' tin-owe*- I r.r I------'-'; Ua— ee* dieed, P/aP>IHW er ae a ' niee*. wLw-b a> *" wo ******** of the BUeeilta Ort". * PIMPEPoIA OH INIHdiKteTIOS. ' ■> 1 aoka. Pnlnto dk* W—.MaakOaart- Tlgte—l* • t?—d. Mtxaiew**. Itoer Brae—— ad tha *—***. I a> Taate to tte ad-elto *--*Wtotto^l^-• ' the Hvart. Jeiammmmi •* the U*a-. P* a !—#• giaeia ad tha Ridea/*.aed ahne*"* ate*y—i* ! , lose*, are the adU*a—adJßVte-ee* thgtoefl* i l>eat aa* •—*—. eirt— rweacr thai ad H"l|l'eli** • *, .. cteto.M*g th. u-i W all —to* mwi • aaruag a*e l*eae* trtparto lha ehalaa/edna. L ro* *Kl)(BiallW.™ , * Mh *]j* Kb'rum. tote— p— t P—— PeWai—i"BaMa.Om* ' rtrf-r"t* iT *r" ,i, ,t ehetwwmm*er —>■■ - Utarafh 4-a • art rarvtod —t adth- eatoarn m a —-r< , liar. Iw 'J- *> —**. O— —gfej* aach - aawr* wiiioeesiaea tfiamaat UK—ute—af thrtr •— > live *KU. ' . Deeggtot* an* Oaa Agreto. tea Freer—e. Otate—to l aa* Hand U Ommmw MraaL he I era jars"LU_T AU. IRltldilFTfi ASP DEALER*. S2BB in 16 DAYS WhitoevV Keai* Foot Harnew Sp. jew Smr# oifsrrs* te&JZsez.**- ft -c -i ft- rno* • Iffy bml Mrartaw PMPuiIWI m, Cfcte rarWXctterv IHatoßtare, TnLk-iu*. Aaneaettr ouTcma's LIOHTWIWO FLY KILLER 1 a*t j DEAD'jgtTsHOT , FOR Bl3X> BTJO-Mr Try tt-m. en* tem— ■ ft**L ~ 1 Lands ii Sflilfifssl iissoifi The Atloßtlr and ParMf R- - €m • Haw tor tote l,*ee,eee eaeea ad ha— gaahto- " l—n. -r-SIMr gas**- -rp- | - J—WW | raj MERCHANTS : GAEGLING OIL n OOOD pom • Pto*. 1 SeeWIM 4Kto*f Jj**to one addro— (aad Daily tor wiar to thr getter op of ctuhh Fifty Dollar* Omhnndrad oopira -—year, —potntoly addr—d ml the Daily for oar year to the getter ap ef deb Maty Bailor* THE BKMI-WEKKLY IT. Five eoptoa, om year, separately addressed. Eight Dollar*. r— copter, one year, cenaratoly addraaaod (aad an eatrx copy to getter up of etab), Hilmi Delia ■END YOl'E MONET in Peat OM— order*, check-, or draftt on New Tot* ■wwy m o—veniemL aot. then register tte tet^r 1- W WfiLAIfD Pnhliehar Son office, New York NY. N U. May H NeH