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s L — NEW PUBLICATIONS, THE SOUTH SINCE THE WAR. SOUTH SINCE TH WAR As smewn my Formavey or THAVFL AND OBSERYATICN IN G £OKGIA AND THE moLinan by BIDNEY ANDKEWs. MG pp Beston Prehocr & Fleds. Mr A ot the wonthe of Septewber, Octob apd Nov 1865, traveling us of the Pouth aud writing letters to The e &'he Chicago Tribune, The greater part og volnme which be has row give o the mus of those pap o studied the state of S 'zha: al of care. He e couvertions summor Wbe couguered State Boverument, and Le bad ab Bain the feelings of tho del @hvee full rejorts of the proce shetches of She sppearance of the e opd the (Larceter of the people, wit o pen which in many passages would not compare unfuve #bly with that wiclded by Mr. Olinsted in Lis ©*Se board hat befell Here is story of aa ad fiom Charleston t of abont sho the botel necommodations. wn o “Yer 1ire there,"” she sal = e there » botel in the town, or axy place at which a per WD 0ol wOp ! ” 4 Ob yer, there's a ho she »r and after a v she o place o8 8 gevtieman would an instoad of occasion to n at & privaie e ght have Rioh, #10 went on to i town for sume days frequent’y & pure i % better suited tb 1didt only thing I we'l conid ot it was potaral L alould do. 1 asked her if she conld w " y uses at which T might ek for ue te] proved unendura she would_say be and 1 may os 1 should wake 10 cr sometimes wi that I at announce & Wwhat rep i vived ¥rom [ T “Fy wint rig e to spenk 1o mo, Sir 1" ehe pokedd 10 ¢ ne, that canght the ears wnd oyen of wost The #1780 ion, Be less than the remarkable sbauge n Ler manuer, e he fact that I knev ons of g b my f 10 be under the observation of thirty or more &Jll v birth and feeling, emblarra me to such degree t1 cosid only stamumer, ** By the right v on 1 suppused & ion. o Ak a lady & civil ¢ to taik with you." r seat, jerked her end sjuared ber o 1eat flusked and e 8 very positive munoer at shon'd 1 do about it? That was a que @yself twenty times per bour for 1 . 1 was ueiined to apologiae, tl ¥ knew for what; E?Ld‘.m t, for | feared the little Rebel might snub me agsin, 3 give ber an opportubity. 1n front of Ler $at & young man Whe bud becn a e ain in the Rebel ermy. Him ske soon en- ed in conversuiion, and they cheered the slow miles with i Lively ehat. thoaght 1, this is begiuning the wostby’ journey unforiusately. 1 could have born stion quite easily: bat eac i L individual in the car soon ppreciated. on wore away. and the crazy oM engire dragped iss was vivacious aud entertaining ; the s 1n & ehéeriul frame of mind; Isat al- nt Finally the ¥ Tose in ok out ber akirts, drew on her thread glo mind you. not to the ex- be good encugh 1. bat to w d me if T would bhatd out her basket lor bher. s anosber surjrise. Queer creature. 1to myse'f, as 1 followed her out, basket. She didn't stop when we reacled ation-house, but waiked on toward its npper en o8d 1 {01 wed, demurely, but wonderiugly. Fifteen or tweaty s away from the car, she suddenly stopped, and turued ckly upon me with “ Thaok you; I wast to apologize to was rude.” Aud bere was the preatest surprise of all! Tt fusion: hot 1 managed to say something 10 t haps 1 wan too forward in asking the qaestion T did N, you were not. It was right that you should ask it, and 3w 1ude 10 -u-ergun so uncivilly. Bat you caught we at » dusnd age; 1 badu't spoken o s Federal since Sumter oo © “Well, it didn't burt you very much, did itt said L 'bm«!-\ #be Yaughed and I laughed, aud theu the englne Whirt forw, of nght me in o effect that she remarked; and as 1 started for the anding on the plat- 1'm going to stop here a day or two, her. ‘ You i slake hands, wou't you : $¢ we shook bands, and T leit ber w This was not his only expenience of the hospitality of Bouttervers. At Albany, in Georgia, Lie narrowiy escaped Jyuch becuuse be had interfered to keep the peace in a uarrel between a negro and & white man—the sum of Lis efevte being that he took the negro by the arm and ad- wised Lim to go home and be quiet. The chivalrous @eorgians would mot brook outside interference in their ptreet-fights, and Mr. Andrews was compelled to leave his Botel st night by a Vack entrauce, sud escape from the Sown on & milk-trun. ‘With regard to the question of zegro-labor, he finds that Shere Las been little or no difficnity where the planters Bave treated their wen joo'ly and kizdly ; but justice and Mindpess scewn to bave been the exception rather than the Fuie. Thera is wuch telk among the country people about a rising of the blacks. A planter who stopped here last night, and whe Jives twelve miles to the . told me that it was be- ed in his neighborbood that they bad guns and pistols bid the timber, and were organizing to use them. His ideas Wwere not very clear about the matter; but be apjeared to @hink they wonld make sciious trouble after the crops are ‘Anotber man, living in Union district. told the ny. with evident pleasure, that ther 'd been able to keep Ponirol of the nigers ap to bis section till 'bout three week Bgo; he lowed thar 'd bin some lickin', but no more o w. fur the fellows. Now the Fecerals kad come in, and tue ses were in & state of glad_excitement, and everybody there wou'd be oloody business right away. A \hing that much sbocks me Js the prevalent indifference negro's fate and life. It isa #ad, but solems fact. that foorths of the native whites consider bim & nuisance, 0uld gladly be rid of bis presence, even at the expense existence. And this io face of the fact that all the trs are compliivivg about the ivsufliciency of labor. 30 Charleston, & merchant told e, with relishing de | 8 story to the effeot that, soon after the promulgation of order agaivst w Confederate buttons, a negro sol- ‘doing duty In the city balted a young mas, informed him ‘the regulations, and told him that if be was seen on the t egain wearing the obnoxions buttons, he would proba- be arrested; whereupon the bopeful seion of the Carleston ocu? whipped out a large knife, seized the negro by the . aud ent !- throat: The soldier died in about a wee wething had been doue with the man who killed him. So, & man who seems to by acting tage agent here sa! d—4 big black buck nigger” was shot near Lewisville about three weeks ago; and the citizens all hield the man Who shot him, and sauction bis course. All the talk of men about the Lotel iudicates that it is Leld to be an evide tness, rather than otberwise, to kill a freedman; :w found » man bere who scems to believe that it is & sin aguiost Dovive low. A Bouth Cerolina freedman stated the case between the pisuters and (he laborers with epigrammatie brevit; ‘Well, you see, boss, de fust dif'culty about de matter be & yer, we gits no meat; and de secon’ is, dat we gits &0 fum-tyin’ too much,” ‘While we stopped a couple of hours at one station on the for water, I strolled off to tbe house of & planter who dozen ** fellows” and as many more women aind children Men und women weie at work in the corn-field, 80 bue place. be was smoking in his piszga —everything in the nature -‘o being called wmm" Eur‘w!l ed we cour- 1o **bave n ugh, and asked pipe.’" which I de- - up from the kesrs ¢ he inquired. I told t oome up Jaid. He had *“heerd,” ke said, 1! kears was esbie. * ‘Pears lixe they are in trouble most every dar,” 5 my neegars is ollus stoppin’ in their work to run and see what's the matter with ‘am.” That launched him the ususl stream. ' Kuow much about ue . mister,” ‘queried. I told bim 1 bad never lired iu the South. * Wall jister. o doo’t knew much about 'em.” And he pro- o ten Iucideutuily 1 asl +'Corn gnd rice and such gauie s they while speakis eral g 105 huafor the ever came through the country. intellige: carpenter who but came in every day tobis through the district late with the mmf; " Weat b the realoxb ween negroes and their em- " lie apaw there's 0y red peoples away, can't do it ve vee, Tawnl,so whal; 80 up by de two fums. an’ don't give ‘et to do work in de wight time an’ v gits oneasy an'_goes off.” utee and this city, 1 Tl“hd A man the ‘who was loudly com) o~y of becon this M " said Lo some- r)‘l 3 * zjb«l1 at nwxnm- 1 . 0 got on at Kiogstree, "1 ruppose you give ger S this el ing some. all for nigh on wo i t ses how you m work less you give them meat.” "H: that muek 10 toe country, and that the did them to give e Bogross meat. And s0, t d at the botel to-day the 'ISE ofs ro"lo tad m: l;'vtu aboat t . “an' be said | must let ‘o h'..r" 'n‘a-: :«k."nh.; 'hh lm:.-,. ars at Marion ‘wan on the ¢ ‘' Towed " he had beer Jail for .flm. gger.—bin in ffveen days, Sir; e over such & d—d outrage " e exclaimed, No ong dis- Dat 1larnt a trick worth two Em‘g‘hl:; iy oo B! S 300 &l 3 oflicer who sert him o Jall sy 4l r g“;} = o LY the thumbs for "bout half an kour, to " Anotber man ! at Florence had strun, hipped her, for whieh o went | unsbakea by the failure to sapport it st ti | d, having answered my | 4 E:m we tware thot my Yaukee basences was wel known sud | NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, AUGUST 10, 1866. P P Andrews fonnd little or none, The batred of he North and of the Fi i Government was as strong as ever, and | the geveral belief in the doctrine of Btate Rights was he bayonet's nxi point; but the Sou 18 generally professed an to come back power whieh they had enjoyed before the must join hands,” they said, with and <0 long as we lot them have off to mwanage everything else in our OWn way, of old.” Tn North Carclina there is o great “We | as we did cs, they will allow us | | | Jeal of something thet calls itself Unionisw; but 1 know nothing more like the appies of Sodom than most of this North C; ua jsm. Tt s a | icwisp, and any man who trasts it will meet There may bo in it the seed of loyaliy, bnt | Wi toih. who mistakes the germ for the Fipened fraif. Ia 1 found abundunt batred of some lead- { promise for the 1 b rests ouly on o be State Hampton, for he is the proud and narrow and dowinee he says. in o Lich be bas rece peoy I of th it isour duty to United St restore all o taas & sovereign State” That sentence will forever stand a8 a model of cool arrogance, and yet it is in fv d with the b uth Carolinians. “The War t them that tke physica nation cannot be resisted, and they will be o the whole current of thelir liv acc orgia there is something worse than & ¥ €0l sequiescence in the issue of batilo: it is th yreval-nt doctrine of the supremacy of the State, Corohna a fow men stood that man 18 hoy The | hes the pecessity of aileg morals as well as into that of olitics; and he w d ‘go with the State” in the Kehor ion i Leld 1o bave committed the unpardonablo sin. At Ma- I met o man who was one of the leading Unionists in th Witter of 156 He told me how ho suffered then for bLis hostility 1o Secession, and yet bo added, **1should have con- sidered wyself forever disgraced if 1 hadn't heartily gore with the State whe she decided to fight.” I believo it is the cou- curtent testimony of all careful travelers in Geargia that there is everywhere only cold toleration for the idea oi natioaal sovereignty, and but little pride in the strengtis and glary and renown of the United St Much s sal tle of it anywher Unionist, but he makes no_spe 1 Us He desiros many favors, bat be ¢ o the grouud cd the Secessionists. nation 10 re may win for wears b South, an cals bimselfl a | 0 of love for the hopes it al rights; y theie s 80 jan demands on'y but te something offers no plea of Unior Tests bis case on the ussumption that he kas fully acquiesc the results of thie war, and he bonestly beiieves that he has so acquieseed, His covfidence in South 4 is 50 SUpTEmo that be fails to sea how mach the conflict meant. walss by such light as be has, und cannot yet believe tivy has decreed Lis State a secondar e in the U . The Gieor- gian began by believing that rost of slavery was honorstle, and the result of the war Las not charged his Ho is anxions for readmission to followstip with k and Penusylvania and Connecticut, but he supports ) by a litt)e claim of community of interest with His spirit is bard and uncomiprowisiog . he de- but does not ask favors; and be is confident trat ¥ us iwportant to toe Usited States s they are corgia. There are few chapters in the book whic h will be read with more interest than the one describing the military prison of Florence, 8. C., from which we sabjoi a few Does any man, borrified by the stovies told concerning it, Lelleve that the famous ond infam “dead-line™ was 8 have been elsewhere, 20 feet inside the stockade wails, 1 by light pole laid in erotch cisewhere it is only marked by the line which distimgui sdden from untrodden ground—of earth rank with grass of earth bare of grass. Just back of this hut, in the nort! eastern quarter, there is ouly this line of grass and mo gras Toubtiess this was the best of the Southern prison-pers; bt even here, if current report among such of the towns people as can be fudneed to speak at ali of the stocknde is irue, the gnards indulged in that very pleasant and exceedingly b ous amusement which consistcd of tossing picces of mi bread into the stockale, between the wall and dead live, in order to get a sbot at some Yankee boy who was so hungry as to thoughtlessly rush for it. These fellows would bave their Joke, you see | Skall wo mudsiils complain thereat 11 they erve who stand and wait. d!d not these aiso serve who died tween the wall and the dead line ¥ ‘Go no more, even in dreams, to Pompeii azd Herculaneu:s, buried cities of the Old W Tlere {8 the city of the liviog dead—eity as nopulous as those, as fruitfal as thoeo 1o tie kens of a life that was and is not. Ou theso 10 or there were at least 2,500 houses—perhaps .00 be a more correet fignre: and not leas than three-fonrths o nearly as good as they were o the day of their e uation, aud in Lundreds of them are memor thatlife of want avd woe ich 13,000 men knew ber: from which 4,000 passed outthrough the door of the de to the slope way yonder by the timber, and Jaid down in lng rows for the final sleep and for the glorious re- ward due useeifish souls. In the construction of these habitations there is almost in finite variety on a common genersl plan. This one fn which I «it, and through which the still drll‘ms( storm beging to i furuishes that geueral plan, with very little clabo oration. Come in and seo it. Do you find the and Darrow, and have you & horror of this squat reof and those smoky walls and this earth floort Yet bere Lved three or four men for many weeks, doubtless, and perhiaps for many months. The but is six and a balf feet long, four feet and thrte inches Part of the way it is mar] | wide, and about five feet high in the cenicr. A Loleof 13 depth was dog; at either end of it was sct a forked stick; in these two forks ws laid a ridge-pole. The wall of our house is the side of the hoie; the roof is the slope of sticks or slabs of wood restivg on tas ridge-pole and at the edge « the hole. This is the general plan. The huts smalier ¢ thin are more unwerous thau those larger, 0 back end is made sticks driven into the ground, against which earth hus been thrown. ‘The frout end is Luil: with more eare. Half of it is of wud brick, and the door and the little chimney at tho coruer occupy the £ ‘The ) n tle bricks, and gives a tivy fireplace of about i5 inches squa The roof was first covered with pine brush and then with six or eight inches of earth. Perhaps s bundred of the huts are entirely above g Possilly & rcore are o high that an o dinary man ean straight in them. But then there are a thousaud by holes three feet deep, & thousand not more than four fect bigh'in the ridge, o thousand not more than four fect square, some hundreds that show only such Light above Fround as a well filled e. Do you deew it swful that men should live in such habitations s theset Yet they were palaces beside the burrows of Selisbury. Thbe thousands of tiny brick used hers wers made from the reddish earth of tbo | hillside west of the brook. The graded flat, extend- ing back 60 or 70 feet from tho stream, suggests A Tnradc-groand: but it was only the bed ou which theso litile bricks were sun-baked. 1u the use of the brick there wan sometimes ill and ingenuity displayed. Ono of chimneys that are models ty; one finds not a few fire places that are constructed with elaborate improvements. 8o, too, of the buts bave doors curiously braided or woven of Ther indeed, over in the south-western corner, o house above ground, woven, walls and roof, 1 These things, though, are exceptional; generail only #0 much as would answer the baldest utilita Teaw with gladness th nismn, there wa plenty of wood. Some of it, us Lhave already said, is still plled in a long rank just out #ide the stockade. There is an abundance, aiso, scattered all about the inclosure, particularly east of the brook. Look into & hundred buts, and you shall sea wood ready cat for the littls fireplace in 75 of them surely. In & few cases it even yet lies nicely pilcd against the chimney on the outside. They wore Yankee bovs, the innabitants of tiis city. Here is a great pine knot fashioned into a 1's ehir, for which would be glad to bid 100 at & sanitary fair, Tils ‘Tough bitof log, bt ite purpose i ovident changh, s sometimes, I judge; for overin the south- ern corver is even fow the litile post st which they aimed, . Bo, 100, they seem to havo wicket i its srrows? for { picked up whit was clearly an arrow. That they played checkers is certain, for just down the bill o little is & bt in Which is & rude checkerboard, aud in the corner, near the fireplace, I tumbled out half a dozen of their pieces—four round, and two square, cut from 7'“ splinters. ) guess they plaved cards, for in one but I picked up the ten of clubs, 4o s gt nd the queen of bearts, and the ace aud tho jack of spades. You see life came to n sudden pause here—there was no time for blotting out ell the marks of this daily exist- ence; and, walk where you will, you stamble against some- 21» :l::r:u"em it was but yesterday these prison-boys und liberty. ke occupant of ne house was s German. Hers ia a sorap from some Germen newspaper, « lesf from a German Testa- went—parts of the second and third chapters of Second Cor- inthisus—and a bit of German manuseript, probably a lefter. 1o another hut I found an old tin plate, part of an iron fork, {be blade of a table-kuife, and the bowl of & clay pipe. An Irishman lived beve; hie wroie his name on one of the posts, “Mic O'Lary;" and 1 have bl o leaf from Prayothook; “0 Lord God, 1 would not only pray for myself, but for all meu. Bless wy relatives and fricuds wherever they are. Bloes, 100, my epemies, anc may tiey become my frionds. My uni- versal peace soou i1 o the simple beart lifted sublime raver in the mghttime, and ccusecrated bis tevt wiih the w of forgiveness. 1n this little sqaare, deep hele-liouse wan a page of Hnziitt's Talie-Talk, s rude 'nodcz PO ir of Inzn ko " tin plate and an armiul of pine w Was it ths moroing that che tenant moved out 14t the large world ¢ In this adjoining cab.n wust bave Jived s boy direct from one of the New-Eugland States. It is six wonths sivce be last passed through the door, yet "erylhlll&ull us_orderly snd neat as if arranged Lui an Loar wood I care- lullyupllul in the corner next to the place, i stool is of big brierwood pipe is sweet aud n. ains aible 3 ] Bie pine-bush coveriug of i 100f 1 & Lttie Toil Py army clota for Pflk\lld:- A string, tied ia tie corner, are sLiuig hree butons, read somebody's History of Euglish Liter- ature, for here is a leaf trom the book, pages 2% and %0; he Kept the roll of his mess, I jadge, for here is « page, wet and dingy, frow bis diary, ob Which ure a dozeo names. L still another Lut 1 find a rude pipe-bow!, dug out of s sassafras-root, and a wooden £poon |-r5. enongh for & giant. The boy wus at hote, too, 10 the tract distributor, for here is No, 80— Do you know tie W ~* published by u South Carolina Coiportage Board.” ‘The boys who Lived Lers—a most wretchad hat, with its pile of straw fu the center—wers also visited by traet mao, wio loft with them ** Au Okl Blade in o New Scabbard,” thi *Deserted: This Is to certily that, within the last twei months, one Peter Weakhearted Lias deserted from the army of Jesus Chirist. Oue of our scouts saw bim last Sabbath wel ing arm im o1m with Captain Lovesin, of the Whisky G hCu‘m‘ Grove, near Lase Perdjtion. A gracious reward will Be given for the recovery aud restoration of this deserier 1o the army. In the bouse with a door at each end—and there is but cie #uch house—I found the rarest trescro of the morming. It was tucked into the piny thitebiag, nod concealed by & serap od woolen cloth, It is a daguerreotype, with the cases hall worn away by long sheflling in the knapsack, aud the whole | tied together with o bit of black thread. " It s apparently the | pheture of wo her srd two misters. A gooddovking, sober 1 and dre 0 the Union and resnmo the exercise of | war. 1 found bat dit- | faced woman of 4%, wearing black bonnet and vail ard cape ud bolding o dark parasol; s young lady of 19 or 20, wearing s bat trimmed with biack, ‘s light Spring or Fail dress, and a gray cloth sack, and bolding a fan; and, between and bebind the two, & sweet-faced miss of Jarge eud lovie eyes, who stands in such position that the only article of dret « varions directions, while the rope itself formed an outeide cov- ring to the whol Uader the division of sociable builders, we have a most wtof Sociable Weaver Lird, whose ter five or six men, visible is & black sils cape. id Tnot that here was life arrested in the very pulse-beat * s number of The tale of Fiorence ean be baif read even now by the dullest | 7040 FTEEY Ly Inbors of those b A quarter of & mile away from the entrance.gate ere the | JDOTEC st ool e gbaghh s semac eizht lang rows of mounds, to which s0 much of this lifo finally | TBo st task of the Wearer bird is to procare & lerge qu eight lang rowe O s, B wmmber of the graves; bus | t167 of the Berb which really seeme as if made expressly for many score unnuwbered, ard the nrx{n»‘n say the Hu:]v"-up;ue.y [:m Sxade v hr oo el prct 4 h‘vnwh. N6 ofte ¥ e old B Yib% | andvery wide blade, which is kuown to the colonists ‘as Were often batiod ot raadum 4 the oMl B ucked | pocechmannic grass, prob sse it grows plentiful'y in liko muttons,” said en in trouble for try The ba f acre of g raves is not incl wed, aud ds. Of course « potter's field, elsa why the numbe upied by these swa wander ¥ hels kept & reco raves! Butthat that part of Southers Africa we aspecies of a dorn ( Acacia giraffs b Yebére the Busbmen,-or Bosjes: grass to some suiteblo tree, cia, called by the Datch col becauss 1! ffe, w el, is fond of er: ch fhe Dateh & ou the o 2 O ) persist in ealiing u Kameel or ca has not veen, and probably never will et 11 | Jeaves. This in the most apyropriate tree for the parpose, as Mr. Andrews writes in a pleasant a lar style, well | the wood is extremely bard nad tough, and the brone therefore nl r the great weigut of the nesta, The birds suited to Lis subject, though it would zow and then be 10 better for a little restraint and a little pe shing. The t accordivg to ull £ merit of Lis book, however, is cb HOW THE BRUTE WORLD LIVES. HOMES WITHOUT HANDS. Brixa 4 i % oF TAR Han ITATIONS OF ANIMALS, CLASSED ACCO Tupms Prise cipLys oF CONSTRUCTION. By the ¥. L. 8, ete. lliusirated. Bvo. pp. & Portions of this work bave been from time to time wade public, and of those who read them as they periodically, no inc onsiderable mumber will wish to possess the entire volume. One sel dom finds, in fact, & book on wuatural history €0 entertaining, =0 fresh, so untechvical, and, in epite of its special topie, so varicd. The divisions are pur poscly made according to the matural rather than the scientific order, and embrace respeciively, with more or less overlapping, the burrowers in earth, wood and rock; those creaturcs whose nests are pensile; the builders; the sub-aquatic dwellers; the social architeets; the parasites; appeared the branch-builders ; and others not easily classitic d. The author is evidently a man versed in from ¢x- tensive reading, large personal €x ohservae tion, and fawiliar access to the collections. His ob- t has not been to construct an elaborate * Bridgewater minor was u wonders of creation, He was aua before clergyman, Whereas gome have instanc d the ‘‘self-sac- nfics " of the female rabbit in stripping ber breast of hair to make a bed for her g, he gees ouly an instinet doubtless more pleast than painful) which she has in common with the eider-dnck and the gold-tail moth. 1 believe,” he says, “that the lower auimals are en- dowed with gifts more extended than we generally sup- pose. But we must not judge them by our own standard; and, ingtead of elevating them to onr p ition, we should try to lower ourselves to theirs.” This, be rightly adds, is the only rational way in ¥ in those animals which are or may be domesticated. Mr. Wood's descriptions are lively and of well-sustained interest. He docs not confine him to details of this and that home without hands,” but introduces appro- priate remarks on the characte of the inmate. Of the Mole Lie says, what we are not ac castomedto imagine: The mole is more courageous than the lion, and, rel Iy speaking, 8 far more powerful and armed with weapons more | destructize, Magnify the mole to the size of the 'ion, and you will have a beast more terrible then the world hn’ y{!l #oen. ol efore ipcapable of wing beyond con tion, spring. it goes alovg. *0 As to eaping with lightning quick. met, rending it to pieces iua mom I y snout into the body of its victim, ating tho still warm and bleed:sg tesh, and instantly searching for freab prey. Seemingly there conld be no mors riticulons s tan- | talizing performance than to offr cocoanuts 10 & hangry crab; yet the robber-crab of th 1 Ocean depends upon this tropical fruit for bis ce. According to Mr. Darwin the crab seizes npon the fullen coconnnts, and Wwith its enormous pinccrs fears away the outer covering, reducing it 10 a mass of rav This stance s carried by the erabs into their bules for the pur when they ehange f robhing the & © bed wihicicon they ean r d tbe Malays are in the e of formis) b t os0 atored fibers, which are ready picked for and which they uso s *jauk,” i ¢, a rough kind of employed for calkizg the seams of vesuls d similar parposes. W ben the crab bas freed o Lask, it futrooncss the small end of & claw little hoies w are found at one end of the ocoantl, and by turniog the claw backwagd aid forward. as o #e00p 0ut (he sft £ it were s brad-awl, the crab substance of the nu even climbs the tree below, then sctually carries them | break ! We know too well that the ship-worm, or teredo navalis bores into timber with the greatest facility; but that & wollusk should bore iito the solid rock appears altogether eredible. Yot & specics of suail in Picirdy is believed to burrow in this way, corroding the rock by a sort of scid socretion in its foot. ‘The Pholasor Piddock employs ouly | 1 diops thom till tell iteelf 18 extremely fragile, and of & rather soft its outer surface | wvered with rid, L that ful ca o hinge to the elge, Vot shoemaker uses Lis awl, the t s being very simi- 1ar to each other in skape. though not is materiol. Tha holes are not at all regular, and in_wome cases there are so many of them that the bird seems to kave found some special gratiiiea tiou in making them, Just as & boy who has 8 new knifo m havoe on ¢very piecs of wood whieh he can obtain. When the boles are completed, the bird next procures ita thread, which is & long fiber of some plant, penerally much longer than isneeded for the task which it performe. Having found its thread, the foathered tailor beging to pass it through the boles, ides of the leaf toward each otier, 8o as to form a kind of & hollow cone. the polat downward. Genorally a single leaf is used for this purpose, but whenever the bird cavnot find one that is sufliciently large. it sews two togoether, or even fetches anotber leaf and fastess it with the fibe Within the bollow thus formed the bird uext depos tity of soft white down, like short cotto structs & warm, light, and elegant nest, visible among the leafage of the tr aluiost every foe except man. The common Spider (which, by the waz, constructs ity geometrical network entirely by the scuse of touch, and therefore as exactly in the dark as in the light) steadies ite web in windy weather by hanging to it weights of some sort s in the following iustance: 1 have seon & piece of wood which hed been thus nsed by & 3 thas eon- which 18 searcely , and which 1s safe from garden spider, and whnich was some two liches iu length, 2 and thicker than an ordinary drawing-pend). The spider Official Southern History of the War, bauled it to a BIght of nearly five foet; and when by some seci- THIE LOST CAUS dent the suspending thread was broken, the little reatare im. B, 4. Pierd, the popale medintely lowered itaelf 1o the ground, attached afresh thread, | 77, ki, arcended ngain to the web, and hauled the plece of wood after | royal octa: t oo Gistance from 1 it. It found this balauoe- wed it for distaneo of i web, and certainly must have d foet aloog the ground bef. chil t the w Beaure - s Zauehiag {48 e S 0D, | Fending e of sl cinches, Orgat (o * hout the othet slle,” wod thus Among mound-making birds the Australia Jungle Fowl | is conspieuous. It always builds uear the ses, some of its -"-l!.:“ tumuli being no less than 15 feot in hight, and 2 feat in diameter. they ean s ub‘r.: ::mp‘ edn;n rather # general wass consiate of leaves, grass. Yablo matter, . Vast vuiabers of sggs are Wi in thens nosts, and are placed at a considerabls depta, some of them belog mnch a8 #ix or seven iect from the Top o tbe seap. Tiey a deposited 1n a curious mauner, the bird seratching its way she beap, loying an exf. asd then filling upthe bolo as & makes ber way out agaio, The Bower bird alone builds, for aught that the orni- thologist can discover, idly and aimlessly, weaving en arched tunnel of twigs, and adorning it with scraps of ribbon, shells, bones, broken glass, feathers, and other waste, and using it after all only as 8 roundeavous or prome- vade, The Termite, or White Ant, South Afile are always futeresting objeots, even from the extrior, and are welcome both to man and best. found in the interior of “The walls az6 40 hard that Lunters are occugomed fo mount. | . apon thea forthe e o of looking ont or gane, and the wild 1 abit, the strueture being strong enough even to support the welgh Jlargo A Aniaal, The travele cotetve, adinirably arranzed f 7 veference, with no p=petitions” I8 always éud\o-u-'li;:.'{r'mmfi-n t, b«‘:u} :« ":‘.:.n; ha :il"b;l'l'-.iwmn wud thaic dates clearly diath n Tusetted gore lo fiud the ground widdod Wilh TCGABIOE, Whih 88 | ousrarite w1 the i editions 1 e wil bo foir Inrger aud beiter Bavored tbao thoss. Which 0uF fields pro- [ETineteon with the ainer efitions 1o 1 kot N & cant uce. | Pubitahed by LIPTLE BROWN & Co, No. 110 Waabington ot oston, Mass., and sold by We must confine our quotations eoncern ag fish to (his about the home of the Stickleback: Alr. Couch, the well known ielibyologist, mentions a case | where a pair of Sticklebacks bad made their nest *“in the loose | oud of & Fope, trom wich the soperated strand rd trom the surfuce, over a depth of fo 1o which the materials conid only have been brogght, of course in the mouth of tho fish, from the distance of about thirty feet. They were forwed of the usial aggregation of the finer sorts of green and red sea-weed, but they Wero go mattel togetber in the bollow formed by the untwisted strands of the | 1076 that the mass constitnted an oblong ball of newily the 9.2+ nd been deposited (R geattared awom- | 3 was bound 1o shape with a thread fance, which was pusscd ( ol wiiial P wube then hang tie Booschmapie grass over & by mesu . boases 0 & modern strect, before the biin make vo dal Our common water-rat, to w! several will ful, garoo called the Bru abading-pla under the toe-n; and J. precipiees, are form Contalne written under the encoury, o ohiptis e asd. women & DROF'iI;l—O ru\;_fi:nl-c sotlor, V. amoust of tiwe, la " e s , tnakes nests fally 20 foot in hight These | Fithont side—cannot fail. under and ELECTROS. 1ough aud through 1o | pus table braneb, and of weaving and plaiting it they form a rouf of some der this roof are placed 8 quantity of rests, jnereas. 00, Tho nests aro sct 4 s in number with each successive b appearances, it is the record of a careful, 8 eonscicntio B ey togethor, 80 shat 8t ust ther look like mass of grass aud a competent observer, piereéd with neimerous holes, and it is yeally wondeiful that the sbould be uble to find their way to their 0 T lor bomes. T human eycs, the nests are mwuch 1l ber additions bave comianieated an_ individuality t ng; but. notwithstanding this similarity, the inma e in and out without any hesitation. Passing from this Philadelphia of the fowls of the air, wo can stop with the Beaver just long enough to draw a moral for the human kind from thi Mr. Wood so ¢hosen, the “ trapper” might have been identi- fied with a certain evil spirft whose enares are ever spread for the unemployed. ct, in which, had There are also certain individusls, called by the trappers “les paressens,” of idlers, which do ot live fn honses, aud bot a taunels, like those of ch they aro closely ailied. These and it sometimes happens that the same tuonel. The trapper is al jcased when he finds the babitation of an idler, ua its captare s comparatively un easy task, S0, too, we may only allude to the the species of Kan- tailed Bettong, which builds its nest of grass, and contrives to transport this material by rolling it into a bunch under its tail; to the Jigger, or Earth-Fly, of South America and the West Indics, w hich has an inconvenient predilection for human flesh as its to bury itself and breed nt Swallow, of Borneo are,al ** paressei; : to the low-building Ni houses itself on lofty pters on branch-building birds, on mentioned, is caviaro to Chinese ingule, and the A above the sea, The cb bees and on corals a also only to ] 1t we shall close concerns an inseet lled the Agrieultural Ant, and is perhaps the rkable of all tho stories which Mr. Wood re- o o languago Darwin: Iural, 48 large, of Texas most re counts, of Dr. The species wh brownish aut. It and lke a thiift f, provident ents for the bas selcctad a sitaation for its habitation, ground, it bores & hole, aronnd which it rafses the surface thice and sometizes six inches, forming a low, cireular mound, ation from the center to the outer havirg a very genils foe! border, which on an sverago is three or four feet from the wation is chosen _on low, flat, wet Lind, gh the gronnd may be perfectly dry to work, it nevertlicless elevatea the shiarp coos o the hight of 13 to 0 t if the att we the mound in the for 20 inches or more, and 1. B Arsand th nd, in eiil nut clears the ground of all obstructicas, levels and the the surface to the Cistanes of i) ree or four feet from the gate of the city, giving o of & bandsome pavement, as it ntrance aear the sumo the kpace tle Ap) really i, Within this paved ares, not a blade of any green thing Iy allowed to grow, except a single s of grain-bearing I3 Having planted this crop in & arourd, and two o three feet from the cester of the moun insect tends and cult y all other Kinseon and weeds that may spriog op among it, and all around Jo farm circle, to the extent of one oF two feod or more, The cultivated grans grows juxi § Uuces n heavy erop of small, white, flinty seeds. wh the microscope, vory elosely resemole ordinary ri Fipe, it i8 earefuily harvested, and carried by the workers, A uil. 10t the granary eells. where it is divested of the ked away, Tho cbaff is takeu out and thiown he paved are sometimes bappens v e dazp, apd aie lisble to 1o vhis tho first fine day, the ants out 1he damp 4 damaged grain, and exposs it to (ke sk away all eds, leaving those that had sprouted to waste. as of this work are carefully propared, Iy truosted. s brin K wan £ 18 48 dry, when they eairy it back aad The illustrat and may be f w Publications. IS WANTED for FRANK MOORE™ “WOMEN THE WAR.” b pethos and wmost touching seutiment "—[Boston traite are enzraved in 'he most approved bavk- Harvord -plate ~|New-York Tribune. «d Tiwes. Hanf “A very vilu 1 original work."—{ Boston « caniot frad thesn iecords without tie Harfrd Evening Press Ve be wafe to predict Kepublic Jumme of great merit and popul £ 104! merit. possessing & (reah sud peculiar iuterest all its *—pHarfocd Daily interesting worke of the industrious suthor.”— no other book and covering s field w s brad-aw] Is used to pieree wi | s book ever sald by ageuts bas been wathed n.l in the act of insinuat [ O Iviag L1 partic . T sell into thie chalk rock, feat which wan performed by gently | Address Ko 18 Corl BAWRON 5 S0 furning the shell from Fight to left, and back again. I e Pho- 0. 16 Asviaw ot Hariford Conm. Jns biurrows to & considerhle depth, and if n piece of the rock be detached broken to pieces by the hanmer, it Le seen 1o be " Iy riddled with the perforstions. alk rock in mostly the richest in specimens, but even the hard lime stone formations are penetrable by the fregile sheil of the hovas, EAT: Y o0d & Of the Tailor bird Mr. Woad ras [ 7S MISTOKY, LOCATION. FORMATION, AND CHAR ‘The mauner in whict it constro ite pensile nest in very wingular, l‘:mln; n convenls af, geuerally which ACTER. Banga from the end of o sleud u row of holes Along sach edge, uring iia STEw of Mikee A NEW UTILIZATION OF BOG LANDS, THE VALUE AND USE OF PEAT IN I8 NATURAL AND MANUFACITURED STAT PEAT MACHINES AND MANUFACTURIES OF FUEL DESCRIBED. PEAT IS TO BE FOUND, FIND IT. THE NEW YORK WEEKLY TRIBUNE g OF JULY 18, artlcls of over 10 columns, giviog & history of Peat in the “nited States. With coal st present prices, every convumer ls inter- o1 in the Peat question. Buy Tux Wraxy Tainuxs and lesrn WHERE AND HOW TO what discoveries Lave been made. Price In wrappers ready fof mail oy o cents. Subscription price §:2 per annum, THE TRIBUNE, New York. Address canvass for the only 1 federacy, of Gens. Johnaton, thern goteut E, Lee, and others, Tle work is being liberally patronized by rrive st tie trath of history, which it Is fmposib'e to do from the istories written ooly from a Northern standpoiut. and the public are cantioned sguinst auy otler work purport- o be this one. I offered to make re chan ve. Dou't ful o seud for eirculurs of this Addions E. B, TKE. * Broken to Harwows;” ** ¥jm nat Wou 'wice Lost (" * Linnet's Trial e Queen of the Connt (g0l i ‘Tesding them through ¢l have never been published, and each one bas had great success. LORING, Pablisher. B Jor HORACE GREELEY® ralleled snccas—13),000 izally indorsed by the press of reacy u Congress, Stale and Kop 2 a1 by (housands politically opposed to tie nat, and will wore than ts prepacation, the vast y —and you will | Summer. More agreeable CNTS WANTED AMERICAN CONFLI Vol. 1 of this History Las met with ing alre ady bewn wol enipha ties, by leading Generals of ¢ of the Cabinet, Senatan, ernors, Litersry men, and (324 ) wit e publlted o Ao tho high charsctor of the firat. h, devoted to a corelnl b i face il adapied by earlier wiiters To i collection of fwportant information inaccessible or overlooked—including wueh foni the Rebed zathor, to colonce, which will D. CASE & Co, I record of s works'au e soht ™ O ERS MANUAL is full, OUTWELL' TAX-PAY eatabiishiod an Ageney b Sew-York or tie sale of their BOOKS Brosdway, New York. WALTER LOW, ASSELL, PETTER & GALPIN® Illustrated JIUE will b sent by twil, to any address. on roceipt The ordinary Catalosus on recelpt of Three Ceuta WALTER LOW, No. 3% Broadway, New-York. INGLISH BOOKS,—On hand at presont, New Publications. y ICK™ ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE HARDY BULBS, FOR THE AUVTUMN OF 1966, AND Ts now pubiished. It cont i3, TULIP: LE TULIP AND SCILT wt Bulb Grewers of He d e tves syl the fiest lot of Bulbe EATALOGUE AND GUIDE Toalot Postag: K ever brooght Lo U o Uiy Te published for tie benehit 1y o s rapid'y s possible. which (the cont. 2 to plant B talogue. AGRUTS VICK, Rochester, N. Y. NEW BOOKS, DGE & SONS, IN, repaid to o 1], will Gud it o their 1 vors W 10 0btai Ly terest WO INTERESTIN GEORGE RC iT., NEW-YORK, o Day . Py WriLiaw Jenoax. Small 8vo. Cloth of the led g » lifetime of oo ¥ men tnd Autbors of ar, . tion to cusrent liter ty SONGS AND ¥ CUMBERLAND. ot and sraphi Flited by Sidnay Gilpin of Derwe Steel Portralt of Mies Susenna Ulsire. LADS or P Cloth, $4 %0. Also, just received. u farther sapply ATk SOURNAL OF A L0 Ey W M of NDON PLAYGOER, Frofessor ot Eughish L App's or sddre 4 No. of well to do gr commen: neral HOUSEWORK, &c., st Mrs. " Stanton at.. near the Bowery Gitnations Wanted—Males, 10N WANTED as GARDENER or Is & good Conchuman if required in it , good reieience, Address V. Y. T - v buse Ot 1\ SIT AN (Ane Pi b bl refervrce gi Y NIED—By an esperienced BOOKKEEP} a SITUATION in a Manufactuaing Company. Couubeston iouse Joing o L cher; will receive prompt felp Wanted- BOY WANTED in a BOOK STORE gentleman whe scn wboat 16 years of age, whom te wo. | Jike to fearn th 1 STATIONERY bu il pivase call at McFARLAND'S Bockstore, corner Twent id way. . Th.e information in ¢ Addres rtford, Coun Willcox & Gibbs Se i experience in the uwe of b man ta canvass for subscribers to pr ‘Miist be 8 good_peuman. huow soething of bookker 'wid be dispoed to wake himsel? generaily used Undoubted rafereners reqaiped. Address. stating sge i saiary eapected, he., PUBLISHER, Box N pre vious ew- 0. 112 Trivune WANTED WATCH- MAKET e, by DILLON L3 Tl'Trb" No. % TED—Esperienced SALE R. 1. MACY. Fourteenth ANTED IMMEDIATELY % wl W, J | ‘v wa'e and feus AND TRUF; or Love asp Lovarry i iug story by Mra Spencer, u loyal Saathern Wo fa hls great Camosign and March to the Sea. " 1 Agent. No 10 Calor eddeess 1 1. FERR “ ‘VANTRD Compe MALE NURSES for Cholers Hospitsle, Apply st the Offize of Sanitary Sapesintend ent, N ] fott-et , Leiwern 92, . and 12 m., bring'og detters of Tecomme ndativn. ‘ FANTED—EXVERIE aid engage o fir st edition tock of OLD snd NEW ENGLISH BUOKS, . J. HOLLAND & Co., i of Assessors for exan viz Iaving crosswalie in Third-strvet cpposite No. : e Wi f. . —For laying Coupilandt snd Oreenwich stie-te Ath —F West stzoct from north-easterly corner layivg crosswalk f-om the sonth-east to the soutl-west tin sud Gireenw N For butlding sew.r in Fo ot sewer to 8 point seven'y. 1 avenae, Muiberry street fom Bleecker to Houston-street L to Sevent! o ith stome block wtuated 00 Tat—Hoth sides of Tl 24O U strvet to the extent corner of West 34~ On both Block from Conrtl lundt-atzvet to the exten Lots of Gronnd, vacant Lots, pisces atd parceis of Land, d Avenne C. f Charl south ea arth side of Court. reenwicltrcet to atreet. of Charjton- om Borth east b side of tof Green wiehestreet. 6th.—(m both sides of Fortysixthatreet fom the Teuth to the | Fleveoth avenaes. K 7th.—0n boths s.des of Mulberry-street between Blee-ker and Hous oneairvets aud to the extent of half the block eitker way oo Blercier and Houston stree both sides of Thi ues and to th {ntersecting streets, . —On both side: of Twentiethatreet from Brosdway to Fourth- —-On both sides of Forty-fithatreet {rom tha Sixth to the nd to the extent of halt ‘he block either way on the t cte. 'All persons whior e interests are affccted by the sbore named Aseess- wents, snd Who &re opposed to the wame, or either of them. are re quested to present their objections in wriling, to one of Sened. at their office. No, 32 CHAMBER?-STREET, BASEMF NEW COURT HOUSE, within thirty days from ihe date of this notice. . JACOB F. OAKLEY. ) JOHN D, OTTIWELL, ¢ Board of Asses ISAAC O, HUNT, Owricr, Boaxp o Assxssons. New Court [Tonve, Aug. 10, 1006, ROTON AQUEDUCT DEPARTMENT—TO CONTRACTORS.—Scaled Propossls wili be recetved ot tlie offies (Rotunda, City 11 k), vutii 11 K MONDAY August 20, 1866, for the covstrne'ion of & DAM e for & Iarge storsze rewervolr, et Boyd's Coru Kent, Patuam County. X FPropon st Maservois b Puty and must sbio have indorrel proposal. Plans can be e of the Enginser iu charge at Boyd's Cornrrs, neat Cartn cations can also be obtaued at 1l offico TIOMAS 81 RO 4 o AW Y Deprrtent. | New-York, July 30, 1064, Ornes or T St } No. 257 ERoADWAY. CTORS, —Proposals, inclosed in a indorsed with the tit'e of the work and (e nane Aque eny. of tho bidder witien thereon, will be received ot this oftice wntil MONDAY, Augast 20. 1856, at 12 o'clock a. . For reguliting, grading and earh iy oorth street, between Elesewh avenve and lidson Kiver ELink forms and peopo h the specifications and agreoments, can ba obtaimed st (bis officn, = Dated Strvet Depariment, ow-York, August 8, 1NGF, CHAKLES G. CORNELL, Suect Commissioner. —SEPARATE SEAI titls of work ©.ved at this office wutil 11 08, for the construc ouul!T:)l;l.: rty-second to Fifty eighthst or Johbiug or | TN nt to owwalk i Weebstreet (rom south-east corner of | FEV) REN rosew elks from nert’-east to north-west corres of | rap bk | %—'For paviog Forty fith strcet from Sixth to Ninth avenies e embraced by such Awessment. include sll the several | Real LL WANTING nd making water, Viaelan containing fall fnformation will Sclom , Ayricdcural Editor of The Tribune It mcat extenive Jortile tracts, \a an aimoit ievel poas nn‘lhmfl:"’::u-( Jarming thaé we ancw o his nde o ive Landi Western uvemen: Cetalgwfot Gale. FARMS. e Large and tbrivine settlement. of Vineland: mild elimatey % miles south of Philsdeiphia by raiirosd. Kich soil < dos £25 tracts wauiip, N. J. be sent frem “A FARM for SALE cheap, of 100 acres, 40 Tsland Len, § ber nd oub house, an ticalars inguire of the ower, F. D, HARNED, north of Myrtle-ave. A Office hours, 10 to 4. ; 2} from railroad depot, with good, new i o PPLY at No. “ DAY'S REAT ESTATE CIRCULAR. Mailed gee i desiied. Tms . Kent for STANLEY et outhooses, ¢ 519 Fourth-av A MOST desirable PROPERTY; new, and cons venient in sll rorpe: Price, $16,000. Brooklyr. | BEAUTIFUL City, Md., a station on ¢ cent toa tarnpike; orch trees; meadow land. w provements goods Pri exick City, Md. ] ARGAINS togs and Sehenecta, soil, and Fruit in abund, Cm:.n' FARM W Soil, fine loa suf e for beanty sd uili Water soft and pure., tnre, on eany teris. The Do DOR SALE | l‘ HOUsY, | Pries $23,5 D *. 'REAT INDUC reat aboye La | of timberand ric feet in bight. Address | wery produc 8ond for catsl ]{EAL E bas for SA nov y with fine store, o rond De is Trox Novss Bridgepo to Seveuti-aves. ANTED=T4 between Twe: 1ot building cove: for business miry and in comylete or: ire |pereone, P New-York, | fowt, with 60 bo | ox Ne. 98 Drtda por | D W Sn iy River, overlooking A1 situsted e 5 ratoze. The s and w o deiighaf place £ F.’\.\m,\‘ WIN L d Wines aud pac 1o suit, by JO vy Y. “ NUATTAN < | h.»m TABER & WRO TED—0n, 24 Blck B ous pair > of thinsbare animaals,alh to ), G. BELL. Ko, ¥ “'A\'l'l"l! FiLY WY WATER § J. B. CROUK, No. in the most beanf Powers for manyfactol OCEAN COUNTY, NEW-JE! railroud to Philsdelphia. ARMS in the Millstone and Rar ble Thres o Tweuty-3eeondest., uea Lhiree strictly 1ir 25 fect ewst of Lexington-ave. huess of cool wnd miners | Lands contain four workable veing of o3l LE on Murrs, aud STABLE of | | £o bourd with fie ten ANTED by two adies, o dare believed by R JSHING TACKLE of every variety for SA1 loeated {5 the most promisivg pars of 18T RIDER, No. 3 Ploente, 8. 1. L, FARM, 3} miles from Fredench altimore and Obio Rallrosd; wdjee ards of choiee fruit-trees, numbering ever (0 odland, five mansicn houre, & , $6,500, cash. Address Box 1l portions of Sarae dy Coupties, plendid Bufldings, proé junce. Call on JAQUES, No. 24° and FRUIT LAN or SALE, st BRIC 0y 4 mies from New Yornom RSEY, ot for ll erops. Couniry Just volling encigh Chizate miid nd hetblally L o fever and g 4 only Lo sctos! vl Price er scre, % 20 aud upward. For cireulare snd maps. address a V. J. PAR MENTIER, Aent, Bricksbure, acres each, Goed Fode toep BRICK HOUS e | In first-rats OFder. RO 0. 95 Brosdway. tory brown stone bigh-stocp 2 Fi "o depot 0 0N & Co, No. 191 Inqaire on TEMENTS.—COAL OIL and T on liersd terme. 10,000 scies o8 Kenawha River, West Virginia. Luproved, on Gauley River, resr i Ly s o berit - pors o which sre WM. H. BRILL, Allsgheuy City, Pa. SHORR IAM. A. COIT, Yo 4 Prxasr, Hill las story brown stoce . ARy matovey for SALE— s in Western Mosiaclw 0 &e.; bot few rods fiom i ed for SALE. Poi patt wddres LOCK, A, Com. tonses and Farms Wanted. ot FOUNUEN, Fea or PURCITASE—A"vmall soath of Twenti AS ) 0 from tie Foond BROW A @ Brooway ALLEN & _The BEST LOCA. ses, Noy 2 Bowery; full ot, second and third fuors Ty VELLING amsbar hesily ard doors esst ¢ doave. The owie Tt will not be it to a Gmily of over " n imwe Hately. Apply o the prew ses a flourishing towa, FACTOIS! BUIL i mesry vew. Adi oard and Heooms. 1 BOAKD ol 8 4 vea d pla Te. XN, Z mmer Retreats ¢, Mans,—This sitaste! ue.z the va ase 41€ vory colr brated (oF elt me wiaky scicubibie wei (0 be supesior 10 are hoantifal; good ehing and humting. 1t b 10 spend e Syl IO PARK ROPDWYMAN, | Manerere T o R A ARG T Rscellancons, | PBRAMASLL, DEANE & Co.. Munfictarers @ | the impeoved EM 5 NEN 247 and | 49 Water N jr0rs e N GAULY, B OIL CON AN No. 16 Brosiwey, ¥. Y. SOLE MANUFAC R CU1RERS OP EXIRA LARD OL i tine eargo o) LE by AUGUSTUS § , Cinnamon one puir MOOSE DEER. biack taied oth Amecican JAGU AR, Persons bavive any ve, for sale will_find & purchaser by opylying B »,dw ay 'ERS. cnaMpioN R ¥ ean Patent STON o i gl it lous. IE " Y. 50 Faltow-st. (betveen THE Capltal, wachiues, & 1T, GOODWT »fllfi-. No 49 Stute-st, l{EMINuT_Oh on to Fourteenth at. ; ensity. piuce o Fint ave | Vestry-st. from Greenwich to Westat.; Dasnest. trom Hudson o Weatat 4 rty-figat ot. from Eighth to Nioth ayes. ; o 3 ey Hudgn o Wetat Thiriy-lirstos' from Fighth to Ninthi aven.; Ellyabeth st, from Pavard to Grand-st. pring at. from [rosdway to West ot.; fro Brondway to Bowery ifrty-fonrthest, Teom Thicd ave, to East River, and Githest. from Vroadway to Eighth OB LLE PAVENENT in Ele nd D¢ Croswalke across Fourti-ave. at the in- t. Also for the constiuction of Sewers in and Perry st ; nd the Sowery 10 Tw, temseeiion of ¥ betwee Fire Fiatacnth and : eventeenth Easex:st, botween Stai and kiester and Divielos [0] eigithiat. e we Cate. between o nty-eighth sevent ad Lezington. A s tween Filh as ot st. be ., with brauches lu Fifth, Madison and forme for bids ean be bad at this office | THOMAS STEPHEN. ; Croton | A OBT. L {xv\lr;lu 1, ¢ Aguaduct R. LARMONT'® Paris, Loudon and New-York ol N i oarde Special Treatment of Loesl are, Fistula and Files. “Oilice of eansultation frows 10 a, w. 109 p. m. (exesps Bunday SoLD ICES REDUCED HORSE POWEI COTTON GIN MFG. ALBANY < and M o ondensers, Cotton aud kiay Presses, Woed-sawiog dispates tor the her aned ¢ Lanes. Thresioc and Separster, ™ w VoRK AGryie i = FIRE ARMS. BY GUN DEALFRS AND THE PRADE GENE [0 pa AN PR LY. UPW ARD OF 200000 SURNISH & D THE U. & GOVERNMEND- RIFLE (Stee) Barrel AUSKET, o nateid Fatom. Our naw Breach Load g Arus liave just been approve UL 8. RIFLE U's! od for Military service o E. REM wedd T WA, EV] WEDDINA CARD 1915) SR Raro {§aToN & S0¥3, ion, Ne e ing ¢qrbi;: JLL SONS, 23y, - i ONE NLA'I!‘:;"E.:H?,::H .