UTILITY- . Frnlt Trees Experiments In Fced- Incr Swlnc. .Fruit Trcca. Priming should now bo completed as quickly as possible , says a writer in The Garden , as the sap is rapidly rising , and bleeding will take place if f the operation is longer deferred. Vines suffer moro in this respect than most things , except walnuts , which it is best to leave till they have foliage on them ; they may bo thinned out or partly headed back with safety. If vines are cut now , it is advisable to touch the parts with styptic , which stopo the pores and prevents loss of strength. Apples in orchards are gen erally left pretty much to themselves , which is a great mistake , as when al lowed to got thick with wood it is im possible for them to produce fine fruit ; they may and generally do bear pro fusely , but the apples are small and poor in color. In order to expose them to sunshine all branches should bo removed that are misplaced or crossing others , as well as any that are caiikercd. If the latter is caused by blight , as is generally the case , coat the bark with lime , which maybe bo effected by using it fresh and hot , as a wash , pumped on by the aid of a garden engine , which will throw it in a regular stream , smother the insects , and make the trees healthy and clean , as the lime Avill kill and divest them of all moss and lichen , however bad they may be in that respect. The same re marks apply to plums and damsons , and , independent of freeing them from moss , it is always advisable to give them a liming to prevent the buds being eaten by birds. Blums , like apples , arc greatly benefited by judi cious thinning , and the object to be aimed at is to have the branches reg ular and well balanced all over the head. Those on walls that are spurred should be kept as close in as possible , and the same with cherries , apricots , and pears , which every year should have some of the longest spurs re duced , as there is generally more than enough of blossom buds , and the great point is to have these as near the wall as it is possible to get them ; if not. their flowers get injured by cold winds and frosts. Morel lo cherries bear on the 3Toung shoots , but it is useless having these thick , and the same with peaches and nectarines , the proper distance apart for which is from four to six inches , laid in all over the trees. In pruning these , attention should be directed to keeping them well furnished near the base. In the management of peaches and nectarines much depends on the summer disbudding and keeping the foliage free from insects. Figs need but Tittle pruning. The point with them to get them to bear freely is to restrict growth by limiting their root run. This is best done by concreting and bricking them in , or planting in the hardest and poorest of soils in which there is a good admixture of chalk , as than they make very short- jointed shodi , " that become well rip ened and studded with fruit. If pruned at all it should be more in the way of thinning than anything else , . so as to let in the full light and sun to consolidate the pithy growth which they make ; they * will then -endure sharp frosts. Gooseberries , when wanted for picking green , may be left pretty thick , as then the bushes 3ield more fruit , but if required for dessert , the shoots should not be nearer than six inches , and left regular over the bush. Red and white currents ought 'to have their branches from six inches to nine inches apart , and be spurred in close , and the leading shoots short ened to about three inches , but black currents bear from the young wood , and only need thinning. Raspberries should have their canes reduced to from three to five , according to their strength , and shortened to about a yard , a height at which they are more manageable than higher. Half their heads may be bent over from each stool and tied at the points , when they will stand fairly stiff without any slakes. Another way of managing raspberries is to plant or twist the canes up by interlacing them from bottom tom to top , and if then tied they will support each other. Double-bearing or autumn-fruiting kinds should be cut quite down to the ground , as a sum mer crop from them when the others are in is of no value , and it only helps to exhaust them. Forking or digging the ground among raspberries is about the worst thing that can be done for them , as it disturbs and destroys many of their roots , which a good mulching of half-rotten manure fosters and en courages to the great benefit of the plants they are feeding. Instead of disturbing the soil , it is far better teat at once spread the manure and leave it on , as not only does it act in the way referred to , but it keeps out drought , and thus assists in producing fine fruit _ Feeding Swine. The six pigs selected were of one litter , three-quarters Berkshire , and weighed February 2 , 1881 , 437J pounds. Thev were given sweet skim milk and shelled corn three times each day. In this case no record of the quantity of food consumed was made. They were placed in a warm pen and given ary bedding every other day. Care was used not to overfeed. On February 26 they weighed 613 pounds , which is an average gain of 29.2 pounds for each pig for 24 days. It was very evident , judging from the appetite , that the above growth could have been kept up for several months. About the same time I conducted an experiment , keeping an accurate rec ord of the" quantity of corn consumed by hogs , averaging at the beginning 211J pounds. At the expiration of 12 da3s they had consumed 23 bushels and 47 pounds of shelled corn. The gain during this time was 303 pounds , or an average of 15.1 pounds for each hog for 12 days. This is an average of 12.67 pounds of pork per bushel of dry corn. In this case it was evident that the above gain could not have been kept up for any great length of time. time.No No scientific comparison between these experiments can be made , and yet , judging of effects on the constitu tion of these hogs , I am convinced that it is impossible to continue feeding a \ . dry corn and water for any great length of time and make as much money as was made during the time the above experiment was conducted. When pork is worth say four cent , I am. of the opinion wo should add at least ten cents per 100 pounds to the real value of skim milk for feeding swine. At present I have about 320 pounds of skim milk per day for thirty-fiveshoats weighing 110 to 120 pounds. When weather is warm I dilute this with about two to four pails of water and add twenty to forty pounds heavy shorts. J. N. Muncey , in Naliona Stockman. Farm and Garden. ° England will spend S10 ,000,000 for American apples this year. First class cows can be raised cheap er than they can bo purchased. In fact it is the only way to secure a prime herd. A New York horticultural society recommends putting a teaspoonf'ul of sulphur about the roots of the cabbage plants when set , as a remedy for club foot. foot.At At the New York Experiment Sta tion a Jersey cow refused for thirty-six hours to eat stale brewers' grains This is good enough evidence that her "head was level. " It is found by experiment that while the different forms of commercial pot ash increase the crop of potatoes they impair the quality , making the tubers watery and spongy. A couple of ounces of carbolic acid to three quarts of water sprinkled in the poultry house from a small water ing pot , once or twice a month , will destroy lice and other parasites. President Lyon , speaking of the peach yellows" , says : "Wherever the disease attacks the extremity of the longest limbs , the tree is doomed , and the only safe way is to destroy it. " Light , friable soil should he rolled before putting in the seed and after ward. Nothing is better for the gar den than well rotted stable manure. Hog manure 'proves detrimental to cabbage. Sheep should have their feet trim med twice a year , says an exchange. If they are not trimmed , the hoof curies under at the edes and retains a mass of filth and dirt , which is apt to cause footrot. Galvanized wire netting can now bo obtained for one cant per square foot , and as it is more easily converted into fence than is lumber , and is at the same time more durable , more of it is being used this year for poultry yards than ever before. Good cows are always in demand , but fresh cows always command higher prices from the first of Janu ary to the first of May , than at any other season , and it is well to so man age your herd that the heifers and cows which you may have for sale will calve within this time. Tlie American Cultivator says : "It is scarcely possible for grain to stool much on very poor soil. Wo can get but few heads from a seed , and these need , therefore , to be sown more thickly to make a crop than on laud where a large number'of heads may be expected from a single plant. " A veteran sheep-breeder in western Massachusetts thinks the remedy for the disease in sheep known as grub in the head , is plenty of grub in the stomach. He thinks healthy sheep have maggot in the head , and when not properly cared for , the grub gets the better of them , and the result is death. It is estimated that fully fifteen mil lion gallons of amber cane syrup were made m 1884. Of this a very small proportion went on the market. Prob ably three-fourths was made for farm ers who grew small patches of cane and had it manufactured into syrup for themselves and neighbors. Beets and turnips raised by phos phate are not disfigured by a growth of coarse , straggling roots , which so much affect their market value , but are smooth and attractive in appear ance. Superphosphate of lime in creases the yield of potatoes , with proper cultivation , and the tubers are rarely , if ever , affected by the scab. A correspondent of The New York Tribune says sour land is not indicated by a growth of sorrel , but by coarse herbage or unhealthy looking moss on the surface. Draining is the best cure for sour land , and when this is done , a dressing of lime will help to decom pose the coarse vegetable matter and bring the soil to a fertile state. In breaking the fresh heifers to milk , the farmer does well to attend to it himself , and use the utmost gentle ness and kindness towards the timid and oftentimes nervous brute. Viciousness - iousness , which is sometimes exhib ited at this time , is almost always the product of fear either for herself or offspring , and can be overcome by gen tleness. A correspondent of The Country Gentleman says that in Ohio at pres ent it would have paid farmers § 1 per bushel for all the corn fed had they fed their sheep early and made them fat for the winter market. He says he has found by experience and obser vation that it is never a good plan to sell stock of any kind when it is unu sually low. The American Cultivator says that in planting- apple seeds it is important to get a vigorous growth the first year , as on that the number of roots to be grafted depends. The seeds should * be planted early on well-ma nured ground and as free from weeds as possible. The young plants re quire nearly as close care and hand- weeding as onions. Sheep should not be housed in large . numbers under the same roof , says the ; American Sheep Breeder. The breath of so many together poisons the air , " and renders it noxious to breathe. A practical shepherd estimates that not more than fifty should be stabled un der the same roof. It is much better > to build several small sheds at con venient points than one large building. Dr. Voelcker found that the aver age weight of clover roots on an acre was about three tons , and that this ; furnised about 100 pounds of availa ble nitrogen , the most stimulating of all manures. This is one reason why clover sod plowed under is such Sfood preparation for a wheat crop. When a clover sod does not bring good wheat it is a sign that the soil tacks phosphates. In new settlements the pioneers in variably select first the high dry land as most valuable. It is less liable to malaria than the swamps , though the worst fever and ague is generally found on sandy soil adjoining wet low lands. .After clearing and draining the black swamp soil is almost always found to be most valuable. Its fer tility endures the longest under culti vation. _ The Hani Sandwich. The ham sandwich is an institution of comparatively modern times. The Bible speaks of Ham , 'tis true , but not the kind we encounter between the slabs of bread and biscuit of this nine teenth century. Poets have sung the praises of woman and wine , but until now no writer has extolled the merits of the ham sand- wieh , or tried to elevate it to that higher sphere where it properly be longs in the esteem of the community. Where it first lived , moved and had its being , I am unable at this moment to tell , there being no reliable author ity upon the subject , but it probably first saw the light of day somewhere in New England , and the man who first conceived the brilliant idea of a ham sandwich , should have his name preserved in the pickle of un dying glory , and have a race horse or pi-aino city named after him to per petuate his memory. It has taken a stronghold upon the appetite and affections of its country men , and in return the appetite of a grateful nation takes a strong hold upon it when they cannot get any thing better. It is the friend of rich " nnd "poor alike the savior of the poori ly-paid clerk , laborer and mechanic , and it is the shrine at which the free1 lunch liend and impecunious sport smack their lips in worship. It is the life and soul of the picnic and sur prise party and fishing excursions. It plays an important part in the ro mance of every man who carries a lunch , and at the gay and festive wake it is always a welcome visitor. Over the ham sandwich and a glass of beer the aristocrat unbends the knee of dignity and lovingly wipes his nose across the face of his plebian brother , as in peace and love they dis cuss the current topics of the day , and E think that with proper training and education it could be made to act as a kind of mediator or Peace Congress in welding warlike nations together in a bond of peace and mutual love. It long ago took the place of the newspaper in supplying the "long-felt want , " and while the patent outside turns up its toes and its nose grows cold in death , the people of this free and glorious country will sing its phrases and shout , "long may it wave. " Its immense popularity has caused the demand to exceed the supply. At least I have found it so in all boarding houses at which I have ever lived. Unscrupulous parties have tried to cast a slur upon its fair name by plac ing upon the market a base imitation. . . At the railway restaurant they gave ( ' us , as the simon pure article of the old , original Jacobs stamp , only a plaster Paris biscuit , between the slices of which nestles a thin sliver of common red brick. The attention of our legis lators should at once be called to this evil , for if it continues , many oi us who may yet be shining lights in so ciety and states prison will die of what the doctors call phthisis psoriasis ( hog Latin for I-know not what. ) . This is an age of deceit , and fraud stalks abroad throughout the land at tired in the seersucker coat and plug hat of innocence. Our whisky is dilu ted with kerosene and fusil oil , our codfish balls are not up to the stand ard of what a cod-fish ball ought to be , or was in the good old days of General Jackson and cheap rum. In fact nearly every article of bric-a-brac that is swallowed up in the grave of the human stomach is stuffed full of total depravity. But , great heavens ! readers , when they descend so low as to fiddle with the purity of that great emblem of American ingenuity , pro gress and appetite , the ham sandwich , it is time for you and I and every other genuine hog to get up and howl with anguish. It is a direct blow at the most sacred of our institutions , and a slap in the iace of advancing civilization , and I am glad that the President has taken into his Cabinet a man who will be keenly alive to the welfare and interests of our "Interior" Department. The man , who for the sake of gaining - ? ing a few paltry millions , will delib- . fraud as the railroad ham sandwich ought to be compelled to eat one 1 aye , even two of them. d The Bible asserts that it was a stone dt with which David put Goliath out in the first inning. This proves that the fi ham sandwicu has not been handed down to us as a relic of the dark ages , ' " for had the railroad sandwich then Sjc been established , David would never c liave selected a stone with which to lay the giant out. "Having , I trust . . , placed it _ upon the _ , footing where it properly belongs , I fc jj modestly make my bow and retire fcfii upon my laurels won as its champion fiiP1 whooper-up. George Swartwout in P1 Peck's Sun. ai Dogs at the White House. § Many who came in early noticed three forlorn looking dogs on the front portico , who stood there a while P1 .vatching the crowd squeezing through he door and then scampered oil in ai different directions. One is the famous oi "yellow dog" that made his reappear tlid ance after four years , just before the d nauguration , in company with another w mngry specimen , and the third a tall ra lack animal , that looks as if he had oi seen better days , joined the delegation oiT on the fifth. Since then this trio have oi oiw ived at the White House that is to w say , they sleep in a hedge of bushes fete hat protect the marble fountain just toTl n front of the house , and ar > ply regu- Tl arly each night at the kitchen doors fodi down stairs for rations. Letter to Philadelphia di difi adelphia Times. fi ] FACT AND FANCY. A Mifllin county , Pennsylvania , man throw up a live toad. There are several cases of small-pox at Nanaimo , British Columbia. Washoo county , .Nevada , has pro duced a chicken with three logs. The Hudson river ice crop , will reach i.000,000 tons this year , the largest ov er known. At the Sitka Indian school there has been a row and most of the pupils left in a body. Twentj'-ono marriages are booked for Easter week at one church in Pa- latka , Fla. . Almonds and strawberries in Napa valley , Gal. , show signs of early and extensive yields. An observing traveler states that in proportion to its size there are more idle men in Eureka , Gal. , than m any other place on the Pacific coast. , Those now in Lonuon who were hero during the war sny th.it the excite ment and constant extras , cried some times up to midnight , recall to them vividly 1862-5. Mr. Roebling , the engineer , says that heavy engines and cars must not be run over the Brooklyn bridge , as the cables have on them all the load the * ought to curry. Mad dogs recently became so num erous in some parts of Alabama that schools in one county were obliged to suspend , as itwas considered dangerous to have pupils abroad. The Boston Transcript sa\s that the line of perpetual pie must now bo drawn to include Greelc3r , Col. , where thc3T served fort3-livo varieties of the edible at a dinner lately. The Brooklyn bridge earns an aver age of § 47,000 a month , or 615,000 more than expenses , but electricity as motive power and rapid transit in Brookl3ru may increase its receipts lo 8100,000 a month , at least half of it not profit. During the recent trial for polv'- gamy of one of Brigham Young's sons in the United States court at Salt Lake , his second wife testified that with the exception of coming to her room once or twice a week to wind up the clock he had never visited her. We had in 1880 nearly 2,000,000 "common laborers. ' ' The number of clergymen in 1880 was 61,000 , against 43,000 in 1870 ; the number of lawyers 64,000 in 1880 , 40,000 m 1870 ; the num ber of pli3sician increased during the decade from 62,000 to 86,000. In 1880 there were 4,800 actors and 12,000 jour nalists in the countiy. A little girl in Pennsylvania who had listened to a temperance address for the first time in her life was so impressed and interested that she went home and wrote out the follow ing rather novel pledge : "I promise not to drink rum , or wine , or brander \ - . or smoke , or swear , or cider eitheiC" She signed it , and got several of her playmates to sign it also. The mother of a family consisting of two grown-up daughters , living in Joflstown , N. H. , recently died , and when the undertaker came to perform his duties the father was asked the .name of his wife. His reply was : -'Mother. " No other name could he remember , and the daughters were equall3T ignorant , having never known their parent by any other name than 'Mother. " It is a curious institution , the bod3 known as the common council or board of aldermen of New York. There members in- are twenty-five , - pluding the president , who is elected .oy voters of the city at large. Of these fourteen are county democrats , seven are republicans , and but four Tammany hall followers. All of the members wear stove-pipe hats , kid gloves , and jewelry. In boring a salt well at East Aurora , N. Y. , a bed of solid salt sixty-five feet thick has been struck. This find is said to upset the theories of scien tists the salt-beds of regarding - west ern New York. Down to the depth of 1,350 feet the geological formations are reported to be almost identical with those of the oil regions in Penn sylvania. At this depth the bed of salt was struck. The brine stands in the well several hundred feet aeep , and is rich in salt , a quantity evaporated yielding 50 per cent. The "law of the road , " as under stood in Pennsylvania , was laid down by Judge Biddle of the common pleas court of Philadelphia a few da3s ago. It is to the effect that persons meeting on the highway must each keep to the right. This rule is modified in the case of a footman or a horseman , who can not compel a teamster who has a heavy load to turn out of the beaten track , or even a light wagon with a heavy draught. If a horseman or light vehicle can pass with safety on the left of a heavily-laden team it is their duty to give wa3r and leave the choice to the more unwieldy vehicle. Some years ago a law was enacted fixing a license tax upon all foreign corporations ' doing business in Penn sylvania. The object aimed at was to collect < revenue from parties in compe tition with local manufactories which taxed "The intention " were heavily , , says The Philadelphia Press , ' -was good , but ] as a matter of fact , a number of foreign corporations maintained of fices in this state chiefly for the pur pose of purchasing supplies of articles manufactured here , and the effect of the law has been to drive them away and take the trade , amounting to over 1,000,000 annually , to other locali ties. " Among recent inventions is an im proved cab , for which various advant ages over other vehicles of the kind are claimed. The front is a projecting one , and presents a three-sided figure , the center being straight and the doors on the sides , opening toward the wheels , the side springs being so ar ranged that the doors may be readily opened wide without interference" The springs extend beyond the hinges the doors to near the front of the wheels , and are supported at their forward ends by goosenecks attached the rocker frame of the carriage. a The vehicle is low hung , and so far forward on the axle that , whh the driver's seat arranged behind , it is finely balanced. BENT LIMBS MADE 8TUAIGHT. Cutting : Bones with an Electric Siuv Curva tures of the Legs and Arms of an Italian Chllil Successfully Reduced. A novel bone-cutting instrument has been used in the wards of the city hospitals on Randall's island and at the orthopedic clinic of the Now York post-graduate medical school and hos pital in East Twentieth street , for several months. It has been employed in performing operations for the cure of various bony deformities and dis eases of joints , and has proved to bo of such great utility that it will doubtless supersede all other instruments now used for these purposes. The object that the mvcJntor of this instrument had in view was to do away with the bungling and unworkmanlike methods which surgeons have been forced to employ , and more particularly to make it unnecessary to resort to the revolting method of using the mallet and chisel upon human beings. The new instrument is called the elcctro- ostcotomo and is actuated by a cur rent of electricity derived from a pow erful primary battery or from an ac cumulator. It is provided with vari ous sizes of trephines , drills and circular saws , which are made to re volve at the great speed of twelve thou sand revolutions a minute. The larg est long bone of an adult subject can bo sawed through in five seconds , and the bones of children can be divided in from two to three seconds. The cut surfaces of the bones arc perfectly smooth , and are in marked contrast to the bruised and splintered ends of those dividtid by the chisel and mallet. Few persons have seen or heard of this novel surgical invention , as the only instrument made has remained in possession of the inventor and has never been used except by him. lie has refrained from urging its claims upon the profession until he had thor oughly demonstrated its utility. So far he has performed fifty-one distinct operations upon living subjects , and a great advantage has been gained by its use in each case. A formidable operation was to be performed upon a patient at Randall's island , last week , with the electro- osteotome , and a reporter called upon the inventor and obtained his permis sion to witness the operation. When the preparations were com pleted a nurse came in with a horribly- deformed Italian girl in her arms , who had been divested of her clothing and was crying vociferously , as if ex pecting the ordeal through which she was to pass. She is live 3ears old , and possesses the bright black 0303 , rudy cheeks , and perfect teeth peculiar to mam * of her race. Her name is Madej lina Picchiclla. Nearly every bone in her body was out of 'line , especially the long bones of her legs and arms , the collar-bones and ribs. The bones of the arm. between the shoulder and elbowjoint were curved like a btfw. and those of the forearm , between the elbow and wrist joint , were subject tea a double curvature resembling the letter S. The curvature just above the wrist was so great that the hands instead of being m a line with the forearm was almost at right angles to it. These deformities were produced by the peculiar modes of progression adopted by the child during a period when her bones were greatty weaken ed by disease. The bones of the leg were still more deformed than those of the arms. In crawling upon her hands and knees the soles of her feet were turned up so that they were in a line with the legs instead of being at right angles to them as tliC3' would be in a normal condition. The bones of each leg were curved so abruptly backward just above the ankle joint that when the child was in a sitting posture , the soles of her feet rested squarely upon the table. She was not able to stand for an instant , even with assistance. With these pronounc ed deformities uncorrected the patient would have been doomed to a helpless existence , and the problem which pre sented itself was to reduce the curva tures , and bring the bones of the limbs into straight lines. As a precautiona - measure , all the ph3siciuns who were to take part in the operation bathed their hands in a solution of corrosive sublimate , and the legs and arms of the patient were washed with the same solution. A mem ber of the house staff took an ether cone made of coth , sprinkled some ether into it , and pressed it down over the child's face. Her strug gles and cries grew less and less , until she became unconscious. To force the blood out of the leg selected for the first operation , so that no hemorr hage would take place , a strong rub ber bandage was around the limb , be ginning at the toes , and going to the upper part of the thigh. At this point a rubber tube was firing * tied around the thigh , and the bandage unwound , leaving the leg free. Taking a small scalpel , Dr. Roberts made a longi tudinal division , as cut in the skin and flesh , overling the tibia , or long bone of the leg , at the point of its greatest a deformity. After the flesh was dis o sected away a little , two flat strips of rC curved steel wore introduced at right C angles to the bone and between it and elei the muscles , nerves , and blood vessels ei adjacent to it. By means of these ird protectors , the soft parts were pressed d out ] of the wa3' and the bone brought tl plainly into view. In performing sim 1 ilar operations with the chisel no de SJ vice for protecting the soft parts have le ever been used , and not frequently tl death has resulted from injuries re - la ceivcd b3 * the patient. In order to t < straighten the bone it was necessary E to remove a wedge-shaped piece from tc its proper dimensions. The Italian 11 attendant formed a connection be fr tween the battery and the electro- frB B osteotomn , which was suspended by a 18 coiled spring over the operating table. on Dr. Roberts then grasped his instru tt ment , completed the electrical current & by means of a switch , and brought V ( the whirling saw into contact with the m exposed bone. The saw was given a C diagonal direction and passed through re the bone in about two seconds. The rem second division of this bone was in se clined toward the first so as to remove cc wedge-shaped piece , the base of ai which was on the convex side of .the aigi bone , and when the cut ends of the a bone were brought together the de C ( formity of the tibia was entirely cor- F reeled. AD incision was then made on the opposite side of the log for the purpose of operating upon the fibula , , or small bone of the leg. To reach , this bone it wa § necessary to cut down upon its concave aspect. The pro tecting protractors were introduced as before and a wedge-shaped piece saw ed out with the osteotome , but itjstoad of being cut at the base of the wedge , as in the first instance , the two cuts , were made lit the apex of it so that thny inclined away from each other. The removal of two such wedge-shaped pieces with any form of a chisel is an absolute impossibility. By placing the cut ends of both bones in opposition the deformity of the log1 was entirely reduced and the foot instead - | stead of being in a linn with the log ) was now at right angles to it , the position required in walking. The piece of rubber tubing which had been tied around the thigh was now remov ed and the blood allowed to How back into the limb , and the wound examin ed to see if any hemorrhage would take place. Unly n slight amount of blood oozed out , and alter irrigating the part operated upon by allowing v. stream of corrosive sublimate to flow upon it from a small rubber hose the incisions were sewed up by Dr. Hallo- well , with a cat-gut thread. A splint of gutta percha was softened with hot water and applied upon the posterior and lateral aspects of the limb and se cured in this position by bandages. The splint was hardened by the appli cation of asceptic icn water , so that it would retain the cut ends of the bones against each other until they bccamo grown together. A pad of gauze , pre pared with corrosive sublimate was placed over each incision in the soft parts and a quantity of jute was bound upon this with a muslin baud- age. This completed the operation on the left .limb. A similar operation was performed upon the right leg and the deformity in the bones of both forearms were also reduced by removing wedge- shaped pieces just above the wrist joint. After having removed a wedge i'roui one of the bones of the forearm it was found necessary for more ac curate adjustment to cut out : ai addi tional segment. This was easily ac- comulishod by the use of the circular saw. Altogether fifteen distinct di visions ot the bones of the legs and arms of the patient were made during the operation. She bore the operation remarkably well , and when she was allowed to come out from under the influence of the ether , she answered questions readily. The reporter made inquiries yesterday regarding the con dition of MadclinaPicchiella , an.l was informed that she was doing finely , that the reaction after the operation was astonishingly slight , and that her evening temperature forty-eight hounj after the ouoration was only 101 2-10. Her recovery is thought to be certain. New York Tribune. Divorced Ten Years After Death. In 1874 John Summers , formerly a private in the 109th Regiment J J w iTork Volunteers-died in the Ovid In sane Asylum. Ho was : i pensioner at the time of his death. Ills mother , Mrs. L. A. Summers a very respecta ble and industrious lady I'csiding in Groton , applied for a pension because of his services and duath. After his proofs were in she was met by the ob stacle that her sou left a wife who was entitled to the pension. She consult ed Judge A. P. Smith , of this village , who brought an action in the Supreme Court in her name to annul the mar riage , on the ground that her son was insane at the time of- its solemnization. In this ac tion he succeeded in obtaining * a divorce. The Pension Department - . partment refused to recognize a diverse - verse obtained ten years after the death of the party. Judge Smith went to Washington last July and argued the case before the department , and showed the Commissioner of Pensions that the law was as he claimed. It was then objected that there was no con- * nectlon between a bullet wound and the insanity or consumption of which he died , judge Smith'went to Groton and Ithaca and obtained medical testi mony satisfactory lo the department , and last week Mrs. Summers received notice that her pension was allowed , giving her over $1,000 back pension and § 8 a month during life. While the case settles an important question of great interest , the friends of Mrs. Summers will feel a peculiar gratifi cation that so worthy a lady has at last secured justice in the face of such serious and apparently insurmountable obstacles. Cortland News. Christening Eugenie's Baby The secret papers of the Second Em pire give an account of the expendi ture on the occasion of the birth and baptism of the Prince Imperial. Med als in diamonds head the list , at a cost of : 25,000 francs. Doctors and midwives received 68,000 francs. The wardrobe cost ( 100,000 francs. The several soci eties of dramatic authors and compos ers , men of letters , dramatic artists , musicians , painters and sculptors , in dustrial inventors and medical men of the Department of the Seine received 10,000 ( francs each. Ninety-three thou sand francs were given to the benevo lent "bureaus" of the Department of the Seine and of the communes in which lay the estates of the Crown. The "agents of the interior service" of the Empress received gratifications equal four months' wages , amounting to 11,000 francs. Forty-four thousand francs were allotted to giving gratis performances at the theaters on March , 1856. The parents of children born the 16th of that month shared among them 50,000 francs. For medals to be given to authors and composers of verses and cantate addressed to their majesties , and to the pupils at the Ly- cees , 85,000 francs were allowed. The relatives of the godchildren of taeir majesties received 20,000 francs. The service of the stables for the baptismal cortege is set down at 172,000 francs , and 160,000 francs were distributed in gratifications to the hired servants of their majesties' household. The total comes to the sum of 898,000 francs. Frank Leslie's Weekly.