in? the ixittles to the table, his face quite a blazof benignant satisfac tion. Betty. lying upon the sofa, arrayed in a pretty plaid dress, unconsciously took care of all the nitro-glycerine of princi ple that threatened to blow up their new social platform. u O dear Mr. Mohen!" said she, "I'm so sorry! hut we never drink wine at our Thanksgiving dinners." " Not trink vine?" exelamed the amazed Karl. " Xeople they were: and ai't< rdin nerthe gentlemen brought up the asthma tic melodeon, and Miss Eliza produced two hymn-books, out of which they all sang. Then Mynherrgave them rousing solos, and at last they sang merry-go rounds, and nearly deafened each ot .t r in the chase and catch of "Scotland's a-bu ruing." What a delightful time it was. and how they thanked Betty for the loving spirit that had dared* to suggest a Thanksgiving dinner among the incon gruous elements of a city tenement house! How Mynherr walked to the Mission door on the following Sunday with Miss Eliza, and how he went in and sat down the Sunday after, and how his orders increased until he had no room for all his coats and vests and journeymen, and how he and Miss Eliza one day took Betty to look at a new house in a tidv row, I am unable to tell, because it is ! always lest to keep to one's text; and mine, you know, was only No. 310. The Potter Journal AND NEWS ITEM. COUDERSFORT, PA., Dec. 20. 1872 TO THE PUBLIC. / The reader has already been in formed that the POTTER JOURNAL lias a new proprietor, or rather an old one has come back to it. The generous words with which Mrs. Dyke commended the new en terprise to the patrons of the JOUR NAL, will aid us in securing a kindly welcome; and incite us to greater efforts to deserve as much of the fa vorable mention madeof us as is with in the compass of our abilities. It is the ambition of the present owner to make the JOURNAL one of the best local newspapers in the State. Knowing full well that he is incompetent to do this with his own pen, he lias engaged the best writing talent of the village to contribute regularly to these columns. A local editor of experience, tact and ability will give our readers each week a fresh and graphic picture of passing events, and take note of all matters of interest in tiie County. Other writers devoted to the suc cess of the JOURNAL,and to the pros ]>erity of the County, have been en gaged to assist in the editorial de partment. These arrangements will secure greater variety and make the paper more useful and instructive than could well be expected if but a single mind dictated all the editorials. Early in January the paper will be enlarged to seven columns and will be otherwise improved in its mechan ical appearance. These changes and improvements impose considerable expense upon the Proprietor, and he solicits from POTTER JOURNAL & NEWS ITEM. all persons who desire to assist in advancing the growth and increasing the prosperity of this favored county of Cotter, active support in extend ing the circulation of the JOURNAL. More brain work will be put on it than ever before; more labor of all kinds will be given to it and more capital invested in it. I have un doubted faith that the people of this County will generously appreciate these increased expenditures and will respond with a large increase of sub scribers. The I'OTTER COUNTY ITEM, con ducted with so much spirit for eight months past, has been merged in the JOURNAL, and S. F. Hamilton, pro prietor and publisher of the ITEM, will, under tlie new arrangement, publish the JOURNAL. This announce ment is sufficient guarantee that the paper will be all that can be desired, so far as its mechanical appearance it concerned. So, the enterprise is undertaken with hope and confidence. This County-is about entering upon new life and prosperity. I have an ear nest desire to make the JOURNAL a litting opponent and representative of this new and better life we are just entering, and to give etlicient support to every honest effort for improvement. ✓T he JOURNAL was established in IS4S, in the interest of education, temperance, justice, integrity, true democracy and the best interests of the County. It lias bravely held to its original purpose, and now, after almost a quarter of a century, pledges new energy and greater zeal in the advocacy of the same grand ideas. With this explanation oft he change that has been made in the ownership and publication of the JOURNAL, we commend the enterprise to the atten tion of all the people, and bespeak for it such hearty support as the men and women of" Little Potter" usual ly give to a worthy movement. THK PROPRIETOR. THIS village of Coudersport is a very pleasant one, neat, orderly, thrifty look ing. andcontainsas much good society as any village of its size in the state. The citizens. y< umgaiul < >leakahly more happy, if you will cultivate courteous habits to all, and shun coarseness and rowdyism as you would a miasma. " IT IS necessary that by the very con stitution of tilings power should be a cheek to power," foi Doctor Priestly wiseh said, "Then* is no earthly power that has not grown exhorhitai.t when it has met with no control." A MAJORITY < f the stock of the Tri- Inmt Association has been purchased by the friends of lion. Schuyler Colfax, who haveoflfeied that gentleman twenty thousand dollars a year to take charge of its editorial department. The offer will undoubtedly he accepted, and the I rilrui will again be a Republican pa ]KT. Although Mr. Colfax cannot till the place made vacant by the death of Horace Greeley, he can do very much to restore the paper to confidence and respect. This nation contains many able but very few better men than Hon. Schuyler Colfax. New Books. Books arc new to us when we first find them, though they may he quite familiar to our less tardy neighbors. As a late riser looks out upon the morning and exclaims upon its loveliness, a voice at his side may say, "(Hi! it has been de lightful these two hours," or "There was a slight shower early, that makes it so fresh now," so we late sleepers re mark or things as we find them now. Ilere is "Mother (foose for Grown Peop'e," by Mrs. Whitney, author of so many good books that scarce any one needs to lie told who she is. T can re member thinking Mother Goose very silly, and wondering why people kept it j up through so many ages; but long ago I learned to see great wisdom in Simple Simon, and to think whether it might not lie in some others. Mrs. Whitney 1 solves this question to all our under standings, though she does not mention Simon, thinking, perhaps, his lesson was manifest to all. '• Hojw beckoned Youth, and bade him keep, On Life's broad plain, his shining sheep; ; And while along the sward they came, lie called them over, eaeli by name; This one was Friendship, that was Health, I Another Love, another Wealth, One fat, full-fleeced, was Social Station, Another, stainless. Reputation; | In truth a goodly flock of sheep— I A goodly flock, but hard to keep." —as we most of us know. We must ever lie grateful to those : who show ns new and better meanings | in simple things—meanings we may ! have had glimpses of but could not fol | low out ; thankful that some write | poems and prophecies with the A 11 C | we scarcely learn ; and, liest of all, to ; know there is no end to the jioems and prophecies—to the meanings and teach ings that shall yet unfold from the sim ple words of our humblest i>enple. As this author says in her "Conclusion," " For many a fool, and prophet too, Hath spoken wiser than he knew." —so doubtless we all do. Here is the closing melody; Tint ion SCORE AND TEX. '• How many miles of the weary way? Three score miles and ten. Wheic shall I l>e at the end of the day? You shall be back again. " You shall prove it all in the life-long round; The ioy. and the pain, and the sinning; And at candle-light your soul shall l>e found Rack—at its new beginning " Down in4he grave the old man lies In from the earthward wild, At the open door of Paradise Enters a little child." Mother Goose seems to he the style this year; for here we have her songs set to music. Pleasant, simple tunes, as they should lie, but we fear all the time that they are not quite the same as when crooned over cradles in the days when our great-grandmothers were little folk. We have the same old words —we would like the same old music. | Who will give it to us? This compiler does not claim to do so; but if this is accepted now. and is, as I trust it is, eminently suitable, it will probably lie sufficiently ancient in the course of two or three hundred years. "WHOEVER is strong enough to tell the truth will invariably find it to his own interest to do so." Christmas. Christmas is coming once more, with its one great break in the ordinary rou tine of life; with all its reminders, social, historical, and sacred, and we can hard ly let it pass without some word of all it brings to us. In these short days and freezing nights the thought of the watchful shepherds 011 the plains of Gallilee. brings restful, cheery visions of milder skies: of climes where the winter is less severe, while the vision of glory that hurst on their enraptured sight, the announcement i made through the darkness and the still | ness;of the light and joy and glory that : had come to the world, swells our hearts | and makes them overflow. So, as the year conies round, the time laden with all these associations brings us nearer to each other, makes us | long for all kinds of brotherly commun ion, brings the wish to share the good gifts we have received, makes it easier to share them, since, in the spirit of brotherhood, anything, whether great I or small, can lie offered without offense | and accepted without humiliation. Everyone, (from the highest to the i lowest, we were about to say, but that there is no high or low for all are breth ren at this holy time,) can give good gifts, and many are the loving thoughts and deeds that make homes happy and the homeless less desolate. We have not the vast charitable insti tutions. for which in the cities every body is called on to provide, but we have our own few poor, whose Christmas day can lie made brighterto them, and we hope none of these will lie neglected. There are enough in our village who are able and willing, nay, glad to give, to sup ply every humble household with abun dant comforts for that day at least, and the cheer of one day is a brightness that will last through many dark hours of the coming year. But there are pains and miseries far worse than poverty in our neighborhood; a darkness of sin and shaine against which we should all lie roused to new watchfulness and more earnest work. Even here, where the whole Christian feeling and even the law is outraged by it, is intoxicating poison sold and given to those who have within them a terrible temptation, and homes that would other wise be peaceful are made places of ter ror and misery, and little children ex posed to danger of life and limbs. Let every one of us. warmed by some inflowing of that I )ivine love that comes in blessing to the sorrowing and sinful world, seek new and stronger power against this curse of our friends and neighbors, for they are some of them fal len among far worse than thieves. Let us labor anew to reclaim even those who so guiltily tempt them, that they may not bring the worst sufferings they offer to others,on themselves and their families. So shall this he a blessed Christmas to us all. charity and loving kindness reacli to every heart and home, and every good thing he strengthened and every evil weakened for His sake, who was born among the lowly, labored among the guilty, and died to turn mankind away from drunkenness, from all that leads to it, and all its brood of crimes. Brightening Prospects. The Buffalo. New York Phila delphia Railway is nearly complete. Trains will run regularly to Emporium after the lirst day of next month. Five miles of the new road, including Keating Summit and station, arein this County, and will very soon develop a large terri tory, now an entire wilderness, into life and activity. This road has already been of great benefit to the farmers of Potter County. In fac tit has been the chief market for their beef cattle for six months past, and lias kept the prices of i all kinds of farm produce from sinking ; below remunerative figures. We know of several men having but moderate improvements, each of whom has already realized five and six hun dred dollars for the surplus crop of the present year; and we do not know of a single farmer, who has kept reasonably industrious, that has not done well. Every ton of hay and every pound of lieef in the County has been increased in ils market value by the construction of the B„ N. Y. & P. R. R. The people in 11 lis section are greatly benefitted in many other respects. It is now only thirteen miles from Couders port to the railroad; and no more labor to goto Philadelphia. Buffalo, or New York, than it was before the construc tion of the new road, to goto Emporium lor Wellsville. For these great improve ments let us all he duly thankful, and let us prove it by increasing ourf ait It in the capabilities of our County, and by greater activity in all efforts to im prove the situation. GENERAL I)EXT said a pretty good thing the other day to the Washington correspondent of the Cincinnati Om mnri'if. Speaking of the failure of the great newspapers in the late campaign, the General said: "this country aint run bv papers. They are good tilings in their places, but when they try to do too much the people snap them up." Going to School. This morning, Decemlier 10. we again see the eager gathering of scholars; crowds of boy s streaming by with hooks and slates, some too, with balls and ; sleds, equipjied for the new campaign. Girls in bright woolen hoods and warm wraps, with their books tucked under their shawls, and only tlieir dinner pails held in the inittened hands, go cheerily through the snow. We never see them without quickened pulses and brighter eyes. They are a part—no small part— of our daily cheer; and if by ••< >nr dailv bread " is meant, as we believe, wliatev er is needed for the sustenance, toneftt and growth of soul and body, then this glad going to school of so manv children some of it. A friend says: "1 never see theni going, particularly on the first day, but I feel as though I mxsf go too." That is the way many of us feel as we grow too old to sjtend our time in that way. though we may not have felt it so much when we were young. Then, frosted feet and aching lingers, tumbles and bad colds, may have taken a share of our attention; while headaches over hard tasks, and sometimes what seems to us, miserable failures, made us long for the time when lessons should In over. The road in front of us has no stones, that far behind has neither ruts nor mudholes; which is. perhaps, the reason that school days look so bright to us old children. But let any wearied man of business, worrying over the dangers of this or that investment think whether he was not as much harrassed onceover the multiplication table or by Tom's getting above him in class. So while we rejoice in the little JK-O ple's zeal and earnestness, and share their enthusiasm, let us not forget their trials but give. them hearty sympathy in every way. Vcn and syrtesors. Tm- WEEK OF PRAYER.—The otli cer> of the different branches of the Kvangelical Alliance have issued their annual programme of topics for the week of 1 'raver, extending from .hum an-.">th. "78, to the lgtli. The follow ing are the subjects selected: Sunday. Jan. sth.— Subject— Tbrlwik dat ion. security and universal extension of the Christian Church. Monday, Jan. Htli. —Devout Acknowl edgment—Remembrance of God's mer cies to the nation, to families and to the churches; providential and spiritual blessings to ourselves; confession of sin. Tuesday, Jan. 7tli. —Prayer for Chris tain churches; their increase in love, activity, fidelity to truth, and the clear er manifestation of the unity in the faith; for ministers, missionaries and evangelists. Wednesday, Jan. Bth.—Prayer for families; for sons and daughters of Christian parents; for a blessing on home influence, and on the services and ordinances of the "Church of God;" for schools, colleges and universities; for children at sea or in foreign lands; for young men in business and profes sions; for servants, and for all in sick ness and tribulations. Thursday. Jan. 9th. —Prayer for na tions; for kings and all in authority; for the spread of religious lilierty; for the growth of sound knowledge; for contentment, concord and good will among all classes; for the discernment of God's hand in national judgments, and for the removal of intemperance, immorality and the sins which arc a "reproach to any people." Friday, Jan. 10. —Prayer for mankind; for the circulation of the Holy Scrip tures. and the spread of pure literature; for the overthrow of all forms of tyran ny and oppression: for the removal of every form of antichrist; for all prison ers and captives, and for the increase of that kingdom which is "righteous ; ness. j>eace and joy in the Holy Ghost." Saturday, Jan. 11.—Prayer for Sun day schools; for missionary, tract and ! other religious, societies, for raising up and sending lbrtli of more " laborers in to His harvest," and for the removal of ! hindrances to the spread of the gospel and the conversion of the world. Sunday. January li'. —Sermons—"Let the whole earth be tilled with glory. Amen and amen. HOMESTEADERS in the West, if they-.* get their land without money, do not get it exactly without price, for we hear of these pioneers in places where timber is scarce, who live in sod houses, with p-'per windows, and who burn river-bottom grass, twisted into ropes and dried, for fuel, and actually bring themselves to believe that it gives out great heat and is very nice. There are two sides to this Western business. "MB. PRESIDENT," said a member of u school committee out West, "I rise to get up, and I am backward to come forward in the course of edication. Had it not been for edication, I might have lieen as ignorant as yourself, Mr. President." A CORRESPONDENT asks; " Don't you ever get tired of getting up in the morning, eating, drinking, loafing around, and going to lied, wondering why in the devil you were ever born?" Answer reserved.