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2\ NEW YORK HERALD, TUESDAY, JULY 31, 1866.-TRIPLE SHEET. ~ “ ae Se eee tel maay cases the : 4 Some ificent. barley are. 4 few days of good weather will B R ro) .e) K L N anon at > lg A TY — 5 Bh and it mover bave } | tang The potato crop will be YN.)SS oo oe i. | THE CHOLERA IN BROOKLYN. |= — aC a IR gar © | ote Richie f From precondenes te fol , PaO eee Coe in B jense — tects #0 low ‘cannot be enied, but (Fe fe ann pengacettia ihe howion’ harvested Grawvoxo Cornet Cora abd als promise welt a The THE INFECTED DISTRICTS, | for'ie want ot siequats human exertion, it hould be White the a Se ee teen teat erat! ie ee Yess .—-Our wheat was never better. It will hile teligent good. Other jook well. ceipega ian whos oete|MAP SHOWING THE INFECTED DISTRICTS. | miutrs ary oa di oom Sa haracter, and tb beter 3 re < paseinennn-din ia tbe ok of it peculiar character, and bis tee ae ee rs cee a arable porary ome P' e. Perne eladie nortiog, of the district is the lowest, and a) —~ y ore Laporte Herald says:—Never before did the farma Counry.—Winter wheat badly killed, toring and Sixth Wards. heres sear iy inthe eat of summer, and Clog Wl Ul} Oy] Wish eo exxection pine pay y I ae aaa such as present, cannot ‘ cepecially of such a suihmor rytiny LO) SS / e) [} Broad fields are ev: Hn Bpring whont do barley ast vec) renee cit atin to tne there ar spots i the ward smhere the “Es SS (a) iS pad same Of oats, "Corn is backward Tenement onsen Reeking with Pith and |"zio; "went, ctiwuc tnt tone taeets | 7 COU a7! linihre far, iid of whet as lst You,” Gua and core look" poten. : ; ~; 0 : Giving Forth Pestilential Odors. seute alae pe allowed to continue, mae is Hs 1) sd fd] 0 ever raised in ee t; a in the inter wheat all cut; not much in thie couraging to Gnd that the authorities are beginning at 4 the wealth of t eel Soe county. Barley all cut; average yield. Spring wheat i AE EI all events to take li Yl) Bie ‘The Valparaiso (Porter county) Republs Suir We a ey roy and gos, gual. Gus Stee rid tho Twelfth ward of such ‘nuisances. An instance : wil be vel flattering ‘oun Sate A Pump Yielding Cholera Poison sau standing wai, ands gating one inden, was rl) Gj aeal yet i wil ramos. All epors onoar ia the siament tas * d the centre of district i} and a splendid grain wi gathered here, The is Tied Up. ssc i es ad person ali en ee LZ &; S 7) Discos of fring wheat twa, Oat crops” will also be fargo und of ine fully ama as thore lay right uibwart "he stoot © lrge pool of PANS ’ twenty-five to thirty ward, well, ‘The weather for some es oe the street in fength aid Gye or glx fest in breadin. The CPO : form bias provalied becey all anges 7 Sone lm inhabitants oo of kt. What else could they do? e spots are ripen m Aatead THE CGDORIFEROUS HUTS. | the eristonce ‘such a place, inthe very heart of the winter we would infected ict, was y considered an unmitigated if e The following are the latest accounts: — — nuigance, at last, as ‘been said, the unconscious 1) wheat barvest Towa Faris,—Wheat a little blighted, but an average ot water has been removed, and the place 4 Saitiet Leese nay crop rye and barley good. Corn Blevations of the District Above High | (ii vor coraetnre wt tangas wsofal arises the 4 2nd aopromiing lye Kerasi two day untavoraie ot kod showery Water Mark . anges 7 = wheat, oats, rye and barley “ eae <a POM ve cl give gic Bever more le. Corn is coming out fine and hes tors a yield is thin the grain is large, which will make up deficiency in quantity by superior quality. The wheat damage, not! serious. harvest of Todiaua this year may be eet down as above eas, Dat nattlig serious, 801 The Dumping Grounds Removed edical aathorit; an the average. to the Eastern District. tent ay i en ana. a: SUNS SP : ted, It has been somewhat retarded by weather, of Health, gots its drainage from privy sinks Tilinols. other sources of disease. In cases where the pa _— cng say the average The Chicago 7ritune, of July 27, published very full telogtaphle Wospatehes Trom alk sections of the Blais, | Sr°b he cg oo sg hel lps preg 4 from which we select the following as indicating their | rotting in the ground in the spring, nearly all the cora have hitherto been obliged to use, passes general tenor:— MAP OF THE CHOLERA WARDS. through deposits of human excrement the co! a $< = WAsnincton Domes <r of all kinds are considered | but a large crop is anticipated if not injured by frost, ag — pel er prineaprtnnig gy Lg ar A—Wooden shanties forming portion of the flats. Ei—Houses at the corner of Hamilton avenue in which Las Weu nee biitoo wal ae poo leei) Lepr Curton.—Crops in this vicinity are os oli oo &e. &e. &e. effect, = acre, pros] ther crop: ield as oat. has. day eek ico bored, acon percnney, | , BTewment hu infected mith choles — ee eo Eye vary war | Mheseteneechae Me soon wer are not merely 2 an ime! pat in & ge0- 1e cholera pump. olera ricts. ILL UNTY. —" rat there looks vi well _ The numerous eases of cholera reported from day to | metrical ratio. This useful pieco of machinery, D—The cholera eee G, H, K, L—Bad sinks. a crop of fourteen bushels per acre.” Barley—iore than | potter. tate who are ~ the: mds of their harvest day have, as a matter of course, excited public feeling aud given birth to a great deal of unnecessary alarm. ‘This, though always the case under such circumstances, is a very unfortunate thing, as, in times of panic nothing killing the whole neighborhood without the cost of doc- SA Arerade Mino AL CE a emearaae scene ak a oie! Leqrtogerienr ionamin a oD. and Se yee [The figures in the line of streets denote feet and inches above high water mark.) ee and farmers think it = come up to teen Grive Big peli ot a See Lage fla as arenes is of families whose wants it erto Bu) — errs usheis or more acre, re very fair; will yield 4 rust betake themselves elsewhere. May it be fondly, | twenty bushels per acre, Onis prouise well, | seehremer Tasca ' any one year previous. Weather e heartily hoped that they will fare better. Opposi trict here alluded to is about eighty feet above Corn will yield more than an average crop. Wild and fa, ; Dwight street, a little way to the left of Woleott strect, | the water level. The district comprising the T H y rag P. Davenrort.—Barley half in stack; yield fine aad \s really di ‘thing magn! tame hay in abundance. % t] three di ‘ pi ro and! everything ified, in some cases | between Dwight and Columbia streets, stands, or rather | Eighth and Ninth, with | Daria “of " the sev. Penny Couxry.—The crops in this vicinity will be from Formed aren Hie cs gare oibedtoondlc bergen. ar y, and in some twenty, and, it must be owned, in | jies,a peculiar district, forming a portion of what is | euth no aceon Po os i an horsey fair to average, Oats about two-thirds crop; wheat | both im quality and quantity. Harvest 17 | most a hundred fold. And there can be no doubt what- | known as prego Ba eterna bill es niona hatsend Third Seaenannemnnnsnnaate peonebiy: about one-quarter—all harvested in good con- | menced Wheat not injured yet, and will not be unless | ever that there is some reason for public fear, In some heavy rains continue. Weather at present very faver- ‘THE FLATS, k, To hye 4 poate idea of this locality is a matter of | and Fifth steeets and South First and South Fourth _ publi : Kaxkaxer County, —Wheat in this sectioi ; —heay} parts of Brooklyn, as well as in Now. York, the cholera, | some difficulty. The houses, or shantios, are composed streets, has an elevation of about Atty feet, whereas the Satisfactory Accounts from All win cestaniean mauler salina ri Ter aod; able. Cate good—heavy yield and of good quality. Corn in its most deadly and virulent form, does exist. The | entirely of wood, and considerably clevatod above | ground in the ven Fe pall Sa Mapas Han bag artlng : the acre. Barley is good ; will yield about thirty-five | Cxoar Ravims.—Crops of small grain promise above hhope, for a long period entertained, and even now ox- | {0 ,ground—or | waterso as to enable, the | Tteon one side, and the lowlands of Bushwick and Sections of the Country. bustols to the acre. | Corn doing very well; will have to |'an average yield, and of exceliont quality. |W pressed by some a8 an undeniable fact, that the disease | ing” tides, Those rather aboriginal habitations | Wallabout on the other. This district comprises the horyswia stacnem gt ren eget ot > Be She sain: cx ts poNanids po does ni ‘was merely cholera morbus, must give place to the real | aro of the nature of something between a dog kennel | Thirteonth ward and parts of the Fourteenth, Sixteenth a Priaskt Cousty.—Wheat, small yield, but of good headeay Tee. je bar ing, under truth, that, especially in the Twelfth ward of Brooklyn, | 824.2 pig sty, and do indeed demonstrate their pecullar | and Nineteenth wards. It need not be related to any quality; average, fitteen bushels per acre, Oats extra . Minnesota. ee ss ’ | qualities in ‘this, that they answer at one and the same | Person at all conversant with Brooklyn that the districts fine; yield about fifty bushels per acre. Corn bids fair aas well as in some districts of New York, the scourge has | time aga habitation for both species of the quadruped | above enumerated comprise the best portion of the city, | A FULL AVERAGE YIELD OF WHEAT. | to'victd very tarcely: Fuwone Couxty.—The wheat crop looks very fine, made a footing, and the people’s course of behavior, | named and forthe genus homo besides. Pigs, indeed, | and have been settled chiefly by the most respectable Cenrrauid, Cuintox AND Manion Coustms,—The wheat and promises an abundant harvest, Corn, oats, pote- both in the case of bodies and individuals, is not to shirk the matter, not to allow themselves to be rendered use- leas by fear, but to exert themseives, might and main, to seem a necessary and integral portion‘of every family, a | aud most wealthy inhabitants. As a general thin; as meal aloes crops good in this vicinity; about twenty b toes, &e., | k well. characteristic at onve explained by the fact that the in- | all the conveniences for comfort and health nea Secaamer ore Si has eae piven ¢ ig oy by ie perngondiced Waszca Covsty.—The Prospect fora heavy crop of habitants are almost, if notaltogether Celtic. The native | are enjoyed by the inhabitants of those districts. By tg - All kinds of fruit, except peaches, very plenty. wheat and cats ni ab looked better. Corn was planted Gaelic is spoken throughout, many of the people being | comparing the popuiation in the wards mentioned above | The Largest Crop of Corm Yet | “iciiax Covvry.—Wheat will probably yield about | !#t¢; but we shail fiave an average crop. barel: wish lang of in their relation with the area of land covered, it will be A Sree.x Cocyry.—There is every pI of a beaatl- have the disease checked before its ravages become such | Parely able to express a wish in the language of this | [Liv tile mber of persons to the acre is but litle Produced. twenty-five will pe ancat Catan smarty to forty | ful harvest in this wection, of all kinds ot arain. that it must, ag it would seem, die out of sheer exhaus- At a first glance, the point of view being from Dwight | less than in the lower portion of the city. Still, the corn could not be better. There isa third Popes ted Missouri. tion, As to individuals and families, the proper course | street, misery and filth are everywhere apparent. Great, | ratio in the latter districts appears to be growing less woe this year than ever before, Axprew's Covxry.—The prospects for a rea crop of 4s notto be in continual dread and living in continual fith, | ft, mnd-covered pire Me lazily inthe sun or jpg with | yearly. The most sevore Faverre County.—Wheat, light crop, but a sound and | all sorts of grain are very encouraging. Winter dimeulty along the uneven and wiry ground. old, MORTALITY IN THE HIGHER PORTIONS OF BROOKLYN full ber : Weather-beaten, flat-bottomed boat, turning up at Dotti | is about one in a thousand per week, whereas in the rest | All Other Crops Promising a Boun- | Gi. food; wil yield about forty taqhale per mares tw | are: werage per acre, twelve to fifteen bush As has again and again been uttered, the masterand is. | is harvested, and will average twenty-five — per Oats, rye, bariey, corm and potatoes i sovereign preventive is cleanliness, Let the housesthat | ends, lies on the dirty bank, and sleepy looking, bare. | of the city the ratiois about three in every two thou- prospect for corn was never better, as well as an abun- | promising. aro vat iaataciae be kept clean and the person tidy and | beaded, bare-legged boy lies Kicking up his heels as high | sand mhabitants. Many parts of the city that are con- tifal Harvest. Gant crop of potatoe, Sorshnm, lees planted this then | " Davisaax Coverr.—The wheat crop this year ls unuse- as possible {n mid air, ignorant of everyt! and per- | terminous with neighborhoods now considered sickly, de. &e. & previous years. Apples, fair crop. Wheat and oats | ally good. It will average twenty-five bushels por sere. a proper attention paid to dict, and, though the idea of | haps careful for nothing, his tdeas of social comfort | are at a considerable clevation above high water mark; } ee Rave Deca secured in w tte Guneition, ‘All other crops look well. Apples will be plenty. cholera may not be entirely scouted, the chances are | being something like those of the poor Indian, such are many blocks in South Brooklyn, adjoining tho * |ACON Cocyry,—Winter wheat may be considered 2 | The Missouri R-pubiican of a recent date We pay pra whose untutored mind Sixth and Twelfth wards, which are over thirty feet above : . failure. Spring wheat greater than usual, yield alittle | have an immense and excellent crop of wheat thet the disease may quietly pass by. Ass matter o! Giothes hita before and leaves him bare behind. the water level. Ali things considered, the City New Eaginné. under average, mostly cut and standing in shocks; be. | throughout our own State, and through Southern Il ‘course no one can tell whom the shaft may hit. “God 5 of Church with the e¢: ‘ion of the portions In the early part of the season tate frosts worked much . y s Oke De- », On waving the band the boy’s bare feot take their we) —- inning to sprout. Oats—more than usual sown: about | nois, which will furnish all our millers oan do for a year works in a mysterious way.” It is the plain duty of all | natural and Droper position, and tho boat, with its ten | Previously myo PS til Pe looked | TPO ae | injury to the fruit crops, and Inter oertain sections huve Eirelesdis shocks; beginning to sprout, Burley and | to come, and it is expected that this crop will be par- to take such precautions as Providence bas putin their | cent,passenger on board (or rather inside), is propelled cnloring the ordi tion nie nes ially | Suffered from drought, which, however, has not been | €ye—not much sown. Corn—upusual amount planted, | chased on an average under $2 per bushel, across the creek by the aid ot a long pole, nary precaul pom Beg peo! stands well, but backward; late raing have much im- Georgin. ‘way. As to corporate bodies, their duty is also plain: to ‘A stranger seems to be a phenomenon here, and need during the summer, it can rest of escaping, any | sufficiently general to produce serious injury. There proved it; promises a good yiold, od fee nt publie nalances are not permitted to exist, | not be surprised iflooks are cast at lm, words spoken of gplderic this weason, Cue necessary measure nows- | will be throughout the New England Statos a good ave. | © Wooorund Coocry.—-There is. bountital harvest of all | waite Macon, (a.) Deegraps nare:-_tre are Bow Bea ‘and that every public appliance is used and every public _ ed dogs bark pee t at sos aT health to be @ generous liberality on the part of | "ase yield of all cereal crops and of fruits except apples. — on pk, Aeceatymay age hee cm ie the wheat crop, just barvested, and the conclumoa fa, rsaauro taken forthe best interests of al clases of the | 10, 0f the welt ward low and marshy and fltny A8it | ie people ia. distrbuting the favors of olen. Cals | In Massachusetts, where more attention is paid fo or. | Manoel: but ihe weather 4 very discouraging, | Wheat | that "while ic falls short of an average of other daya, a community, When all has been done that can be done, | abcen reported thence during, the ‘past day or two, the fits renoreeity bo continued, those who fecd at the Dub- | ehard products than in any other Kastern State, cherries | Potatoes No 1. The barley harvest was lange ; Dut most rofac yale pagt’ nd ‘of excellent quailty. ‘There is aa as. matter of course there will be cases of cholera; but rent geo lg Ag meg aged nas commenity, #f not out of ite wits: at any rade almost into have been and currants are very plentiful; pears give | of it was stacked before the rain set in. iscutand | abundance for every domestic demand, and a good ser- peont aoe cholera, and if this only s Y the probability is that when all proper precaution has in ridding the com- | token of an excellent yield, but of apples the crop will plus for exportation, The currency being equal, four arising from the situation or to any strennous 4 Pox71ac.—Good crops generally in this vicinity—wheat, boon taken and all enrnost effort made, Che disease, if it | Storts made to prevent the entrance of the So | munkky of a set of leeches who grow sleel: and fat at the | yo short. ‘The trees blossomed fully, but the young | ontsand rye very heavy; cor Not. Fo Rood, but thers | sb! ¥0 and will be considerably cheaper. coatinue at all, will not rage with the same virulence. much for the Twelfth ward. Rho country will uot have beon thus terribly visiied en: | fruit oom blasted or succumbed to the ravages of | Will be an ordinary orop. It has rained more or less Heuth Carolina. That in Brookty: jally, such tions have Sa ve, tirely in vain, the cankerworm, or was, as in the western part of the | Bere every day for the past, ten days. Farmers aro be. | The Charleston Courier says of the rice crop; —All ee. im, sepecially, = which immediately adjoins the Twelfth, has not alto- orm, a pai ¢ | ginning to barvest, and say if they can save their wheat | counts received from various portions of Georgetown éis been taken and such efforts made does not certainly ap- r escaped the sarap, the disease, one or two State, destroyed by the heavy frost of May 26. Proba- | well the quality will be much better than for several The laborers haviag pear on the surface, This at all events is true mow | casos having cooutred the corner of Hamilton PETROLEUM. bly not more than half « orop will be realized; but this:| TM. oest progressing slowly” eile pong whinge om fm the critical moment in the progress of the pestilence, ~ ‘Tux arrvanox, a is an improvement on last season, when the crop was the | rains. It is not thought that gr in is if red by rain at : rotting tm the ground. and that pes aoa oon bpeghen dpi bag pees Sage Mb raged two one uber QUA OIL REGIONS CORRESPONDENCE. lightest known in several years, The grass crop will be yet cw age ha ol crops, Corn is gen- have been enhanced Uy ihe late — noourge whic! ‘80 frequently and wi corner ore erally e have considerable f to the e1 mess devastated our homes may add another chapter to | ton avenue and ruas into Union street. PIONEER, July 20 ee ea eae Whee ree ned ata censure | four days, f vegies fan eighth of 0 oney ““Srne inst census of Kings county shows 1 Here, in the rear of some of the tenement houses, heboeP anh Aen. pasate tae) wat | thrifty, and wilt Rela ye Ayo sprig ed bbs egnres quali tod Sil Wie None ittle ™ 0 last ere, rear of some a Probably yield more than dn a Tage as wality and yield. Wheat and oats littl ovulation of G0 Twalhs ward to be 13,065, apd of the, | nuisance existe euflclont to pollute ‘a whole cy; at io lack of ready writers, of, sather, sensation sorihblers, | | or The cora crop, if It eecapes carly frosts, will | more tha an everage. Varmers now harvesting, Cora “ it 26,407, In 1860, according to n censts’ taken By | least om Monday last it had not beon remaved. the | to furnish Wall street and tho people generally with the | Darra y A trifle below au average. Considerable rain fell the last |», TH¢ wheat in this Stata will be e much larger oreg Dr. Norris, there were im the Sixth ward of males, 10.916; | rear of tenement No. 7, for instance, there is, or was, ® | “very atest” every hour or two. A telegraph company ze. two or three days, but not enongh to materially injure | ‘ea croakers a eee fomaies, 11,604; natives of the United States, 1,608; | whole yard, measuring perhaps twenty feet by fifteen idl Sco < aukb* Chenibel esha” Galak Sada _The Middle States, crops. Fine, clear and pleasant this afternoon, OGFa. ars PAD, doing wor foreigners, 11,244; negroes, 85, and mulattoes 28.” As piled five or six feet decp with excrement, filth and {| Pt UP In Western New York the growth of wheat isasplen- | — Caixo.—Wheat is gathered in this county; good yield Florida. regards aye there were then living of tloso between 20 garbage of iption, emitting an odor sufficient | inside of three months, petrofeum paying all expenses | 4iq one, the yield of some ficlds being estimated at forty | aMd excellent quality. Corn—nousual amount planted, The Tallahassee Floridian says the corn crop of thet and 70 pee between 70 and ‘inet between breed and encourage any epidemic, and more calcu- | and leaving a handsome margin. But, now that spocu- | pushels to the acre; and from the central portions of the | 224 Promises fine crop. Bariey—but tittle sown and | portion of Florida is sufforing greatly for want of rim. 90 and oye eee 4 onion reached chy Bed = ae to yg ge re = syne than of lative genius bas departed, leaving tho fate of this | state we have josie Fs potion yes eaice ae Lore ae da ig hundred acres castor Alabama. Zales, 6,086; of femates, 5.096; uatives, 4,815; forcign- . agp ee r om ng Planted in this county: first ever raised; crop @x- | the yield of wheat to the acre was much better thas to remark, are valuable production in the hands of practical working | are not creaking, as it is certain they wonld be if there | cellent. Cotton cro} Pp angel the existence and incale of this, fee- | men, it seems that Gotham has withdrawn the protect- meraane presto ayehort crop, aering crops started | bas been unfavorable! 4 he indications are that unlexs we pacer ogee hy, geatlg aah nd ing ; a lied kward, bat the bot weather of the last mont we a very late 3 cotton wi t ‘ The cotton is also improving very fast, nuisance being there, the Board of Health, Have been, | 126 light of her countenance, and left the poor borer to hat strongthened and hastened forward the grat amas, | — SOmRIcox.—The wheat and oat crop of this vicinity | Peach us of flelds which present an excellent appearynce, communicated ith, and asa matter of course have made | oxtract the grease from the bowels of the earth unaided | ingly, Corn is well advanced and very healiny in ap- | promised very favorably up to five days ago; since then communications in feturn; and yet, O tempora ! O mores! | and alone, while afew of your merchants sit in their | pearance, while the fruit crop will make good whatever | heavy rains’ and high winds bave done some littie MERCHANTS OF CINCINNATI. nothing has been done, The foul stench still continaes | counting houses and deal iu petroleum as they do in | @eficiencies there may:be in New England, damage, but the crops are too far advanced to suffer THE WEAVY . Geng Tre ie, Gp PO veHae Wy tet Se Indeed, thronghous the whole section knowa aa the | much injury beyond delay im harvesting, which is neat! — much to the danger and disgust © whole neigbbor- | four. This would be an excellent state of affairs if it | yeiddje states the prospects are most 61 raging, and | one-Lialf accomplished, But forthe present rains roviif i diesel Sains: jaan “ak Or ed hood. Other instances in the same block of tenements, | ould only continue; but the effect upon the producing | from no quarter does there come any murmuring of com. | the crops altogether, potatoes excepted, would be the abs Sag cea og eerae all Sa enecomin Gomreuenton ries, Foaming interest is such as to lead to a thorough investigation of are ne fields of grass and grain make the heart | heaviest known sae. A Pees pang reat a hose sae ra 5 ‘the bu: BioowmcTon,—-Heavy rain iy the twelve months April 966, amo not perhaps quite so bad, and certainly not much better. | the nature of this commodity and what position it is | mnct buy ho itll tedar, Weather’ wane’ nk = Past rho Who isto blame? The privies in almost all the destined to assume in the cotmmercial world. This in- | coming winter to be happy in pros sores. Wheat, ona, tye ana barley crop teed, ors, 6,542, Between the ages of 20 and 70 there were living in 1860 6, and between those of 70 and 90, 43. A comparison this with Iast census shows a de- crease in the Twelfth ward to the extent of 9,192, and of the many causes which have contributed to the making ‘of such @ reduction cholera, though undoubtedly doing ita share.in the work of depopulation, may not have been ‘the most active or most deadly agent. Indeed this will be rendered the most able sup) tion by a refer- ence for a moment to the Sixth ward, in which tho de- erease bas amounted to the enormous number of 19,146, ‘and iu which cholera has done no more than merely [ make an appearance. The cholera in Brook- 2 i as Fe LTT Tan net | are Ly se ene erie TaeS foe es C encence tak dass | Vestigation is rapidly going on, and the results will be | 4° 60 st somoihing less than famine {i Puinlered, “Grain net cut—in bed condition, probably | Toinws &. . & Oo. 00,008 Som: 1 orcurred nt; for the men who now hold The West. Roox ron. —Prospect , Clark & Co, 008 Sixth, Ms eter aoeorionen 6 Mile aietrea, nalvigeal oe best THE excuse. hood tlre rg “grease” in their hands have | _ It is to the broad, bountiful flelds of the West that the | wheat cog te de meee sitet ores tog poe yf aed Aady, Hull & Roy. 500 oe wea A Be th aeeay foeopecia ar tony noe nd ante | Suc ead pMUAaMaa Sonia toon ebb Cha benleaanbeaad;| meee ‘ares r nation looks for whatever there may be inexcess of the | years’ Camis fait Hareesing hes i enced, | Bishop, K. M. & Co. 3,731,008 Eniatorceting. It ia juat the spot above all others in the | sucha mate of things ts that there feo place for “dump. | about as clear heads on the subject of thoir own | home demand, which, by ale to foreign ma- | dnq'with pleasant weather will tare oni teal wee: | Bishop Bros....... os,008 city of Brooklyn where priesa facie cholera would be | {ng.” ‘The fact may be ax stated, vot the question will | interests as any class of poople 1 have ever mot, | Yous, may add’ something to the general, wealth. | Seams somewhat unfavorable. gheag Baker, Ro po cted t ing, and’ where, — from boot! D * me oe ain —W crops, thecied_ 10 gui « fooking, and where, indeed, 18 ll | force itt imo netice why WW ot _A.chor ie ence blacks to speculators m “Western prairie | Siac: 'n short crop throughout the country, while | ax iratty lik W heat, barley, oats and rye fatr crops, | BO, Moutier &.C6. 1,864,000 1 "phe low, sunken character of the ground, insome | Sullivan street During tho bight the scavengers aid re. | lauds.” The present lack of :ntorest in oil production is, | an average crop in he West, even if the product in other | crop, and what there le slaudliyp looke Welly Weecker, | Bare, Harding & Howel 608,000 parts washed by the rising tide and in others completely | move a portion of the obnoxious matter from some of | of course, but the natural reactiou from the intense ex. - ae a Nees, would piesa whole conntry | ho! and showery. ‘4 Bare, M. & Co. 518,000 covered with rane and stagnant water, the (tal want of | she houses, but the Around the foot of King street | guement that prevailed for a time subsequent to iw | f7msiner ot want, The reports which at the oneuiug | SeraussG, Ts. —The quality of crops in this section is et coodingly dou biful character of that which is it must bo confessed, that, fn the return of the tide, | Wegovery,, together with the fact that the great channel | Hension that the cropa would prove very light, it not an | yearn’ Harvest, mot’ prossention tunel Weave | Barton & Blackmore. 600,000 nd the hablis and modes of lite of the wat 4, | of demand is now partially closed by the war in Europe. | simost failure; but the event shows that all ich foars | Letvorshio ’ | Prosremting much. © very | Booth, RW. & Co, (000 wiente, “give, to this district. m character of | againat the meastre and suocecded in repressing it. "Or | The question thea naturally arises, what will bethe fe «| (cre oad ‘A very favorable season, wince it fairly | “ntavorable. nOs.- ont v00 ft own, crvtainly uot of the most enviable deseription, | cfurse damping has ended io thet locale upon the oll producing interest if this slato of thinss | opened, has brought forward all tha products of (0 | the Detroit Foe Penn Bob, Mack & 650,008 ae ere ier amakaion We tape ems Maa coal a aoe pe tir age i gam er gerom yg hy Phpe earth 16 8 fruition abundant in quantity and of enperior | seam tote at all behind Chom al pee een crops which | Biggs, 't, Be. & Co 103. 009 of cholera, the wonder being that It ls not in very truth |” Could not flat-bottomed boats of some sort be hired for | Shaner comidantly, Tun, ulin we CaN Mma Ame de | excaltonce. Now is the harvest seaeou; and with every | Sr" wuog’ antelocen fa cone meee erg are ose | cckinghaun 4 L~--4 scourged mor caverely, not with cholera merely, but the purpose of conveying the night-soll toa point where | “the t figures for “crude” at the wells vary from fan scoounts that reach us sre mov gratif ing and | ticularly through the first aud socond tier of connhes, we with “all the itis that flesh is heir to." Some of these | it would cease to be offensive and cease to be dangerous? | gq 933.00 $3 28, cosording to the locality and. gravity of pertain. From the more Important producing States wo | the want of a. gnow covering® and. th se bond bail qualities whic istrict undou' ¥ possesses | This at least could be adopted as a temporary expedient, | the oil. At these rates wells which only yield a small t urns, ) as seen, amply jected both those crops, but the approach of will be made the subject of further remark, with the | until some permanent and radical change should be | br’ oven av nen to de profiable, aud | Justify all we have said, detaoustrated that the injury Wes less es fond, thoveh perbaps vain, hops of having their charac- | made in the sanitary appliances of the neighborhood. | this must necessarily check the boring of new wells The South toperve than was at first feared. Where little was ex- ter chauged and all existing nuisances removed. To | Ag it at present exists, the thing is astanding nuisance, | which ‘are not already commenced or contracted for. Ex. Our accounts from the South are not ry full, cted on the opening of spring wo are now assured that begin with, ERTS. as indeed every nuisance secms to be in this district. jonce has shown that all wells exhaust themselves in | but it may be stated that the cereal crops Turned | Pail half a crop wil be realized. Of corn, oats and pota fe manifestly dofective, and ix acknowledged to be #0 on ai! hands, though here, above all places in Brooklyn, should be the precise spot where the sewerage should, if There is a story told of the celebrated Dean Swift to the | time. The conclusion, is , that when the wells | out much better than we were told they were likely to | toes it may be safe to say the promise ie better following offect:—On one ovcasion, when Ng gd which now produce’ largely shall have become “dry | do. ‘There is likewise a marked change of tone concert. | third than ever before. All the hardier fruits we in folt himself obliged to leave home for a litte, he, like | polos’ petroleum will be left to lubricate the machinery | ing the probable yield of cotton, andthe Southern papers | abundance. any other gentleman who could afford the like, ordered | of nature, instead of continuing an auxiliary of Yankee | are gradually raising (he figures at which they estimate From correspondence of the same journal we select pousible, be rendered most complete, That the greater | his servaut to fetch his boots. The articles in question invention end patent right. it. Estimates as high as 1 000 are now not tucom. | the following items:— mumber of the inhabitants vps a! oy low and were brought forthwith, unbrushed. ‘This result will not be it about, however, wit. | monly made, and Ss ie ae confidence that the Grasp Raina, —Tho wheat growers of this part of the NE ee ie ee ee ee ink HAGE | eee ee ace T Geumeees Re eenens we out a flerce struggle on the part of producers and almost | Heaato’s estimate of 2,000,000 bales, made at the com. | State all report very encouragingly indeed, not only in ariging from myriad pools of standing and stagni herr} ‘Str’ responds the man, “what is the use of brushing | criminal nogligence on the part of capitalists, The | mencement of the season, Will be amply justitied. reference to quailty, but in quantity; and should oan surely furnish no reason why the sewerage should | to have them dirtied again immediately?” So far, 80 | creator part of the supply at present comes from men ov this weather continue ten days, I have no doubt we be weglocted and all san maoastires indefinitely post. | good. The Dean's man was no doubt proud of having | whose pockets contain a Renithy Toil of greenbacks, and Ghie. shall realize full an average crop of wheat. Millers are re . The physical charactor of the district is well | (as ho thought) outwitted his master. The timo for | who are willing to uso the last “stamp” rathor than give A letter froma Newark to the Cleveland Leader says:— | offering to contract with farmers on the opening of the now. Ite moval and social peculiarities have been oc- | departure came and the man was ordered to mount bis | yy eheir hopes of fortunes as the logitimate result In the Muskingom Valley corn is somewhat backward, | market for two dollars per bushel, and im some joecaeas casionaily made the subject of remark in fash mewspa- | horse. of their hazardous labor. ‘The protty absurdity of plug- | Dt promises a splendid yield; it is im some out in | thoy have contracted at those prices. articles written ins snug ale house half « milo at “But, sir, T bave had no breakfast.” ging up the wells is, of course, not thought of by ox- the tassel, I saw there as fine fields of Frxronvitia —The wheat crop will be much betier than Pres Trom tho Iocalty. Botu in Brooklyn and on this | «Nor shalt you," was the sharp rejoinder. arienved oil men, ax that has been thorouguily tested in | be wislied for. Ae I beheld Waving grain and beautiful | the most sanguine had any reason to expect, and yet tho hide of the river it has been made the subject of more the pre of having breakfast to be hunery again? Syspees and’ invariably resulted in ing the | elds of corn stretching for miles, I though! farmers teil us that there will not be haifa crop. Man; than occasional rarcasm, aud it is confidently rightly je conclusion of the etory, th not supply ne Py ‘and it is now wu ny | with her dusty wings, would never er laces will average as well as last year. Corn has ronf believed that it is the very nest and propagator of disease, | to the pufpose, may as well be gi acknowledged that oil, having once commenced to tlow, | ‘¢ loveliest valleys in the State, beck ward on account of the mauy and cold rains, but and that were the Tweifth ward perfectly pure, the | overtaking the two worthics on the road, asked tho will continue to do 90, if not in one direction then in The Ashiand (Ashland county) Union says the harvest | the warm days of-last and this week have sent it for. cholera could never, under ordinary cireuinetances, have | vant who the front rider was, another, A moro praotical method than thts has been | has begun. Most of our farmers are now engayed Incutting | ward beyond all expectations, and the crop now prom. gained a headway in the City of Churches, “Dean Swift,” replied the mao. found, and is being put in operation, in the shape of large | their wheat, and by the last of next there will be | isos better than it has hofore in several years, while oats, ‘Not that, on thts head, so far as the matter goer, there “And what may be your destimation?” questioned | iron fanke of cont ‘many hundrods and | Dut very little standing. The wheat crop of the country | barley and potatoes look better, and the prospects of 4 fe any cauro for an itnmiediaic amount of alarm! Tho | the stranger, even thousands of barrels, Iato which oil is allowed | '# much better than was contemplated in the early | ); crop to the farmer than in May. The apple otner wards, with the exception of the Sixth, are, as will “Heaven,” again Sey the servant—‘“because my | to run through iron pipes’ until full, when they her. | *ting. Indeed, in some fields, it ts sald, the yield will Promise well, also pears. i ‘De son in another place, 1m their usually healthy condi- | master is praying and | am te. metically sealed to await a rise in the market. I would | ¥¢.equal in ee. and quantity to former years. Fust.—The crops if this section are looking and oe. Dut ft te surely needless to temark that #0 long as | Perhaps the suthoritien CA wwe on i are acting ann aemge take — og Ih Ma a in | reports from all parts of the county are 80 tatieteis tint 4 ‘welfth werd and a portion at joatt of the Sixth con. | in this matteron # ncipl ie n’s servant, mi le int cul week. mn ‘more than erage pected. tinue a (hey are, no guarantee can be given that disease | and if so, they may repens to be told that it is a very 2 * ~ ow whey rs ° fields yield full crop—some of them considerabiy above Wheat le Nlling up well fer tho harvest, will not, even ‘under uornfal circumstances, invade we are told, will be much | sanguine that it will bo of excellent ‘val wile a Brooklyn. The of the ward consists, in the fret place, of a large sewer, beginning at Degraw into the canal ala point near to Sec fa intended to eatend this along the canal far aa the and thence to Red Hook, so a3 lo allow the con- @rnte to de received in deep era water, No better ar. could be devised, no more jadieious pian a put into execution, The oniy misfortune fe that it ia meroly & pian, and one GOOD INTRN HONE with which, as some one bas wisely said, “hell ts pared.’ The jes of the old woman in Dickens’ oolebrated work of “ Bleak House,’ murt be fresh in the recollection of all who have ever rend the book; sho, poor soul, whose al! was in chancery and had alwaya foolish principle, amd one not much calculated to lead to such a y result. wart TUR ae beet an eas paar is at last beginning to be seen in and sppragtis cholers hospital, at the corner of Van Brant street and Hamilton avenue, taken possesion of im their name and by ther authority. The building ts very well aday for the purpose, the rooms being air; the basement such as to furnish material 48 tcot in tront by 180 fet deep, abd conalat ot three | 4°, Jin i , feet in front feot deep, of three if bie in be 00 small, as on oe Hories and the basement, It has been calculated that wir Re uthing’ remains Dat to" retire from the ‘held. | ®#&S0R, we do not ace why the farmers lave not due ree: | Casand Hortion, woe const ot Kalainazvo, Van Bur accommodation can be had for over a hundred patients. | The remedy lies in eng ist to work in | #00 to rejoice at the prospect; for certainly, the products | acres iu progress of being cut, and as many ripe enough On Monday last there were only four patients, and it is | harmony with the p nd thas reap a matual | Of the country this scasom will compare with those of | to be cut. In those counties, with one week ‘ot good harvest weather, nearly all of it will be cut and in the shock. The farmers all agree the yield will be good heavier, and conseq: better than last year. Intel. spring cropa give promise of an abundant lyre farmers ‘express = that the wheat crop Tosta.—All crops are doi exceed ingly wel yot the Miami county this year will exceed that of last year. | wheat crop will be Assuming 0 to be the The Conneaut (Ashiabula county) Reporter says:—The | index of a total failure and 12 to be the ropresentati vast expanse of corn and throug this section | s full crop, wheat will, from it appenraaces, be The late 12, corn bite 10, potatoes 12, and about 7, oate 12, hay garden crops very good, : . Cevrrat Ratroad.—On the line of the Michigan Cen- tral Railroad, to-day (Saturday, iy 1 uv of those a but fair vo state that every attention is likely to be paid instead porary cause Teot preceding yoar, beg jo vd the medical staff being not more numerous the pormomens asain wrens of our oe Cincinnati Gazette says:—We are safe in saying than efficient, nd provision being made for their con- | bie productions, that in the aggregate the wheat crop, io ht and | and ox bean in chancery, comforied herself with the reflection quality, isa fair average, and much better than last pe ae pst mies phamp Corry. that she would gota judgment im ber favor some day— IOMER PORTIONS OF RROOKLTS, year. In regard to othor crops it can be definitely stated weather bes pet our farming i “4 “was 4 Ure dag of Mdgmout Who kuoweth Pur hat, wien | Ax rogards the better portion of the ey of Brookivn, THE NATIONAL GAME. that hay turns out short; but thore will be no scarcity, | Wheat bas pushed forward peyond all expectations, and, the old lady ‘shall have obtained her judgment, the | it may be safely stated that it le in acleaner and more hg and the crop promises to be secured in splendid con- | with dry and favorable harvest weal! moben 08 004, 009 fewer now extending from Degraw styeet to Séeond | healthy condition this season than it hes been for the Active, Jr. vs. Stock Exchange, dition. ive a grop above the average in quality if ‘not In quan. 180,000 street may be emptying is contents imi deop water at | list ton yours. One thing Is to be regretted, in connec: | A game of five innings was played between the Active, | A despatch to the Chicago Tribune contains the fol- | fry heade.ere ‘usually largo and. well filled, $00,009 Red Hook? tion with the abatement of nuisances—namely, that the | Jr., of Staten Island anda picked nine from the New | lowing:—Canton, Ohio, July 26, 1966.—Wheat good— the killing owt of winter will irtly comy aaated 20,009 From the canal to (tchards streot—-n space including | Inv creating the Board of Health has teft the matter in| yore stock Exchange, on Saturday last, on the grounds | Utter than last Year, Outs first’ rate. Corn promising | for. The grass caop ta not as large a2 osual, but the dot $00,009 the (geoater portion of the marshy ground, and that ia | suah a position that. the street Commiesloner, who for. » Pe proercenent. | Rye and bariey viokt targely. | Harvevt | cioncy will bo rando up by th incroaved breadth of oats, + 700.000 whioh inf diseares have been most prevalent and | meriy had the power to abate nuisances, fill pools, &c., | Of the former, which resulted im a vietory for the Ac- | {x progressiug rapidly, Weather favorable, Quality of | Kc, which wid add tp the but at toni oan + 610,000 Will ta all probability continve to prevail there is neither rsa the costs, is now deprived of that power, with: | tive, as the following score will show :— an eres cod - Pia Week PoLatoes, ke, are pushing Gnely avd provaise well. + $00,009 rai nor sewerage of any iption " cquivaient authority having been conferred u proce mother reports ag follows :<—The w' arven, from despatc! + From jards street, io a line with Howen street and other department. Notwithstanding this and other ‘ae 9 eemamee gh | though event in anti , ip excellent im quality, and chicago foun iabeag andar 5 38 008 Commerce gireet, two gnatl sewers do empty drawbacks, all partis agree in keeping the city in 1 1 3 | has been carricd—as the English term getting !t under | Nrune—As a general thing harvest ia abundast. The -. 31.689 tonta Into the Atlantic b and with the ex general in the most cleanly condition. If 1 84 3 2 | Cover. ine order; so that the superior of the | quality of the wheat is excelient, rebiio the yield is & Keen... +, 910,000 the large sewor reterrod any grumbling is manifest, it aj to be 8 : ; ? Cs even in Ohio where the crop is quite short, will go | Thig part of the harvost is nearly over and rou Save Twee 4 & Andrews, 858, 000 | dicated, extends only catised by the necessity for more money—like most chil- H 3 3 to make up the deficiency in quantity. Last yearthe | commenced threslii Barley is ax good as wheat. | Te ad & Sibley. 900,004 4 the whole extent of grou dren, the majority of offictals cannot live without abu 32 Weny ade 3 | quality, was alimost everywhere poor, and in several | Gren promtaes an exceliont crop. Oats ace full and ‘Tr gunstin, A. 5. J. 148,000 eee ay te denne of “pap.” From un lespemion at the tuen os 4 ae ed way extremely dificult to procure a barrel of | Totaunes rive a cheering prospect; prest imerenae Taper b Brother . ! 891,000 ti ae a we ‘te city of Brookly: is’ Heumted ‘a by rude Sa eee er Gaon one trtiole "art Lag Any eaten ‘thet ia Wile { O88 heuvy and good. eat ts 3 over, and crowd- kite Brothers s » $22,000 ourva’ nm ie ait ‘at an al —-— - = = . ole durit poaton now r u Goes Re, umes | Ecmcreereemeees | a oe S| ams a lplpabelreepieperpietae fT + im int streets the eleration e | w ing om ma. ‘ ANN Annon— for the few days % wi on 768,000 ds 2 rater sar, ie incl four bounded om the wer ide by A Sa ; a re “te ‘The Jay and Adame Reprbtican sare: Wheat "i being boon very froente for harvest. It iooks PP Wilon fire 628 000, coum neorre, é harvested, Barly WwWations is | showers. wheat Charles ie @ low ome, aud nothing but a figurative com- | Tk will be found to include the First, Third and most Empire rg ee L Wrnie Soke Co $00,008. parison of this with other oarts of the clir of Brook. | of the Fourth wards The averae clevation of the dis | tonninap of aamaa—Twy house Woven, 4. 7. & Co. yee