It is not known that any seizure of fishing vessels carrying the Hag of the United States has been made under this claim. So far as the claim is founded on the alleged construction of the convention of ISIS, it cannot bo acquiesced in by the United States. It is hoped that it w "ill not bo in sisted on by Her Majesty's Government. During the conferences which preceded the negotiation of the convention of 1S18, the British Commissioners proposed to ex clude the fishermen of the United States from the privilege of carrying on trade with anv of Her Brittanic Majesty's sub jects residing wiuun tne limits assigned for their use, and also that it should not be law ful for the vessels of the United States en gaged in such fishery, to have on board anv goods, wares, or merchandise, whatever, except such as may be necessary for the prosecution of their voyages to and from said fishing grounds, and any vessel of the United States, which shall contravene this regulation, may be seized, condemned and confiscated, with her cargo. This proposition, which is identical with the construction put on the language of the Convention, was emphatically rejected bv the American Commissioners, and there upon was abandoned by the Briiish Pleni potentiaries, and Article 1, as it stands in the Convention, was adopted. If, however, it be said that the claim is founded on prov incial or colonial statutes, and not upon the Convention, this Government cannot but regard them as unfriendly, and a contra vention of the spirit, if not the letter, of the treaty, for the faithful" execution of which the Imperial Government is alone responsible. l'HKK NAVIGATION OX THK ST. I-AWI1KXCE. Anticipating that an attempt may possi bly be made by the Canadian authorities in the coming season to repeat their tin neighborly act toward our lishermen, I recommend you to confer upon the Kxecu tive the power to suspend, by proclamation, the operation of the laws authorizing the transit of goods, wares and merchandise, i in bond, across the territory of the United States to Canada; and lurther, should sue! an extreme measure be necessary, to sus pend the operation of any laws wherein the vessels of the Dominion of Canada are permitted to enter the waters of the Unitei States. Y HKe umrienuiy disposition lias been manifested on the part of Canada in the maintenance of a claim of the right to ex elude the citizens of the United States froi the navigation of the St. Lawrence. .This river constitutes a natural outlet to the ocean for eight States, with an aggregate population of 17,00,000 inhabitants, am with an aggregate tonnago ot 701.309 tons upon the waters which discharge into it ine ioreign commerce 01 their ports on these waters is open to British competition and the major part ol it is done m Bnti bottoms. . If American seamen be excluded from the natural avenue to the ocean, the mo nopoly of the direct commerce ot the Lake ports with the Atlantic would be in ioreign hands, their vessels on transatlantic voyages having an access to our lake ports which would be denied to American ves sels on similar voyages. To state such a proposition is to refute its justice. During the administration of John (uincy Adams Mr. Clay unquestionably demonstrated the natural right of the citizens of the United States to tiie navigation of this river, claiming the act of the Congress of Vienna upon the Rhino and other rivers' and all nations to have the judgment ot European jurists and statesmen, that the inhabitants of a country through which a navigable river passes, has a natural right to enjoy the navigation of that river to am into the sea, even though passing through the territory of another power. The right docs not exclude the coequal right of the sovereign of passing the terri tory through which the river debauches into the sea to make such regulations, rela tive to the policy ot the navigation, as may be reasonably necessary, but those regula tions should be framed in a liberal spirit of comity, and should impose no needless burdens upon the commerce which has the right of transit. It has been found in practice more advantageous to arrange those regulations by mutual agreement The United States are ready to make, any reasonable arrangement as to the practice ot the St. Lawrence, which may be siu gestcd bv Great Britain. If the claim made by Mr. Clay was just when the population of the States bordering on the shores ot the lakes was only 0,400,000. It now derives greater notice and equity from the increas ed population, wealth, production and ton nage ot the States on the Canadian frontier On the ground that she possessed a small domain, in which the Mississippi took its rise, she insisted on this right to navigate the entire volume of its water. On tin ground that she possesses both banks of the St. Lawrence, where it disembogues itself into the sea, she denies the United States the riffht of navigation through about cne-half the waters of Lakes Onta rio, Huron and Superior, and the whole of Lake Michigan, through which the river Hows, though they are the property of the United States. The whole nation is interested m se curing cheap transportation from the Ag ricultural States ot" the West to the Atlan tic seaboard. To the citizens of the States, it secures a greater return ior the produce ot the lands tilled by them. Since Mr. Clay advanced hisargumentin behalf of our right, the principle for which he contended has been frequently and b3T various nations recognized by law or by treaty, and has been extended to several other great rivers. jy tne treaty concilia edat Maycnce in 1832, the Ithino was de clared free, from the point where-it was first navigable, into the sea: by the con vention between Spain and Portugal, con eluded in 1835, the navigation of the Douro, throughout its whole extent, was made free for the subjects of both crowns; in 1S53. the Argentine Confederation, by tmdy, threw open the free navigation of the Parano and Uraguay to the merchant vessels of all nations; in lboh, the lerncan was closed by a treaty, which provided for the free navigation of the Danube; in 1858 Tvjivi;! bv treatv. declared it regarded the rivers Amazon and Laplatta, in accord nnnfl with fixed principles of international law. as highways or channels opened by Nature for the commerce of all nations; in 1859, the Paraguay was made free by treaty, and in December, 108, the Em peror of Brazil, by imperial decree, de clared the Amazon to be open, to all the frontier of Brazil, to the merchant ships of all nations. The greatest living British authorities on this-subject, while asserting the arbitrary right of the British claim, say it seems difficult to deny that Great Britain may ground her refusal upon strict law; but it is equally difficult to deny, first, that in so doing she exercises harshly an extreme and hard law; secondly, that her conduct Avith respect to the navigation of the St. Lawrence is in glaring and discreditable inconsistency with her conduct with re spect to the navigation of the Mississippi: on the ground that she possessed a small domain in which the Mississippi took its rise, she insisted on this right to navigate the entire volume of its waters ; on the ground that she possesses both banks of the St. Lawrence, where it disembogues it self into the sea, she denies to the United States the right of navigation, though Ontario, Krie, Huron, and Superior, and the whole of Lake Michigan, thiough which the river Hows, are the propeity of mi i. t . . . - i j i. -me iwune nation is interested in se curing cheap transportation from the States of the West to the Atlantic. To the citizens ot those States it secures a greater return for labor; to the inhabitants of the seaboard it offers cheaper food; to the na tion an increase in the annual surplus of wealth . It is hoped the Government of Great Britain will see the justice of abandoning the narrow and inconsistent claim to which her Canadian provinces have nrge her adherence. THE UNITED STATES MINT AND COINAGE. Excluding redeposits. the amount of colti and silver deposited at the Mint and its sev eral branches, during the last fiscal year. was 30,403,788 10; the coinage for the year was .s-j4,h3j,uil, and the value ot gold and silver bars stamped was 8,748,852 5)1. I respcctiully ask the attention of Con gress to a bill prepared in this department and submitted at the last session, and to the accompanying report relative to Mints and the coinage sj stem of the country. The bill was prepared with care, and has since been revised. CIVIL, service nr.rouM. Always favoring practical reforms would respectfully call your attention to an abuse of long standin like to see remedied by this Congress. It ti jeiumi in me civu service or the coun try- I would have it go beyond the mere nxing ot the tenure of offices of clerks and employes, who do not require the advice and consent ot the Senate to make them complete. I would have it govern not the tenure, but the manner of making-appointments. There is no duty which". so much embarrasses the Executive and heads of Departments as that of appointments. Nor is there any such arduous and thankless labor imposed on Senators and Represen tatives as that of finding places for their constituents. The present system does not secure the best, and often not even til men, for public place. The elevation and purification of the civil service of the Government will be hailed with approval by the whole people of the United States. THE NEW POLICY TO WAP. 11 THE INDIANS. Reform in the management of the Indian aftairs has received the special attention of ine Administration trom its inauguration to the present day. The experiment of making it a missionars' work was tried, with a few Agencies given to the denomin ation of Friends, and has been found to work most advantageous. All the Agen cies and Superintendeneies not so disposed of were given to officers of the army. The Act of Congress regulating the army ren ders army officers ineligible for civil posi tions; inuian Agencies being civil olhco I determined to give all the Atreneies f such religious denominations as had here tofore established missionaries among the Indians, and perhaps to some other denom inations who would undertake the work on the same plan as missionary work. The societies selected are allowed to name their own agents, subject to the approval of the Executive, and are expected to instruct and aid them as missionaries to Christianize and civilize the Indians, and train them in the arts of peace. The Government watches over the pflicial acts of these agents, and requires of them as strict an accountability as if they were appointed in any other manner. The con fident hope that the policy now pursued will, in a few years, bring all the India ns upon the reservations, where they will live in houses, have schools and churches, will be pursuing peaceful and self-sustaining avocations, and where they may be visited by the law-abiding whito man with the same impunity mat lie now visits the civ ilized white settlement. I call your special attention to the report of the Commission er of Indian A Hairs for full information on the subject. THE PU11LIC LANDS. During the last fiscal year, 8,005,413 acres ot public lands were disposed ot ; ot tin? quantity, 3,(599,810 acres were taken under tne Homestead law, ami ,io5,.i-j acres were sold for cash. The remainder was treated with military warrants, college or Indian scrip, or applied in satisfaction of grants to railroads, or for other public use lhe entries under the Homestead law, during the last year, covered 901,515 acres more than those during the preceding year Surveys have been vigorously prosecuted to the full extent of the means applicable to the pujpose. I lie quantity ot land m market will amply supply the present de mand. The claim of the settlers under the home stead or pre-emption law is not, however, limited to lands subject to sale; at private entry unappropriated surveyed public land may be at quired under the former laws, it the party entitled to enter under them will comply with the requirements they pre scribe in regard to the residence in cultiva tion. The actual settlers' preference to right of purchase is even broader and ex tends to lands which were un.surveyed at the time of his settlement; his right was formerly confined within much narrower limits ami at one period ot our History was conferred only by special statute. They were enacted from time to time to le galize what was then regarded as an au thorized intrusion upon the public domain. The opinion that the public land should be egarded chiefly as a source ot revenue is no longer maintained, for rapid settlement and successful cultivation ot them is now justly considered of more importance to our well-being than is the lunu winch tne ale of them would produce. Ihe remark able growth and prosperity ot our new States and Territories attest the wisdom of the legislation which invites- the tiller of the soil to procure a permanent home on terms within the reach of all. The pioneer who incurs the dangers and privations of a frontier life, and thus aids in the foundations of new commonwealths, renders a signal service to his country and is entitled to its special favor and protection. The laws secure th;t object and largely pro mote the general welfare; the3r should therefore be cherished as a permanent feat ure of our land sj-stem. Good faith re quires us to give mil enecc to me existing grants. The time-honored and beneiiceni policy of setting apart certain sections of public land lor educational purposes in the new- States, should be continued, when public provision shall have been made lor the ob jects. I submit, as a question wormy oi serious consideration whether the residue of our National domain should not be totally dis posed of under the provisions of the home stead and pre-emption laws. In addition to the swamp anuovernoweu mrls m-anted to the States in which they are situated, the lands taken under the Ag ricultural College Acts, and lor internal bimi-nveinent. purposes, under the Act of September 18th a.ul the Acts supplemental thereto, mere imu ucun vwmv,j close of the last fiscal year, oy patent or other equivalent, evidence or title to state and corporations, 2,783,025,713 acres. It is estimated that an additional quantity oi 174,735,523 acres is still due under grama ior ike uses. The policy of thus aiding tuc states in buihlffiir works of internal improvement was inaugurated more than forty years since, in the grants to Indiana and Illinois to aid those States in opening canals to connect the waters of the Wabash with those of Lake Erie, and the waters of Illi nois with those of Lake Michigan; it was followed, with some modification, in the grant to Illinois ot alternate sections of public land within certain limits of the Illinois Central llailroad Fourteen States and sundry corporations nave received similar subsidies in connec tion with railroads completed, or in pro cess ot construction. As the reserved sec tions are rated at the double minimum, the . 1 f 1 I. w. i. II I . 1 I suits ui uiem b me eunanceu price lias thus, in niany instances, indemnified the Treasury for the granted lands. The con struction of some of these thoroughfares has undoubtedly given a vigorous impetus to the development of our resources and the settlement of the more distant portions of the country. It may, however, be understood that much of our legislation in this regard has been characterized by indiscriminate and profuse liberality. The United States should not loan their credit in aid of any enterprise undertaken by States or Corpo- lations, nor grant lands in any instance unless the projected work is of acknow ledged national importance. I am strong ly inclined to the opinion that it is inex pedient and unnecessary to bestow snb- Klies of either description: but should Congress determine otherwise, I earnestly recommend that the rights ot settlers and of the public be more effectually secured inu protected b3' appropriate legislation THE PATENT OFFICE. During the year ending September 30. is (0, there were filed in the Patent Office 15,411 applications for patents. 3.374eaveats. and 100 applications for the extension of patents. 13,022 patents, including issues md designs, were issued: 110 extended. ana i,usj allowed, but not issued by reason of the non-payment of the final fees. The receipts oi the oilice during the fiscal year were 8130,301 70 in excess of its expendi tures. THE CEXSl'S The work of the Census Bureau has been energetically prosecuted. The preliminary volumes, containing much information of special value and interest, will be ready for delivery during the present session : the remaining volumes will be completed with an me despatch consistent with perfect ac curacy in arranging and classifying tho re turns. We shall thus, at no distant day. be furnished with an authentic record of our condition and resources. It will. I loubt not, attest the growing prosperity of the country, although, during the decade which has j tist closed, it was so severe Iv tried by the great war waged to maintain its integrity, and to secure and perpetuate our free institutions. PENSIONS. During the last fiscal year, the sum paid to pensioners, including the costs of dis bursement, was 827,780,811 11. and 1,758 bounty land warrants were issued. At its close 19S,080 names were on the pension rolls. The labors of the Pension Office lave been directed to tho severe scrutiny of the evidence submitted in favor of new claims; to the discovery of fictitious claims, which have been heretofore al lowed, lhe appropriation for the emplo3r ment of special agents for the investigation of frauds, has been judiciously used, and the results of it have been of unquestiona ble benefit to the service. AfJiircrrrritE axp education. The subjects of Education and Agricul ture are ot great interest to the success of our Republican institutions, and our hap piness and grandeur as a nation. In the interests of one, a bureau has been estab lished in the Interior Department the Bureau of Education and in the interest of the other a separate department, that of Agriculture. I believe great good is to flow from the operations of both these bureaus, if properly fostered. I cannot commend to your careful consideration too highly the reports of tho Commissioners ol Jvlu- cation and of Agriculture, nor urge too strongly such liberal legislation as to sc enic their ellicieiuy. Tn conclusion, I would sum up the poli cy ol the Administration to be a thorough enforcement of every law, a faithful collec tion of taxes provided for, ewmomy in the disbursement of the same, ii prompt y-ay-ment of the debt of the Nation, a reduction ot taxes as rapidly as the requirements ol the country will admit, reduction of taxa tion and a tariff to be so arranged as to af ford the greatest good to the greatest num ber, honest and fair dealings with all other people, to the end that war, with all its blighting consequences, may be avoided, but without surrendering any right or ob ligation due to us; a reform in the treat ment of the Indians, and in the wholecivil service of the country, and, finally, in se curing a sure, untrammeled ballot, when every "'man entitled to cast a vote may do so just once, at each election, without fear of "molestation or proscription on act-omit of his political faith, nativity or color. IT. S. Grant. Executive Mansion, Washington, I. C, December 5th, 1870. Oii Wife too JIany. I-'roin the New York World. A curious case of marital entanglement has just come to light in Brooklyn. It ap pears that about four years ago Louis Rat ten entered into the bonds of matrimony at Baltimore, Md.,with aladyot that place. The couple lived together a short time, Mrs. Ratten became dissatisfied, and left her husband, who then proceeded to vasn- ington, 1). C, where he made the acquain tance of a Miss Hill, the daughter of his landlady. Miss Hill is aged is, and vows she loves Ratten. At all events she eloped with him front Washington to Brooklyn a few weeks ago. They were followed by Miss Hill's brother, who took them to a minister in Brooklyn, witnessed and paid for their marriage. Mrs. Hill, becoming incensed at the conduct of her daughter, went to Baltimore, saw Batten's first wife, got the marriage certificate, and an affida vit duly certified -by a county clerk, and then came on to Brooklyn, where she pre ferred a complaint before Justice Valsh, charging Mr. Batten with bigamj'-. lr. Batten was arrested, but Mrs. Hill in the meantime regretted what she had done, and attempted to withdraw the complaint. Jus tice Walsh refused to allow the withdrawal, and set down the examination for Friday. Mrs. Hill's son has since arrived from Washington, and attempted to kidnap his sister. An interview between mother and daughter was arranged at the oilice of Coun selor Keadv, who appears for Mr. Ratten, but the young lady failed to come to time, and sends her "ma" a polite note declining to see her, and adding that as she brought this trouble on herself, she (Mrs. mil), could get out of it as best she could. As for herself, (Mrs. Ratten), she would stick to Ratten through thick and thin. Mr. Rat ten has just opened a croc-Kery store on Court street, where he hopes to make his votifl" wife happy, and in the meantime J i- . i.s.. c i. procure a cuvorce liom uis in.-st wins Such the course ot true love. lu some of the localities of Chicago it is said that real estate has not advanced in price since lSGtf. Along the course of the lake property is in brisk demand. Lots on Rrairie avenue have recently been sold at from 350 to 400 per foot. Gunpowder and Gun in Olden Times. Chamber's Journal. Gunpowder was at first always placed in guns loose, by means of long ladels; and in spite of the inconvenience and danger of the practice, it was 300 years before aii3' attempt was made to place it in cartridges. lhesewero at first only used when rapid firing was necessary, aud their employ ment did not become general, owing to the cianger in serving the guns with them -oeiug maue oi parchment, paper, canvas or linen, they were more or less comhusti ble, and left burning fragments in the bore, which had to be carefully removed before a fresh charge was put in. The vents of the gun were freriuentlv choked. ana me pieces rendered unservieable bv lragmentsof the cartridge-bag being lorced into them. It was not till 1778 that Sir Charles Douglas, then Captain of H. M. . mike, suggested serge as a proper ma teriai ior cartridges: and when his uro- posais were not treated with the attention iney merited, ne placed mo wnoie amum- 1. j 1 1 tion 'of his ship in proper cartridges, at his own expense. The advantage of serge as a material for cartridges, the principle of which is its total consumption by the llame of the powder, are so great that its v a soon became universal. - From instructions laid down for the ser vice of the great guns of tho fifteenth cen tury, it appears that they must have been nearly as formidable to friend as to foes. The actual damage they inflicted on the enemy probably bore little relation to the moral effect they produced; while on the other hand, the charges of loose powder carried about in "spoon es,v and fired by means of red-hot spikes, heated in a char coal fire with a pair of bellows, must have been a frequent cause of accident on the field. At first the heated spikes seem to have been actually thrust into the vents of the guns, until" the safer expedient of laying a train of priming-powder was thought of. This, in its turn, was super seded by a piece of quick-match placed in the vent; and it was soon discovered that the action of the match was much in creased bv placing it in a small tube of paper. This led to the invention of the "tlllino ' 1TT tvl,S.l, oil 1 i t in .'..-, "j iiun.u an iin: Jlil'll ill Ule present day. Steamboats Versus Sliiili-oarfs. A spirited contest took place in the Cin cinnati Commercial Convention, last sum mer, on the third day of the session, upon the subject of erecting railroad bridges across navigable rivers. There were evi dently two opposing interests in the con vention, each lortified with reasons why their respective views should prevail. The steamboat men claimed their right, as an axiom of law, to the free navigation of American rivers, while the railroad men were as positive in declaring their right of way across the rivers. A "resolution was finally adopted denying the correctness of the position that navigable rivers may be obstructed under any circumstances. The effect of this policy, if carried out, will be to compel the erection of railroad bridges at such a height as not to interfere with passing steamers, or lurmshmg each bridge with a draw, to bo raised as occasion may require. This conflict between steam boat men and railroad men is of many years' standing. 'Ihe bridge across the Ohio at Wheeling, and the one across the Mississippi at Rock Island, have cost liti gants enough in law charges to have raised the obstructions complained of out of the reach of the tallest mast that carries our flag across the ocean. And if an under standing can be arrived at or a rule estab lished which will settle the micstion bv means of this action of the convention, we snau consider it a result sumcieniiv satis factory to compensate for tho trouble of holding the convention. Heretofore butlrpc, nine '"as ueen accomplished by tneso as semblies of so-called commercial men. They usually recommend measures which the members are unwilling to urge by means of their local influences and at their pecuniary cost ; but as no great results were expected there was little or no com ment. E?emi Truly, New York is not to lie outdone this winter. An enterprising Frenchman has started a." Grand Duchess " assembly saloon, where nightly crowds gather and do such can-cans as only used to be done in the Closerie de Lilac'sor the Jardin Ma bile. But Raris has been transplanted, and grows the ranker for the change of soil and climate. Never in this country have the demi monde appeared so splendidly equipped as now; most all of them keep carriages or hire them by the month, and every hour of the day or night one hears or sees them. The ugliest creatures one can well imagine, terribly painted, costumed with the extrav agance and magnificence of Kastern prin cesses, roll by in their carriages awful temptations to the poor, pretty-faced, hard working girls who come up to the city, and think the possession of these tine trap pings worth all the world. There is no manner of doubt in any well-informed mind here in this city as "to where all this rioting iniquity comes from. Were all the grasping, lilching plebeian hands that now dip into the treasury to find their occupa tion gone, the 81,000 robes of Madame Har ris and Monsieur Stewart would lie longer on their lay figures. But not a prominent politican exists in this city whoso chcrc ami cannot be mentioned among the Cora Pearls of New York, while some of them out-Brigham old Brig, himself. The Washington correspondent of the Chicago Republican tells the following sto ry of'an interview he had with Senator Sumner, of Massachusetts. Grant, and the San Domingo treaty being alluded to, Sum ner said: " That was a good illustration of what he had been saying. Those young military men whom the President had gathered around him or in his actual Cabinet, by what warrant it is difficult to say, had ta ken a notion that there was a good specu lation in that quarter, and Grant had, hon estly enough, been pursuaded into their scheme. Why, a friend of mine who has been dowii there, says that the whole coast of the Bay of Samana is staked off into lots, and marked 'Cazno,' and 'Babcock,' and 'f aez,' and that one of the particularly large ones is marked 'Grant.' " The tide of commerce, so long running against us, seems at length turning in our favor. During the eight months ending August 31, 1S00, our imports exceeded our exports more than 30,000,000, while during the eight months ending on the same date of this 3ear, the excess of imports over ex ports is only 0,750,501. Of the total im ports during the. last named period, 8314, 538,342 consisted of merchandise, and 17, 004,000 of gold and silver; $13,287,817 was free, and 304,254,525 dutiable. Of the total domestic exports for the same period, 250, 301 ,326" was merchandise (gold value), and 50,979.240 gold and silver coin and bullion. A farmer near Landonville, Ohio, recent ly killed a monstrous yellow rattlesnake, seven feet in length, twenty inches in cir cumference, and with thirty-seven rattles. In consequence of the late flood and de struction in crops in Texas, corn has risen to a dollar a bushel on the Guadaloupe. "TWENTTYEARSAGO.' The srrass is just as green, dear Tom Uarc-roofctt boys at play Are sporfingjnst as we were then W ith spints just as gay ' But the master sleeps upon the hP, All covered o'er with snow, Where once we ucd to slide, dear Tom Just twenty years ago! m, My lids have lon been dry, dear Tom isit tears carne to my eves I thought of her I loved so well Those early broken ties; I went asam to the old. church-yard And took some flowers to strew Upon (lie graves oi those we loved Just, t went y years ago'. ' And some, are in the church-vard laid Some sJpcp beneath the sra. And lew there are ot all o:ir -'.iv Kxceptinjr you and me; ' And when our time f-hail come, dear Tom And we sire called to ko, '-", I hope they'll lay us where we played Tur twenty years nsro! S(al toxical. It will cost the government nearly 000,000 to take the census. lorfy wholesale stores of Indianapolis, of liquor annii- Ind., Sell SC.OOO.OOO worth ally. There are t10 tobacco and simfr ,i 10,- - cigar manufactories in the States. Unitcd The Kgyptians 2.000 years ago, could ii quality equal lo make line linen cloth of my that is now worn. Chicago invested about s;7.000 in t?,.i- of the. San Francisco Mercantile Lottery and drew 1 7.200 in prizes. ' There has been T.0,000 tons less of wliwf received at San Francisco this vear than during last season up to the present time Charge Vallejoand akland with the differ ence. The Chicago and Alton Railroad Com pany are Pudding, at the crossing of the Illinois river, by their Louisiana division near Orand 1'as landimr. n. tma bridge, 1,170 teet in length. The total of the losses and da Strasburg during the siege is estimated to amount to S7,o7,000. Of the ti,m houses in the city, 44S have been completely de stroyed, and from 2,000 to 3.0(H) damaged Sidney B. Morris bought rater lots in Boston fifteen vears.n"-o for mere nothing, and has just leased the prop erty for i5,oyO a year. lie cast his brcat bread upon the waters, and it returned with interest. There are probably t50.000.Oo0 acres nf sterile plains between the Mississippi river and the Rocky Mountains. Some of tl-,. are too barren to produce anything, while sonic couiu ue imoe productive by irri'a tion. As an evidence of the value of the new invention for consuming sparks and cin ders on railroads, we are informed that on a recent trip of forty-five miles in Massa chusetts, fourteen bushels of this stuff was accumulated. Tho Salem Mercer asserts that "re markable as it may appear, the Willam ette Woolen Manufacturing Company ships large quantities of their produce to British Columbia, paying a duty to the Crown of lifteen per cent, ad valorem. Xothiiio- hot the absolute superiority oi the goods of this manufacture would enable this company , iu tuinpcu! wnn me "pauper iauor of J'Ju- I i ,. .-!. II.. I . . - and pa' fifteen per cent, for the I'ii. i it re. TIae Elide Dealer's Sign. The proprietor of a tanyard adjacent to a certain town in Virginia, concluded to build a stand, or soTt of store, on one of the main streets, for the purpose of vending his leather, buying raw hides, and the like! After completing his building, he began to consider what sort of a sign it would be best to put up for the purpose of attracting attention to his new establishment; and lor days and weeks he was sorely puzzled on this subject. Several devices were, one after another, adopted, and, on further con sideration, rejected. At last a happy idea struck him. Ho bored an auger hole through the doorpost, and stuck a calf 's tail into it, with bushy end flaunting out. After a while, he no ticed a grave looking personage standing near the door with Ids spectacles on, gazing intently on the" sign. And there he con firmed to stand, dumbly absorbed, gazing and gazing, until tho curiosity of the hide dealer was greatly excited in turn. He stepped out and addrcssed-the individual : "Good morning," said he. "Morning," said the other, without mov ing his eyes from the sign. "Do you want to buy leather?" inquired the dealer. "No." "Do you want to sell hides?" "No." "Perhaps you are a farmer." "No." "A merchant, may be?" "No." . "Are you a doctor?" "No." "What are you, then?" " I am a philosopher. I have been stand ing here for an hour, trying to ascertain how that calf got through that auger hole!" A full count of the vote on the proposed constitutional amendments in Michigan has not yet been made, but the returns so far received indicate the defeat of most of tho articles. Notwithstanding the State gives an aggregate Radial majority in the Congressional vote of over twenty-five thousand, it is probable the article striking out the word "white" wherever "citizen" is referred to, is defeated by a small major ity. This is accounted for by the fact that while nearly the whole Democratic vote was cast against it, the Radicals abstained from voting upon it. . There is a project on foot to establish a lino of steamers between Philadelphia and Liverpool, England. The proposed com pany intend to start with 700,000 in cash, of which the Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany will subscribe 100,000, leaving 300, 000 for those who lay claim to the title of Philadelphia merchants. It is likewise in tended to issue 1,500,000 in bonds, free from taxation, having twenty-five years to run, and bearing interest at the rate of five per cent, per annum, payable in gold. We notice that the Commissioner of Cus toms alleges in his annual report that the cost of collecting the customs has been in creased, and that there will be a deficiency in the appropriation to that object. This statement is accompanied by the usual sa ving clause, that the cost of collecting the customs might be reduced from fen to twelve per cent. But, if so, why has not this been done before. There is a ludicrous contrast between the belligerent attitude of Butler now, and tho one which he occupied during tho war, when he was safely bottled up at Bermuda Hundreds,