A Rammer Wish. Lire all thy sweet life thro'. Sweet Rose, dew-spreot. Prep down thine evening dew To gather it anew When day ia bright: I flancv then wast meant Chiefly to give delight. Sing in the silent sky, (Had. soaring bird ; Sing out thv notes on high To sunbeam stealing by Or passing cloud; Heedless if thou art heard, Sing thy ftill song aloud. Oh. that it were with me As with the flower ; Blooming on its own tree l-Or buttterfly and bee Ithsummer htorns: That I might bloom mine hoar, A roe* in spite of thorns. Oh, that my work were done As birds' thst aoar Rejoicing in the sun : That when my time is run And daylight too, I so might mat onee more Cool with refreshing dew. Farm, Harden and Household. To Cnut HOLLOW Hons.—My remedy ia bleeding lIMI in the neck just as YOU would a horse. One thorough bleeding usually effect* a cure. 1 have know n cattle to oat heartily immediately after being bled tlmt had refused food before. BREAD.—Into a basin break 4 ems, having about a pint of m.svl in the basin; beat all well together, add a large table spoonful of lard, salt to taste, and rnisk enough to make a stiff batter. Just be fore you pour it into the baking-ran old i of a tea-spoonful of arala dissolved in a little milk. AU batter bread is nicer bak-xl in a round pan than in cither a square or oval one. It i* also lighter baked in tin or iron than in a " Turk's head" of earthenware. To Purser HORSES KICKING t THK STALL.— Give them a wider stall, or turn them loose in a box stall. If neither is convenient to do. or fail to rare, take a piece of trace-chain, about two feetloug, and fasten one end of it, with a strong strap, to the foot with which tljey kick. Or put a surcingle loosely around the animal, and pass a cord from the kicking foot through the girth, around the head in front of one ear aud behiud the other. Make the knots so that they will not slip tight, and give length for necessary mo tions. COBS GRIDDLE CAKES,— -Take fine white meal, and stir rich buttermilk into it until it is almost the consistency of thin mush ; add a little soda, and salt to taste. Have the griddle Hot and well greased. Drop on a spoonful, and pat them down with the spoon, so that they will not be more then a quarter of an inch in thickness. When brown, turn them and let them brown on the other side. In eating them, split and butter. The great "knack" is not to have the batter rwway, nor yet too stiff; just so that it will" drop in a lump from the spoon. YAKXISH. —A varnish recommended as well adapt-d tor lacouering picturec and engravings, as well as for preserving dried plants and flowers, is prepared by pounding up ten ounces of gum sandaric, four ounces of mastic, and half an ounce rf camphor, and adding three quarts of strong alcohol. The mass is to be fre quently stirred up, and finally placed in A warm position until it settles. Plants coated with this varnish will, it is said, be protected from destruction by insects, and will retain their colors fresh and un changed. This varnish does cot peel off. and therefore can be applied very thin. Bora AXD COLIC —A fanner at Swan, 0., writes to the Cincinnati (Saitttr: " For oolic make a strong tea of the warts from the horse's leg*. For bots give strong sage tea. I never wait to argue the question whether it is bote or oouc, or whether bote kill the horse or not, bat, njx>n the first symptoms, I make the teas and administer them, and in half an hour my horse is ready for work again. These" have been my reme dies for thirty years, and my father, who was an extensive horse-raiser, used tbern for fifty years, and neither of us ever kwt a "horse by colic or bote, and bad many cases." OBSTRCCTIONB NC Cows' TEATS.—Ob structions in cows' teats are quite com mon in the daiiy districts of New York. The trouble prevails more largely with young cows than with old ones. It is suppose.! to result, in rnanv cases, from an improper drying off of the cows in fall, or from neglect in making clean. Particles of milk coagulating are arrest ed in the milk duct, and a tissue form ing about this matter adheres to the walls of the passage, and in time com pletely closes the duct. There may be other" causes for the trouble, but we name that which is supposed to be most common. The only remedy is to break through this obstruction, so as to unite the two portions of the dnct which have been separated by the obstacle. An instru ment has been invented for the purpose. It consist*' of a small, round tube, in closing a double edged knife, which may be pushed forward or backward from the tube at pleasure. In operating, the smooth, round tube is gently worked up the orifice of the teat until it meets with the obstruction, the knife is then pushed out of the tube, cutting throughly the obstacle and re-establishing a connection between the parts, to that the milk may pass through the due*. It is necessary for a few days, at the time of milking, to use the tnbe—the knife being taken out—working it gen tly up the duct of the teat, and through the opening made in the obstruction, thus keeping it open until the parts are healed. When the operation is skillfully performed, and care is taken that the waHb of the duct are not injured so as to cause inflammation, the operation of the teat may be entirely restored. Obstruc tions in the hat are sometimes removed by using a large knitting needle, with point sharpened to cut through the part obstructed This is a somewhat risky operation, as there is danger of cutting through the walls of the milk duct, and thus causing an inflammation in the teat and adder, which may injure the cow permanently foo milk' We have seen cows completely spoiled for milk by the operation.— Rurol ITetr- Yorlcnr. TERRIBLE RESTLT or A FAULT QUAR REL. —A special dispatch to The Courier- Journal, from Owensboruugb, Ky., says that a fanner named Cain, while passing through on adjoining farm belonging to a Mr. Summers, was shot at and slightly wounded by Summers. The latter s wife joined in the attack, and fired three times, wounding Cain twice. Cain then seized an ax, and nearly split Summers's bead open. Mrs. Summers was also hit on the head with the ax, aud shot in the head and breast with her husband's pistol, which Cain seized. The two are dying. Cain wan shot in the head, shoulder, aud bowels. The last wound will probably prove mortal. An enmity has existed between the men since Cain fired at Mrs. Summers last Spring. Each had forbidden the other to pass through their respective farms. NRW YORK AS IT IS.— According to the most accurate calculations that can be made, the meat bill of New York city for the last year was $30,000,000, and the liquor bill 868,000,000. Ice costs the city $2,500,000 a year; and $7,000,000 are expended in theatrical and other amusements. Of the 163,593 children . between the ages of five and fifteen. 78,450 are in Protestant Sabbath-schools. Vr The statement has been made that the siloons of the city, if placed in line, would extend on both sides of Broadway from the Battery to the Central Park. A YOUNG BANKRUPT.— In the case of the bankruptcy of Mr. Vane J'iibanke, which came before the Loudon court, it was shown that the liabilities amounted to $150,000, whilst the bankrupt would he entitled on the death of the Dnke of Cleveland, whose dukedom willthen be extinct, to property worth s7ojooo a year, and on the death of his father to an estate of the value of 8500,000 a year. || THZ COHMUKMT ARMY. —According to the Oaulois, there are 18,000 Garibaldi ans, 7,000 Irish and English Fenians, 1,200 Greeks, 600 Americans, and 600 Spaniajtis, Germans, and other foreigners in the army of the Commune. Summary ef Sews. THE Republic of Mexico has 8,688,973 inhabitants. THE majority against tho Bond bill in Minnesota ia nearly 10,000. THE rewidencea of MM. Favre and Thiers in Paris have boon racked. TvmMU churches in lNuria have IMW-U eloaed by order of the insurgent I. THERE were 514 deaths, 040 births, and 368 marriages in New York last week. THK Troy Haymakers whipped the Boston Red Stockings Base-ball Club, at Boston. At least 150.000 soldiers of the French arc now in poaition for the operations around Paris. Tint wreather throughout Central Illinois is seriously injnriug the wheat and oata crops. Four new plays have leo preaented to the New York public within a week, and all sensational. THK .Nova Scotia elections indicate a slight gaiu for the Ooverenuient or auti Confederate party. A Fxetca Ashing vessel was run down by an American bark. Twelve of the French crew w ere had. THE insurgent trilaw of Central Aria, under the lead of Satlik, have comineuced hostilities against Russia. IT is annouueed that the Turkish Government is unwilling to conclude any convention with the Pope. A TKXA* paper reports the killing of three women while disguised as men aud attempting to rob a house. Pmunnmu is talking about in creasing its police force to 1,900 rntn. It now numbers about 500 men. A KK-VMOS of the aoldiera of the Northwest is to be held at R.vk Island, Illinois, on Wednesday, Juue 7. THE Democratic St Ate Central Com mittoc of California have decided to hold the State Convention at Sacramento on June 20. AUOTT 0,400 workmen are out of em ployment in lVris on account of the wholesale suppress! •_ n of newspapt-ra by the Commune. A aIXTKEK - VEAH old son of a widow of Fitehburg, Mass.. shot himself dead in the presence of his motlier, because ahe reproved him. A MATCH in St Louis, Mo., between "Pilot Teuijde " aud " Cotton Picker," for SI,OOO a aide, was won by " Pilot Temple." Time : 2.255, 2.24b A OOLCMN of Spanish troop* roubd a band of insurgents, composed of negroes, near Cineo Villas. Cuba. Thirteen were killed and four were ma le prisoners. A resolution providing for an amend ment to the Stale Constitution to confer suffrage on women, has been defeated in the Massachusetts House bv a vote of rt9 to 68. WHILE four High School children were taking a sail at Chicopee. Mass., the boat ported, and three of them, Arad Srinthworth, Kate Hunter, and Minnie White, were drowned. TUF. Adams Express office in Colum bus, Ohio, was robbed of bet weep 840,- 000 aud 850,QU0. The two men who slept in tho office were drugged, and the two safes were opened. Two seamen were fonnd dead off Swan sea. They were identified as belonging to the Cornish Diamond schooner, of Plymouth, and that vessel has, it is feared, gone down with all hands. A GENERAL field order, issued bv Gen. Stoneman, directs the Apache Indians in Arizona to remove at once to the White Mountain reservation, set apart for them, or be pursued and punished whtrever fonnd. ADVICES from Manitoba, Canada, state that resolutions fur an investigation into the outbreak of 1869-70, and to punish the murderers of Scott, and comjiensate losers bv the disturbance, were lost bv 14 to 5. * THE town of Verovitica, in Sclavonia, has been almost entirely destroyed by fire. Four hundred boost* were burnt, four thousand people rendered house less, and the loss is estimated at half u million. ADVICES from Japan state that three great clans there are united under the leadership of Prince Satenma to main tain the Mikado in full powers against the Tycoon and party. Satsuma is now virtually dictator. THE priests imprisoned in La Conci erge, Mazas. La Boquette. La Sarthe, and other jails, are treated with excep tional cruelty and Harshness, nuder which, some of them, being very old men, have succumbed. 1U .-UVEAS at Buenos Ayres is entirely suspended, and the city to a great extent deserted. The custom house and all the banks are closed. The ravages of the Yellow fever continue, and will apjtarent ly only cease for the w-aut of victims. A Malay steward on a California coast steamer outraged a young girl recently, when he was tried at Vm|Hjua bv a Lynch court, condemned to death ami shot in a small lioat, taken out of sight for the purpose. The body was then sunk in the sea. ADVICES reoeived at the Internal Rev enue office show that the fruit crop of the West and Northwest has been ex tensively injured by the late frosts, but that the promise of an abundant yield throughout the South is good, though probably not up to last year's crop. , A Chance for Litigation. A Boston correspondent writes: Somebody has been digging up the will of Josbpa Sear*, who died sixteen years ago, leaving an immense property, and which is to-day worth 810,000,000, and lias discovered that it is loosely drawn up, and may be the means of depriving his son land only child), Joshua Mont gomery Sears, now about fifteen years old, of the great and accumulating prop erty when he shall become of age. At twenty-one years of age the son is to have 830,000, and this is all save aytarlv income until be is thirty years old, amounting to 810,000 a year." No pro vision is made for tiie son after he lias passed the age of thirty. The trustees —three gentlemen who make some 825,- 000 a year each—have the entire swing of the property, and whenever one or either of them die it will go to their heirs or assigns us joint tenants in trust. It is estimated that the property will be worth 835,000,000 by the time the son becomes thirty years old; and the in come of that will lie equal to 8350,000 annually. Taking things in their natu ral order, it is fair to presume that the young man will outlive his two ancles, to whom the residue of the property is will ed ; and then what ? a fimt-classlnw-nuit, because a yearly income of 8360,000 is not to be sneezed at, and besides he oould afford to spend five or ten millions in a litigation. Home lawyer in the future will have a rich plum to pick. WOMEN is ARMS. —The following oomes from Paris of course. A fortnight ago a woman who was in the ran ks of the Communists who had just discharged her gun commenced un angry discussion with another of her sex, who asserted that mothers should stop at home and take care of their little ones. In a paroxysm of anger the female warrior was about to strike the woman who ad vocated stay-at-home-women ; but her arms remained inactive, her eyes became fixed, an ashy pallor overspread her face, and she fell down dead, a victim to heart disease. SALMON BREEDING. —The report of the celebrated Stormontfield salmon-breed ing ponds, in Scotland, for 1870, shows that during the breeding season over 600,000 eggs were procuri d. The suc cess of this establishment in • rearing young fhh is well known, the number of eggs batched usually amounting to over 90 per cent., and most of the young are raised to the age of smolths with very little loss. HAD ACCIDENT. —A terrible horning accident occurred at Rah way. The wife of Mr. Charles George, a young jeweler poured some oil on a fire while endeavor ing to light it, and at the same time spil ed 6ome of the fluid upon her clothing, which instantly ignited. She died from her injuries. While endeavoring to rescue his wile, Mr. George was badly burned. They had been married only about two months. How They do Thing* In Pari*. Tho once famous Bignon who de nounced the four sergeants Born*. lUoulx. Gaulaiu, end Pomniirr —axrout- ed in tho tine of lotii* XYIII. is raid to Imtt' boon arrested tho otlior day in j l'ario. Tho arrest took nlace i" this manner. Pcniiuicr'a grandson wan ait ting before tho Cafe of tho Yonno clint ting with one of hie friend*. Ho sud denly roee abruptly end went straight up t a uuiu who was walking along the Hue do Itivoli, and hastily addressed him in these tonus : " You are Uigu.m, who denounced tlio four a>r|pwuti of la* Hoohollo. and 1 arrest you." *" By what right V " You ask for w hat right—you | who oaraaaiuated my grandfather by tho restorntiou !" Hignou did not reply, and fried to escape. Tho crowd assembled round the cafe, anil Bignon disengaged himself from the gtasp of Pouiniier'a grandson. and ran away. He was, how ever, again naught, and the crowd, on learning that he had caused the arrest f the four sergeants of la ltoohelle, wish ed to ahoot lum on the spot, Potnmior's grandson interposed, xaytug, "Do him no harm. This umu Iwloup to the jus tice of t'-.e land. The magistrates id the Republic must pass sentence upon him." llignoa WHS tlieu conducted to the Maine of the fourth arroudissement, followed by a Souk* fWrnnit ra/e. ltiguou i, or waa—-for perhaps it is pretty much over with Bignou by this time aeventy-eight years of age. Slaughter of Indian*. The Tucson (Ariaoua) Oi/iWi has the follow iug : •• The suffering and cxasuaiwted peo ple have commenced u work of retalia tion on the Indians. Their patience liaa liecn remarkable, but tiie killing of four good citizens i>u the Han Palp), by lu tUans who had been fad and otherwise provided for at Camp Grant, exhausted it. There is no Indian reservation at Camp Grant, but a few hundred Apache Indians recently came in then-, promised peace, aud were ft d and recruited, and then went out to steal and murder. Hav ing tracked the guilty party over their Imao of supplies two weeks ago, the citi zens determined to make their power felt; and on tlio 28th of April, few of them, aided by 100 Papago Indians start up* in those days, and which reminds us of an other remark of his after the election was over, and Taylor had been elected, which has never been printed. We were on our wav to Washington, aud met John Van Ruren iu the ferry-boat, cross ing the Hudson to Jersey Citv to take the train to Washington. Me sat to gether all the way. The Washington depot was then on Peuusyhunia avenue. \V e each had a valise aud were earn ing them in our hands to the National Hotel. On the avenue we met Mr. Hives, the proprietor of the Gl>J*. He was going joist without noticing Mr. Van Buret), who stopjied and sjxke to him. Rives lookial at him, and said in rather a sharp way, " You are pretty Democrats in New York to allow the State to go for Taylor and defeat the Democratic candidate." Van IJuren replied in his quiet, jocose way, " Yes, Rives, it was too bad, a* you say ; hut the truth i.% Com kuri tkr o'tl mu M in our Sink." The two then jwrt ed. when Mr. Van Buren remarked to us that he thought ltives had not gained a poiut in that game. A FIGHT WITH MEXICANS. —A d**sper nto fight occurred a ft w day* ago in tin- Ponoche Mountain.*), about twenty miles from Gilror, California, Ist ween a Imml of desiieraclos and the sheriffs of Alameda and Santa Clara counties, with their pomes. The sheriffs and their men fol lowed the Mexicans for the purpose of arresting them. On overtaking the crim inals a desperate fight commenced, and a most determined resistance to capture was made by t hem. One of their uninbor named Juan Soto, a notorious desperado, who is charged with having murdered three Frenchmen in the Sinial valley a year ago, was shot dead by the officers. 'The Mexicans, seeing themselves out numbered, Istook themselves to their horses and fled, leaving one of their comrades a prisoner in the hands of the officers. PIOKONS, —The great pigeon roost at the West this vtar is in Wisconsin. A jwpcr at Killsourn City says that for three week* pigeons have U*en flying iu flocks which nil man could number. On Saturday, April 22, for al>ont two hours before nightfall, they flew in one coutinu oua flock from North to South, ilarkeuing the air and astonishing the people by the sound of their wings. Hotels are full of trappers and hunters, coopers are busy making barrels, and men, women, and children are active in |tack tug the birds or filling the barrels. They are shipped to Milwaukee, Chicago, St. Louis, Cincinnati, Philadelphia, New H ork, and Boston. From ten to thirty thousands birds are forwarded daily. Two MI BHEREMH EXEITTKD.— Vincent Bavonne and Petro Abriel were hanged in New Orleans for murdering a sailor nhout a year ago. They robbed him and threw the l>ody into the river. Both mcu behaved with coolness to the last. After religious rites had been jH'rfoniiod they were pinioned. When Bayonne stepjied on the scaffold be looked at the crowd, maculated " C'arajo"and sjiat upon them. The execution took place in the Parish Prison yard, nnt! a large crowd gathered around the prison. The Spanish, Eng lish, Belgian and French Consuls peti tioned the Governor for a commutation of the sentence, but acting Gov. Dunn refused to grant it. WESTERN GROT PROSPECTS. —The pros poets in the West, so far as the crops arc concerned, appear to be of a rather mixed character. In some sections of the country the farmers ore jubilant over the promise of large harvests; while in others, complaints arise that snatches of cold weather and a too great abundance of rain have done much in jury. Taken altogether it would appear that though the weather has done a good deal of harm, plenty of grain is spared to enrich the agriculturist*. The Win ter crop will lie a large onk ; and with anything like propitious atmosnhej-eic in fluences, the Spring grain will come out more than all right. A HERIOCS JOKE.— The Detroit Free Preu says : " Home three months since, as a well-known un dcrtaker was sitting in front of his shop-door an acquaintance j came along, and for a joke asked the uudertaker,what he would charge to burry | him. The man replied that he would do it very reasonably, and—consider ing that it was a very dull day—said that he would bury in fine style for thirty dol lars provided that he died in twelve weeks. The bargain wus concluded on the spot, a third party being called to witness, and on MondAy the undertaker kept his share of the contract, the man having died after an illness of two weeks, which were his only sick days for twelve years." A Saratoga gardener says he never knew vegetation so forward as it is this spring. All hia seeds are up. i His neighbors keep hens. \ Custom-llonse Kmugglera. Vtuy youug infants and small uhildron ore used M instmmouta says a currcs puodenk t>n uuii occasion nu immi grant family, mnn and wife and two neatly grown up daughters, preeeetotl thoaißejvca. They were very alfable and easy in their niauneiw und, without Bturh trouble to them, were pronounced "all rightand while the pro|r pro ceedings were in progrtwa f,r their dis- IUIH.MII, one of Uie oNieors saw a hulul aoiue little bov Htandttig alone, and struck by his sttractive appetuwutv, imd nut Knowing to wtioiu he belonged, he spoke to the child, uinl attempted to "skylark" with liiiu The officer wu Kurprisctl to find the child could not bend ita liody ; on examination it was found that his clothing was quilted with valuable artielcs of silk manufacture and diver h|HHms. The little fellow lleiollg i-d to the fuinily the members of whi -h hud just bceo jirououncetl "all right." A gcnttemenlydookini; but |KM>rly clad p.isM-uger, from hia llitelligcut ex piesaion of face and agreeable innuuent, nu* trcatctl with morketl t*onsulerution. The officers were ao cu-u!y satislled tlmt lie was lumcot that they took uo tqicciul notice of n MUIIU "lup-cloth," much wotn, which wiu> hanging on his arm. A detective, at the time "off duty." noticed ecarriage waiting for sonic jwr aou, ami toked tlie driver for whom it was intended, ami Jehu pointed to the p*HSriigcr who tva.-> ttpuroachiiig with the lap-cloth, aa usual, on his arm. There wus something apparently inconsistent iu having a carriage for such a num. A •suspicion being excited, the officer seiz ed the lap-clotli. On a critical search, it was found to IM> lined or padded with BriiH-cla luce, that soltl at public auction for eleven thousand dollars. The fool smuggler is illustrated by a IUIUI, said to bo from the western jwrt of the Slate of New York, who got a diamond worth sixtccu thousand dollars safely through without fatying the duties. This gem h< sold fnr its full value, ami suUseuueutly " bragged of his siu.u tneH ." The fact came to the knowledge of the goverument, and the protvetls of the sale were confiscated KwlndHnffa Widow. A charming American widow, with oae child. residing iu Fan*, but during the siege iltwncd it prudent to leave, re turned to her tine njinrtmctits soon after the armistice was signed. During her journey she had, at a certain hotel, in couipauy a ith her mother, mule the HC tgtutiutance of a French gwnUoman, a lio seemed to take the greatest interest in both mother and dnuehter ; and ua the former, for certain political reason*, did not deem it prudeut to enter l'uria for a long period, she trusted the very agree aide gentleman (who declared himself ready to aid and protect the young widow) to accompany her daughter to their res idence in the city, where they resided for some few weeks. In the meanwhile the neighbors supposed they were mar ried. Adonis, owing (as he stud) to the -ver, Ac., Ac., rm short of money, but he bad such gotid prospects in view that the kind-hearted widow gave him all that was necoaKU-y. lie then persuaded her to accompany hun to her drcasmakeni.uud insiste-1 on ln rprdering several dresse*. The dressmaker required that, as she was not able to wait the payment of the gentleman, that madame must give the security, which she did without the least hesitation. A day or two after Un order for Uie dresses, Adonis called with his mistress on the dressmaker, and rep resented her as his sister, and took the dresses intended for mmlanic and sever al other articles of ladies' wardrola-s, atid left for parts nukuowu. He ran in debt nt ull tlie places where the widow was known, and she had to pay many of his bills. She wrote to her mother, up pricing her of her misfortune, and the mother hastened at once to her. All who knew the affair sympathized with her. She is a good, kind lady, awl lier charac ter has been without reproach. lion Advrrtidng CompeL Attention. A writer in Alt lAe )W ROHHH MYM : The truth i, iu this world sheer labor and industry always make themselves felt. This is a theory that would tie dear to Mr. t'arlyle us rvpr-seating something real and genuine. \\ .rk. he would tell us. is never thrown away. Men who sjx nd suras of money, and sums of trouble and toil, together with much ingenious polychromatic device iu nourishing their names and wares, are {iretty pertain to tind such bread * tlu-y inve east upon the waters returning to theui. Tlio wise who travel in the un derground railway# and tee " Kitto's Starch" staring at thinn from over the heads of their vis-a-vis in the carriages— or the " Oraaahop|M-r Sowing Machine," no doubt salute those titles *-ith a "push!" and a "pshaw!" Hut later, as their eye wanders over the m-wsjiapcr or dead wall, or ururubus kuifo-laiurd. or fly-leaf of msimwine. and sees everv where, as a murderer does blood, " Kit to's Starch," " Grasshopper Sewing Machine," a kind of dull, liivtiwhle im pression is produced. By-and-bye, when either of them- important neces saries an- in demand in the reader's family, und when there is on impression of dotibi or iguorwuoe, the |**ir aid-de camp of conceit, or counrioua superior ity, step* in, and aids the Advertiser. Where tdl are groping in the dark, it is hard to resist the conscious sense of superiority. "Htarch! Why, there is a fellow called Kit to, who avn to lie in great demand; at least hi* name is everywhere. Hewing Machine ! Oct the Grasshopper —only four guineas." It will thus lie seen that advertising owes n good deal to the pardonable little in firmities of our nature. THE SEASON*. -Each seison is supposed to commence when the sun in tald to enter a certain sign on the imaginary hand upon the celestial globe railed the rodiac. The ahuiuiao of each Tear will give von the exact time. Spring in Con sequently said t< commence nlxiut tlie twenty-first of March, wlien the Run cuter* the sign Aries, Kumnu'r about the twenty-second of June, when tha sun enters Cancer, and so on. The signs are Aries, Taurus, Gemini, Caneer, Jjeo, Virgo, Libra, Scorpio, Sagittarius, Cnp rioonius, Acquarius ami Piace. The signs are counted from the vernal equi nox, at one of the points in which the equator intersects the ecliptic in consequence of their regression of the equinoctial points, their position with leapeOt to the constellations or fixed star* is greatly different from what it was in remote ages. Some time prior to Hijv parch us, the first points of the constelm tions Aries and Libra corresponded to the vernal and autumnal equinoxes ; those of Cancer and Capricorn to the summer and winter solstices ;at present, the difference is about 300. The vernal equinox now hap]>ons in the constella tion Pisces, the summer solstice in Gemini, the autumnal equinox in Virgo, and the winter solution in Sagittarius ; but the vernal equinox always oorres pondents to the first point of the sign Aries, the summer solstice to the first of Cancer, and so on. Uirotm FAMILIARITY. —One of the great faults in modern maimers ia tlie habit of undue and improper familiarity. Some of the cleverest of men fall into tbc way of squeezing band* in the moat violent manner, of slapping even their seniors on the back, ami other rudu modes emphasizing their familiarity and assuming a close proximity of per son quite uncomfortable to persons ef (food breeding and taste. Other* again lave an offensive and familiar habit of using personalities, displaying a know ledge of intimate and strictly private matters which one would scarcely care to have known to one's particular friends, much less tho subject of rndo and un mannerly conversation by comparative strangers. THE DacpjUJf.—The wife of the late Elezar Williams is still living near Oreen ! Bay, and shows the remains of great physical beauty. The present dauphin, ; his" son. John Williams, who, if his father's belief be true, is the lineal heir j of the French throne, is engaged as the sailing master of one of the Like crafts, and modes at Oshkosb. This jierson, | who is now about forty yaws of age, is j said to be quite illiterate, and entirely' wanting in the personal and mental at-' tractions ef his father. Matters In Peris. A dis]Mteh from Versailles announce* that tlie Government forces have iv.-upitnl Fort Vauvrea, Uie iu*urgeut garrtaou making their twajw by a aubtcrnmoan paaaagv to Fort Moutrouge. Fifty guns, eight niortura, and a few priaouwis fell into the luiiuls of the Verwuilles trooua. The Seminary of ls*y hai also been enptiircU, with eoiisitlcrsble loss to the iiiHUigcnta Eight cannon have Uvn capturetl at Oiseaux, where 1IK) iusur geuta were killed ud several hundretl taken prisoncra. The apprnachea t the ruiii|uirta and fortltU-aUoiis of Paris are actively pushing forward under cover of n heavy cannonade. Marslial McMuhou has issued an address to his soldiers, which is wpparetiUy prelimiiiurv to the gruud attack. The breuchiug batteries are now ready Ui oj-n fire UJIOII the - i*intr of Paris. It is stated Unit W'.WK) trtN>|M ure encamped at Ht. Geriuaio, niul will join the fortvs of (leu. Don si in the grand attack. /'As iku/y Aeics sjwvtid from Versailles ro|Kirta a uavrd combat at the Autcuil Yisiluct, and Unit one insurgent gtin-boat waa sunk. Fighting is reported at Kt. Ouen, which shows the sphere of attack is extending. The German commander linn demanded the disarmament of the northern careiof Paris. A circular issued by M. Tlu-irv says the troo|Mt have undertaken to ciuatruct trenches iu the Bois de Boulogne ; that commuuieation between Porta Mont rouge ami Vsnvrea has lie'n out ; that the Lyceum of the Prince lm|vriid iu the village of Vauvrea has INN-U occupied, and that operations are advancing at ail points for the deSverantv of Paris. It is rejKjrted that the Prussians have shot two of the inhabitants of the town of Yvetot, who had bcateu a Herman soldier. M. Favre communicated to the Assem bly the treaty of peace with Harmony, negotiated at Frankfort. The severity of the terms occasioned uitn-li emotion amoug the members. l)i|iat'he* from Paris tuto that au attempt of the Versailles forvvs to throw a bridge over the Heme has la-en repulsed. It is admitt-d that tlie Hovernnu-ut forces continue to gain ground in the direction of Ihe Maillot gate. The demolition of the house of M. Thiers lias begun. The Control t'oui mtttce has ordered a general search, which is now in progress, for arms and }M-rsoUR inimical to the Government of tire Comuiuue. M. Hmusarl, the insurgent Minister of Foreign Affair , has ii-urnl a protest against the declaration of M. Thiers that the C'omiuuue has disregarded the pro- I visions of the I'ouveatiou of Geneva in ! it-gurd to explosive bullets, aud retorts that the Versailles troops have themselvi-s ' been guilty of the iufra<*tiou of the Con venUou whn-h they charge upon the Commune. M ltrittiorarv replaces M. Dclcscluze as deli-gate Minister of War to the Com ' muue. Four mcmlM-rs of the National Guard have liecn shot for treason. It i said Uiut Gcu. lloHiiel ts at Belleville arranging for the safety of the city iu case the Vanmillists sliould take the rauqiarts. The members of the lb-pub- I lieau League have joinr-d the Commun is to. Kjsvial from Paris say a levy ca MM we is expected. Gen. bCw --i lia becomes Hciicralisrirno. The Com ; -nuue baa made a dciu.-uiil upou the BiUik of France for 10,pula.v. A tat terv is also erecting in Uie Garden of the Tuilerics. The sta-ciid di*|iateh from Paris says that >l. Pvnt openly declares that the fall of the Commune L> immi nent. Many of the Natioual Guards den-line to march, and talk of opening the gates to the Government forces. Gen. Ihimbrowski's ortler* are not obey ed. It * reported that the women of Paris dciuiurdi-tl arms to fight the Ver sailles troops. The TW-./rrf/tA'* sjM-cial dispatch says the VenvatUc* fom-* have lnen driven luck to Longcharu|*i from the sdvonceil position they had taken in the Bois de ; Boulogne. Tire Uatloit say* it is reported that two Versailles Imitations were deoiruateil on Friday night. M. Iti-alay, who has IM-I-U C.IIIIHI the "Father of the Commune,"has n-riguuil from tliat IHKIT INVSUM- Ul<- residetice of M. Thiers has leen despoiled. All |ereous having sulplittr or phos phorus in tlreir ■—swion are n>qwtl to report to the ('omnium-. Gen. lot Cecelia is now iu command !of the insurgeuta at Petit Vunvre*. 1 CarjM comnuraders will henceforth 4-ora msml airondisaemcntsand la- repmirible j for their defense. Torpdois liave been ordered to all exposed points, i The Congreas of Muniritial Deputies, i called by the partisans of the Coramuue !to meet at Bordeaux, ha* proved a j failure. Tlie Timet special dispatch from Pari* I unys the Commune has resolved to form j a Central Club of women, for the Pur pose of disarming runaways. The dele- ( gstion of the Commune in the Second Arroudisßcment boa decreed the closing in Uutt portion of Paris of all houses of ill-fame. The lA/ik/ Jeo *|eoiiil tlis patch from Paris rej>ort that there is great agitation among the people, and distrust of the Commune grows universal. Arrests are In-coming general. It is Hiippoecd the Germans are alsmt to send an ultimatum to the Commune. Heavy j columns of troops ore near Ps>sy, where ' a battle is hourly exjiectcd. The Tele •fruph't sjieciol dis|>atch from Versailles j says a lioilv of 10.0(.H> insurgents at- I ternpteil on Tuesly to surprise thoGov | crnment forces at Nenilly. but wore | repulsed aud driven back to their own i lines. It is reported the Versailles troop* have carried the MueUo Gate of ' Paris by storm. A dispatch from Paris says the numlier j of persons killed by the explosion of the I powder magazine in the Avenue du Trocailero is variously estimated at from fifty to two hundred. The stock of cartridges, which was immense, and a large amount of neighboring property, was destroyed. MM. Clement and Bru nei, member* of the Commune, have j been arrested. The Committee of Hafe- I ty appeal to the National Guard to se cure the triumph of the Commune, and j in so doing deserilie the fearful results _ which must come from their inaction. | Another attack was made on Wedtiea ' day on tlie Veraailliau' position at Nen | illy, but, as on the previous day, the os- I sailauts wore repulsed. The Communist batteries on Montmatre are to-day lorn barding the Versailles works at C bateau lb-eon. The Commune has directed M. Rignnlt to make reprisals for all acts of cruelty perpetrated by the Versailles commanders. THF. OIRLH. —They think of Hymen and can't help sighing. When their lovers fotsake tliem they can't help cry ing. They sit at the window, and can't help spying. Into private matters they can't lielp prying. To get each a beau they can't help trying. When together, their tongues can't help plying. At the j mirror they oira'thelp twisting and turn ing and trying. They screw up their 1 corset, bring on the consumption, and j can't help dying. I CATTLE EN ROUTE. —A New Orleans letter to the St. Louis RtpMiran, says : " There are more cattle going North via Missouri from Texas than at any previous year. I learn from drovers that 'at least a naif a million bead will oome from Missouri, Kansas, and Nebraska. ; The grazing stock, many of them, go ,to tho latter place, where they will feed until the frosty weather this fall destroys the gioas. There are not many of this stock at present fit for good beef. The Fiseatlon of MnlslT. It is seldom that the execution of a man, even for the crime uf murder, has created so great au excitement ss that of Ituloff which took tilace at Biughampton, New York. Tlie last acetic la thus de scribed: Ituloff early in the morutug urotiM-tl hiuiM'lf uud washed himst-lf carefully, joking the while oo ghastly trifioa, ami bundling jokes with the under slu-riffs w ho la gun to swarm ill. At half-past six Uie prisoner was re moved from the main tvll ami taken up stairs to i.wait his final exit into the jail yard, where the scaffold had IMWII erected the cveuiug before. He walked briskly up- doira. In his new quarters be rigidly refused oil intercourse with outaiders save only his counsel, wiUi whom lie held inceible communication sven at this supreme moment of his life. Mr. likvker MVIUS to hsvc worked dili gently for his client, ami urul< r the strongest diseourugt-iuenk Ituloff wus no ordiuary lawyer himself, and every niov cmeiit of his txiuusel was norutinized with a vigot ami ill t<-nqs r only >-<|uall*uuiU-d time came a lioursc murmur was heard us they culled for Uie criminal. 11 turned toward the window at the sound and chuckled maligiuuiUy .applying some ritiald epithet 'to the mass below. Then to one of liis guards, whose head appearing aliove the i grating was mistaken lor the murderer, lie said facetiously, " Now you ore fam ous ; you have Usui taken for me." I a-iked liim if he cared to see a clergyman, ami was answered at once in an emphatic negative. The door during the whole inoruiug stood slightly ajar, ami halt the press of the Htat hiwl represM-utetives I on tlie landing. Meanwhile the Sheriff, with his depu ties has Us u busy in the coll where the murderer hod been. Through this the scaffold was approached. It projected from the prison wall, quite fifteen feet from the ground. The jail is at the foot of a somewhat extended hill in the vary centre of the town, und although the jail court is of very limited size -32 by 19 bit ; the vast multitude expected to ree the butchery from the rising ground without, which reae to a level with tin high brick walls, in one corner the brick wall had U-cu pierced, and a slen der U-ain thrust through; from this IM-UIU the rojie fell, and at the other end outaiile of the wall, under shelter of the HherifTa laru, the drop waa secured. Bv 11 o'clock, all was in readiness for the lost act. The little incluaure or jail court could not hold over Iow>m. He caught it, exarnimd it a moment curiously. lie replaced it in his breast. Even at this moment, this man of iron smiled grimly, aud extended his hand and motioning to the Kherrff. told him to lead cm—he was ready. The group passed down the stairs, Ituloff commenting idoaa&ntly, iu a scarcely audible voice, lie wolktd briskly between his guard*, through the Ci 11 in which he htui lain since condem nation, and pat-d down into the court- TArd, gL-racing curiously iloot liim st the clo*ely-pßi kee hanging from the Ix-stn ; and. be wo* asked : " Ituloff. have yon anything to SUV ?" For ten minutes he hail stood sbw-nt ly contem]>lntiug a aort of green left Wre at hi* feet, and never for a moment rais ed hia eyes to meet the curious throng gazing eagerly at him. Roused bv the Sheriff's ap]N*al, he shook hi* In-ad hoati hr witli a short "No !" Again the ques tiuu—after a short interval was put to him. and again, this time somewhat im patiently. be answered. " No." "You have 23 minutes to spare, then ; shall I w*it until they have paused 1" oakt-il the officer. Again, with the dogged motion of the head and the gruff voice. "No." All the implement* were removed, and the prisoner was put in podtiou. Hia ariu* were drappi-d. ahd a pure white cotton cap was pulled down over the blank exprexeioulewa foci-. Deputy Sher iff Ashburu read the indictment, arid, when be concluded. Sheriff Martin ad justed the uouae, placed the pulley fairly, gave the signal and the body of ituloff shot three feet into the air, a* a .'kK) pound IMH fell on the other ride of the wall. The body swung for an instant, quivered, the arm* loose below the el bow*. moved deliberately, aud Uie flabby hand which had been prksl from the l>ocket, bv the fall of the weight, were calmlv replaced. The body hung quite free from contortion for 13 minutoa. w hen the examining surgeous pronounced life extinct. At 15minutea after 1. life was wholly extinct, though the neck was ot broken. The body waa placed in the jail vault, subject to the oruer of his brother, who can have it if called for within a day or two. He left no other effects than his manuscript ; his lawyer bills are not §?ttled. AOer Twentj-alx Years' Heparaßan. An lowa paper, the Miimhl Plmimiil Journal, has this account of a roinauce : Twenty-si* years Ago, the beautiful city jof Salem, aa now. was jieopled with some of the best families iu lowa. Here resided the family of James McWliorter, and Jamea and his wife were happy. After a while there came the news of gold discoveries in California, ond stories l of how meu could find fortunes. James hearing there stone> decided to bid adieu te his wife, for a short time, fill his pockets with tlie glittering metal, 1 and then return to his Rebecca. The farewell was avid, and wife aud husband parted. McWliorter went to California. The letters came and went as fast as i Uncle Sara's carriers could take tlicin. As the novel writers say, " time wore on ajwu-ethe weeks walked off into , month*, and the months galloped into vearH, and, no the story comes to na, ! .'fames MoWhorter and his wife were separat**! by the willful and malicious I lying and misrepresentations of evil j doers. Word was sent back to the wife that her husband the husband of another. Letters ceased to go to arid from ; the reparation became apparently p*rmaneut, and wound np with a divorce. Mrs. MeWhortcr in time became Mrs. Abbott, and, after a time, her husband died, leaving her a widow. Home two i years sgo a gentleman came from CaJi | fornia, direct from the place where Mr. i McWhorter resided, and he denied all i the, reports that had been circulated oon | cerning that gentleman, reporting him to be au honorable and upright man, I doing well and prospering in worldly ! matters. After his return to California, a reconciliation won commenced, letters bearing words of love again commenced to pass to and fro, and on lost Friday James McWhorter and Rebecca Abbott were again joined in the holy bonds of wedlock. This is the story as it came to us. The following queer birth notice ap pears in a country-paper in Ohio : "On Monday morning, April 17, to W. B. and Jennie C. Heani. a daughter, shall vote when she is 21." fmrnammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm r ' MIUTABT Enst-riom. The Grand Arm; of tbs Republic elected the folio*, tag officers : Grand Commader, Gen. A. K. Uurnside. of Rliodo Island ; Hosier Vice-Commander-In-Übtef,. Gen. Lewi* A. Wagner, of Pennsylvania ; Junior Vico-Commuiidor-in-Chief, CoL James F. Ooy, of California ; Buign-ia-Chief, l)r". Hitaia 1 \ 1 ■ • .of ll.mtou : Chap lain, the Bet. Mr. Ernahaw, of Ohio. The Cost ration adjourned to me4 in ! Cleveland, Ohio, next year. At the Ninth Army Corps re-uuion in Boston, the following officer* for the on-1 •uing year wart- chosen : Proof ilant. Ma jor-lien. A. E. Bunuide ; V roe-President, , Major-Oeu. John 11. Parka; Keoordtag Secretary, Hen. Louis Blob mood ; Cor responding Hccretary, OoL I'. K. IrtKfled ; Tri-aaurer, Maj N. H. Hodgkiua. The Society toted to moot in Philadelphia next y -ar, the date to be fixed ly the Eiwatite Committee. At the Cavalry re-anion, (len. Hheri den waa skated Preoident of the Amocte tioa for the ensuing year ly acclamation. Vioe Preaidenta—Dnvil M. M. GMtt lfor:u Col. I (avid J. Miiu, Beeocdinggaawtwy. (Jen. Joseph £. Jaekaon, Tnwauiwr, CoL , HaurtuJ J. Trueadeli. Tremettdeaa Hood at IMarU. The pajier* by the la teat Cape of (loud Hope mad give details of a great ca laiuity at Victoria Wert. On the 17th id February, a tremendous flood, sappaaed to hare ueen caused by the bursting of a waterspout, occurred at Victoria West, which, in the apace of two or three hours, washed away no leas than thirty houses, and destroyed nearly one hun dred livas. Whether the flood was actu ally caused by a waterajiout, or by one of those tnmeudous thuudcr-atorm* wtih-h are >o common in the interior cif thi* colonv, will never, perhaps. be. known, the flood aeenm to have com menced at the farm of a Mr Hugo.some distance from the town. Ho house, homestead, and stock were all swept away, his wife, and all his children but one infant, (which he managed to nave by swimmiug with it tn his arms,) were i drowned. He describes the scene aa ap palling beyond measure. First he and hiH wife heard a sound "like iron falling from the sky ; " tber looked out and saw a huge black mass of cloud coming along the earth towards them; they 1 caught up the children and rashed from 11 the house, but it was too late, and every- ■ i thing was swept away in the tom-ut save < Hugo and his infant; even their eacape i was imraculuua. A public meeting had , le<-n held in Capetown to consider the , lieat means of relieving the *ufferer*,and , it had'beeu adjourned so aa to get accu- j, rate information aa to what will really be needed. Sew lark Heme Market. I 1 The home trade in New York contra- . ues active, with a marked inemtae in tha < demand for pleasure horses. Prices re- < main Arm, without any noticeable change. 1 The supply of well-shaped, gentle po- | nies fit to be driven by Ladies or chii- j, dn-n is not equal to the demand, and ( good priena were )ud fur there pots, one i lur of bay ponies bringing as much as < $750, and several single j ionics selling at.' from 1900 to $375. The following prices were realized at > a sale of borsei. I IwfrtpUm Hudi Inn Wrics fWirdapni* erar* ..-U* * •>* rss Uj. 111 TfcS :m lark brwu turr ... .Il l T Ml lkikwo ja i t as %-rrrt-ttnr Il l T MS IS|HS4lthani..... U.I JSS Cattle in New lark. At latest reports there were in the New York market, 8.432 beeves, 94 cows, 5,743 reals, 19,748 sheep and latnba. and 21,- ' 476 saine. We note tlie following : Divmnnw MS KttW CrmSm *g f-Wy. flu www*. Lmst arwwA. Vte<7 mm * tt 1* vylk. UScflk U.eH4 V- Crus. lIVSIIy- lIV-**S*- *!o4 U\r ft IV. ItV-kUc. Medium u* (wr Uy sitye. Il'c.sns<- IVifWarfiiia Ilyalfc. lie. ml 6. Bik is ',< iii-,r. uyaik. i Ar.-rafr Uk fe— Utir.tS— ' tV*nM Ift. - Us. #- 1, Worm tie. slly. Mr. 2IS We. ■ frun* Me. (eta V- Me. *ll sr. > For the c irrcsponding week last year. ' with Uie supply of 5,713 head, extra cat tle aold for L Jc. at 17jc. per lb., and the average sales were reported at 15(c. I >EfXATKI) BT IXOLIXK.—On the sth inst , Ideut W. B. Cuslnng with 20 men <( the 3d Cavalry were routed ly Cachiea, j a note-1 Apache chief, with 50 warriors, at the Wliitestone mountains, south-east jof Tuscon. Lieut. Cuahing. who was iic of the most efficient officers of the Territory, and one soldier were filled. The troo}ia wen- compelhd to retreat to Camp Crittenden, t apt*. Kanwood and Moore, with 40 men each, gave pursuit to the savages. A forage train was at tacked by Indians near Camp Verde,; Arizona, one Mexican being killed, another wounded, and 87 cattle cap- : ttired. How Tbet Do Tuixos. —Mortimer * .fanes, of an interior town in Ilhnoia, was recently tarred and feathered by bis fellow-citizens because he thought it proper to plsy croquet twenty-four hours after bis wife died, and he lias brought the matter tiefore a jury to know if these things can be. The Markets. xiv rose. Brar (Uuu-OirS) pruar 11 ISO M.M MItCS 00vra..., SS. M.(W . . Unas— lavs ST a .a* ; , ' nrcoi m m .IS* 1 suKse as • or •, • ■•rrs~WMdtta li • .IT ruMPS—Eun Wwlera... S.SS < til Wall- Eitia i.M a 5.40 O-tx-M. Eitr. TOO m . Viut-iakcr WaaMra 1 60 iIM " StaM I.Wo I.SS Whlu- Oooooo* Eilro ISI o IST h*-BaWV 1.00 o I.M Matr 1.10 o I.U lliaa 101 l oo o los ; i\>as—WUnd W,Mro TO o .01 HIED—CWvr. 00 s SOW TiiaoOg-... o IN ; Oil*—*Wni Si o .00 IVirm—Mr 17 00 <16.00 .Uli) .11 o .1* ! TIMII it,o .01 BcTrsa—Stair M o .10 Ohio W. R It a. •• raney M o Woalrrn nrdtaarr -Us .11 I Prnn.rlvaoK Sur .M O .IT ; Caziws—Rtu rartnrr It m .10 •• Sktmmrd 0T • .10 i Ohio 10 a .It , Kooo-Slalo t a .18 i i Fl/>r—Rm—rSo* M.S a 60S < Ettra X7l a TOO iCoas 01 s .0* ! CUT* o .71 j 11 • 11 : BcTTsm-rnnuann 10 a .11 ChotceLuta M a M I'SUII 11 a .IT Eooa—WctU-ra U .10 1 ulifi IT • .10 dUK MtiS-Oorrr. '.O .11 TIokiUIT 4*o a 600 MTrp 001 a 600 U*T~< botes IvOO aM 00 ComiaoD 10.00 a'UOO qnouft Bcrrca-Cbolra fT 00 a T.TS Hrtae 000 a 600 l"lr Orsdra ISO a 6TO BtorsCarrut—romman............ too a T.U Inferior 600 a 4uo , Hrtus. No. 1 1.4 V a 1.80 j No. % 1.35 a 1.30 { Pvu-Xmw 18.00 ais.oo I acrrazo. BucrCavTLS 6TS a 740 SIKH aSO a 0.00 I Itooa—Lira o*o a 600 i WHEAT 110 a l.ac j J cos* 00 a OS I OATS a .80 RTB 00 a 1.00 [ S TO a .67 , I LABB U ■ 14 J turn. WHEAT— SUIr 1-00 a 1.80 t j Extra 1-48 a 1.08 I RTO —State 1 U a 1.18 i Ooaa—Kixad TO a .80 ! BABLXT— State 30 a 1.00 • ; OATS— a .TO ( rRXLADKLTHLA. Fiaua—Prnn. Extra 614 a 6TB i:S ItS | ::::::::::::8 ::S t Srts- -i®h° .11 t Timothy a 8.14 PtTßOLxrw—Cm da UWRtOaeU .14 Bttr 0T a .00 < 1 mh—bmhsb———mmmmrmm—m— Th*t Had Hi*.—A Methodist clergy roan u lately naked to conclude the c-xermacM of t ftubhstb-scbool auuivef •err by n few re marks. It wan already after OP. M., and the apeaker began by aaking tlie rhlldttn whether they would rather go home or atay and hear hi* | xpeecb. " Thoae who wish to go home j ay ' aye,' " quoth be, when, to lii sa toniabineut, nearly allot th* 950 children i united iu a cboni* of "ayes" caatly hoard u block away. The apeak ir blushed and covered hia retreat with a bsuedlrtion. j Haw* at uurr ! "For live yt-ara" write* a gentleman at Harriahai-gh, Pa., "I waa on a aild-gooae ebaae after remediea for •lyaiieuaia. I have taken firat and laatj enough 'infallible pus—* to float a jolty ' i Imait, and the more I rwallovrd the faa-j ter I got no better. Luckily, or rattier provident ially, it aune into my head to I try Dr. Walker's Vsoktabui Vinegar | Hitter*. Thin waa about Ave month* j itgn. In hwa thau aU wm*y*x Liniment. lueaae of s sudden accident, an immediate uae of it may wave week* of nib-ring, and lierimpa a limb, or even a life. There u* avml kind* of worma which trouble horse* ; the piu-woraw (pointed at both ends; are the moat com -1 mon and moat dnngi-rous. Hhekiiia*'# ' Cavalry Cowomo* Powders will in a few day* eject the worma, and the bone will la-gin to thrive. Thl pumat uad iwatot Cod-Liver Oil in the world ia HAAAJU* A Caswell,*. mule on the tea-above, from freab, at- j lectcd liven., by Caswell, Hazard A Co., New York. It is absolutely jmrt. and *■**/. Patieuia vbo have once taken it prefer it to all otti. iw Physic ians have decided it nupurior to any of the other oil* in market. TV MimtiM Teals, Ttw Mierj at HawHe'i Cetobaeud ianl HiU.l j * >m" lie tor mnanaa th* infaiilal iWAm j MC dw faatwad ** mind kat it late a aw* I" Ik. I'uvU auM, dm Ik* wand, a. laM* U> honw An all affMUaaat arfamd aB hide. Ufa laul (•Kin tuwlf ihhal is a leiw as* knew ran* far ran, aatil At to*. th# iw*wlar asta at ita> prrpArsuoA run! It— aI aU ate •uaatm aa bumd Emiaai ammkiri *f th. MfaSeal pwSaasaa aad pucrnn thai ywadm# im> eAAi dtfaihr ea* ■■■ ie. *■■■. i. Hoßltar'.Bmmm. nut,liAf**f a nn.Mhli thymoma At Raw Tat. "Tha lUan am U pmrmt .Urn.Lit and th. ifa*t mk wa Sam. Bat ik aaaa to j Ik* |iel „ ilkl. aaltoet. am a1 wam wi*Mk aaa • semi eimlui pr> AAA ef MMMUMAI new. aa aeeMaar. a wawaidila Ml A iliw.tr tar in Aikillly .ndi nail jweaM itAß towituMaiiruta 1 Hi no Bu un It h Ik* fai**faiitd t*Bl* to ISA IwHA null, end W all Mama yr.k.l.lay wRI ha as far 1 and Ifcl a a mill aa Balk la. amUMa. at dw ■■III', a p**d by *l. taW aad am* iiu*am— ak THE COLWELLS SHAW 1 IILLABDj UJtivrirrrßita ro„ m* Mwm m earn ra. *t arm tw mam i* th* iMMkiu at TteJemi lair hMMMuMeMkaw; V^ESSsagpSj sited a. ordinary bad mm. aad aa. ! laua MAIUw fAWUata-hAAd. and Ima Wiaa dw dik*ir ; Iwii A -MAt Mdwa ar waa real, la mtaaa W dw j piiaUAX at hui... W jalaiyW aaa* MtWHaflai Mgr | tABIAM!"wWwMI aatia. aad . Hma* A 11111 111 MTiItTI UcahSiat Oar bwtklMildwe aaraw bam eMakwd , ikni.AAk.At •tik r*m Tw-liatd. toad PiM, wa Uk. t J.A.at la Wattac thai ttW wtviad M aaUia it* •- - t -iu SS^irvsfcrasr -lM*a I wdl cm tall tuna far aakaai tae Mrier artwifa I m W'Aaw at kail thr aaaal mm. T> HOtoTAXDi tausfaaa. Raw, j Agents Wanted Everywhere. FBAQBANT SAPOLIENE ilaa Rid fifaMA aad all tdad. <4 tfallaaad IMtl; i rawmn. rail. Oimai', Tar, dr.. 4aM vUSaatUM' 33 Rarrlay St . Saw Tt M to MalW ii.jtoa* S2BB in 16 DAYS Laifls in SoM liwi The Atlantle aad Paelflc Hi L Ik, Hat* for aatr l.tM.ddaarmd kin aaaStr. a ' yiZThafaaSipl kraackt Ma MarhgtkartagkaM ! raro.l *tac* l*fo till tk* M|Mlyl thwßaad. A o* ,4 lb** laad. ha*, cwaa M* iMUltinlaa I Artaal m Win. a* onaitac. and tn Oian*ri> at* ACfa* nada. Tk* kal rimata. wiy qdCtW } ■ —v. MAua*r*. ii, **. l far rwaaeaai *t**iUaa i IWAt. and haahMnlAMA mmw la all eoaaaaidlvA Mr- f Im**. In, ii* attia. to o.i. MCtoa. f<* Mrtfc-A I M-sJ pMaahMa, ta AMOS tfi'K. toadOaWaaa* J j €N a Uae Hfaktr Claaa tkaa aay Mkar MMHfa ta rr aadifan* of a* dat ataad. Ttmt't tfnaoat S*law iscst, Aad far tko raaaca it i* aa aaact aMiatarpart Ward tk* aM *afaakia aataral AdiatAM ta da adt W* Mfar to tk* frit s-lur Spnnc ol lan Mar, to whk-h Ihaaaaada of tk* drMWUr. tkakllMaa. lb* rfiriia.li*. aad tk* rwlMa *f taaal ifb.aii m raanct anavallr. aad ml arc to tbii h,ooC. 1 lin* RoaMcnr* near Uorana- j town, ua. looatkm. SaJ*H 1 On. Rraidanoe wi Go- , ruatown, M loeal m, |T,KU. I Low aiUolnin* bor. -ohnrhan pr- ;>-rtv. $3,300 ,wh. #11,300. #30,000 Hilda , Kpiwna*Sl. Pi* mot and I.mc ,'n C-mnty, N*krika. t per wnt. cld int #4,000 V. S Bond-. SIMM W. 0. I R-.t- Bond#, 110 Bhara National BWh.nio.' Bank. Balto., 100 fibua CitiMß.' National Bank. Balto., MO Sharr. North-rn Central R. R.. lie Shirr. Erie ER., J SD Share. Ratio. S Ohio R. R-. 30 Sham Phil* wtl- I ndnatoa A Ralto. R. R. 30,010 Tvxmaaly will h. Md J at #3oaofc, S3SXOOO. Hon. H. Mc ou-oi-08, Elktoa. Md. I ' Slaj. QsaT. elms, Bako. Md. | —n..".1111JIT n , Hon. J. S. Nr.oi.XT. M. C., Pittotmrx. Pa IVwia ] ffaWim : M.j. Gx. D. jlanter. U S A.. Washing ton. D, P.. Hut. Ja-. j. NPittimrc. Pa.. Red , Vilioual Back. Haxm-o*!,. (id. Ai.plrman A Oa., 1 Banker*. Hair*r>lo*n. lion. R. j. Brunt, lata Att'y . Cfap l. Baltimen. ! On the day of the Coooert, the n.wapepar. la Waah- ' on will aaaoaroe the nimet of the aeatfoaua who be wwiat a* a Commute* of Citiaetu, fa inritaWap, , at tha allotment of f.ifu, *nd week be/or* thil day, I prompt eWISi : lIT I ... finili-- St Mrs s Ch.. p*l"j i )n All fa* 0elM M l-*""- •< " MiI.I.IONS Has* Twllwoof • ■#* MowdrrfAl CSVWIIvV RSkfaW. U*M, Whlehrr, Trag fa |r^,*' 4 "ri* r " "suiwh"to, I hat lead tha iMder oatadMllk atraa Madiettw.atado from Ih* NAIIm fam all Urrfa of ('AlifurnU. Iree (ram *ll *•*•*•*** *™5T laat a, ThayKto* faKRS* W,0O ™l* EI Kit and A l-IRR !** |>|SC|P^l. iprMfaieir sd la.;hfa"fa nmrtag oSall mmur ad mbm taahaalthywMWfa* a iiwm a ato tov tare BOeidlr.# ta duarttaaa Sdiwlo iwovided iMr bal SM sa Sawr*jad fa *"*# plaonor atfaw sfaasa. aad thd *UM i#fa* "iSwr BW S We sols wl_ m Twslc* Um H*™ l * ' * m MwwtfwJ IM m lm*rn* iMiifi. irf ||a f4smmt- MflMi Umi VlfMiflfiii Maw Y t'Mit AGO ttorartri:# tzioi. C3kk.Bfm.lU XBRTH W EST EM B xK—rsPEi rsros. t * _ M'ttaewwh**, Wfa, MERCHANTS GARGLING OIL IS OOOD FCMFT jeaxjsr*- H £t. Sfasp Ilk, • Bbb. jaaay-. P-aaSwa. #at .ffalliw. n® ftfats * *'• M , I SON. UAAkaair #-#<**, ft, adi. fa.k4B.fi. Um Sst SIS ; loli#K Ml ; flssft St th* Gaiahaf OB (a far la fa an lanwaMsM* tik*. tafaa—oat the radad. I fan* aad aswrfhaa- SssS£Sa3rssi ■ iuw.lidi^ Xtnafacmod st loohgft, V. T., -srr- M BRCRAXTI GARGLING OIL COMPANY, JOHN HODGE, #**•>. Time Tssts tha Merita of tOl Thin—. TOE OYXX THIRTY THAIS PTinnT DAvrfl' Jh JkiMXMX J( JLrUh VAD VBOETABIIH "PAIN KILLER," Hi. Wn t**il .nMnTcauuJm lb* M >nr, aad th* trailer, ea am ewl lend, aad no ae faeautreaal aa ear lake, or riaam *>tfaxn It. PAIN KILLKH was the First, and Is the Only Permanent Pain Reliever. Stow tha PAIN KILLER aw Bmt tatnrfawd, aad Ml with *ooh aaaarpawßd aale, eiei.j L>ntaaal>. ll*- bate, P*sn*, end other Ramedim ba*e fan ofrted to the pobh*. bat not one at thorn hi i iwaofalaiil tha trnly enrmbl. Weadtes of th* PA IN KILLER WHY I— Tlllfd WO? It U fa waa, DAVIS' PAIN KILLER fa What it ciatoM to b.,. Rli*T*r of Pain. It. Merita are T'aewa-p.aeaS. If ye are nSeriax from Intaraal hta, fhrnafa Oe Thirty Dm in a Lift:* Water mil .lionet intently oar* joe TbM k netbiai to eqael it. in . few mo- AMla it earn Colic, Cramps. Spurn*. Heart-bum, Diarrhea, Djarattry. Flux. Wind in the Boweii. Sour Stomach, Dyiptpsia, Kek Eahdo. b McOona of th* country where Fever and Ague in water, mil pmeat eiekaaaa or bowel faouUw inaa •hence of wetrr. Frwo forricn eooatriw tk* oelto far PAIN KiLLER AM (net. HI. found to Oure Cholera, When all other Remedies Fail. jss SSSSfX: now end Scald, tt reanow*. the fir*, end iS* ggmmt keala tilu wdiaery aaae* Those aaNwrin* with RhumtiMn. Gout or Neurelma, If not e po-ftire cur*, they Sad tke Pein Killer *ii thew relief wbeo as mb ar remedy will. ■* Glr*. Inatsnt MelleT fan Aehta Taeh. i Jftanat tnflewith mrahw fa faifa antried rmrv yya Jp^ayoo^^J^^d^^i^djl^g^tlN SS*SdeUroeeeowSro^i^'wltfa.. '''* U rriMM*ta,Mati„aß4|lHrßattli. For Sale By All Medicine Dealers- NVN. V. May r ~ Roa