CLEARFIELD REPUBLICAN" V "hl inuMi st; ', J ' fcOODLANDKR U AOERTV,' CLKARPrBLD, H. pBTABUBBIiO III iBtte Tka laraW Iraolatbraoa aa la Serf Central BenaavlTSiila. Terms of Snbaoriptiori. t. .j... a. .IiMb 1 atoBtks....B OU K Eij .ti l aod before ojonlht 0 If paid aftor the txplretloa of aioaihi... 00 o -t y . Bates oi Advertising. Tiaatlaat adeortleeiaeote, per equaro of 10 JJ laee, I tlmee or leee. w JJ v.. .uh HhMaiunl in eertioe. ........... - - i Jilnlitrmtort' erul Uxooatcrs' aottoet. 1 ft Auditors' notice".... . ' Oaolloor aod Beteajt. - I M a.tualatiaB BOtteeB ........- ' 00 IWeaaiooal Cerde, ft IM Wt,l pear.... t 00 Latal oUm, p " BASL? 4DYEIITISRMEXTS... 'CLEABFJEliI) v f -r ' : ! e' V -.a. i .'.' fc I - t I .A . V..A G ., .(-,' .. " ,'"V rV 1' REPUBLICAN; '.Q00?I4!I).EB BfiEEWi 'Publishers. : V : PRINCIPLES)! NOT MEN. ' K-'i- r TERMS-$2 pe? annum In Advance. ' V0i: 4T--WH0LE N0 2325. - ' . CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 18, 1873. NEW'SERIES-VOL 14. N0. 25. cams. 1 KU I ,0,04700..... 20 00 I' oolamft I soloaaa.... 1 ooIbibb..... ..) 00 , 4ft 00 , to oo Job Wort. ! I '!. BLAKKB. . 0UU qlru...."..I0 I qulrtl,pr.o,ulr,l ( oufc.qi. P0 I Otor , pt ,lr, 1 ftO , - BANDBILL8. ikt,5j'ot lt.f.ll 00 I i ibMt,M or le,t! 00 i lMt.UorlMi, I 00 I kMt.lsortoat.l? Am M f mob of soovo t firafortioooto nUi. "f SSOROIS B. QOOnr.ASDER, ('Ulihora. DillU W.V'CCBDT. fc,MoENlLLY & MoOUBBY, AXIOIUWStAT-LAW, . UWCfUi ra. , abort Iko First :1I:T1 Pa. VLonl buunoM otunded to fromptljr wltk tMAj. Omea oa Sotoaa ttroot Battoaal Baak. " aiuj.a aTwiLitoi. ' - aaa niurni WALLACE 4. FIELDING, ; .TTOBNEYS - AT. LAW, ... OlaarflaK. Pa. iUnl hiliai of all aindi alUndeA to wit pfOBptMM old IdelilJ. OBeo i mldaoeo ol Tf imam a.-iroinww. G. R. BARRETT, ATTOBNlf AND CoONSKLOE AT JLiAW, OLIARFlKLl), PA. - Borlaf ratlKaod Ua Jadtaiaip, a Malaotl kt piaoltoo of tao lav la aia oU otloo at Ckmr tM Pa. WillaUoaAthoaoorttofdofonoaaad Wk ooaatlotvkoa f.. tolly Malaa4 la ooaaMtioa MttnoiaaalooaaitU 1:14.73 wivv.nl: mccullough, - - BTTORN BY' AT LAW, ' " -' c-laarflafd. ra. v ' ODoo ap fUirl in Wtitfra llotol VoUdlnf. Ug! bullnflt prompil atteoaou w. aouibt aati oold., Bool MUtO JolHJ Tin. MURRAY, , XtTOBSBY AND OOUKSELOR AT LAW, attoatloi ilroa to all fcnl aaalaoof oatnitod lo 'bto oaro ia.Cloarflold aod adjolo'.og OBoattoa. OSleo oa Marital aU. oppoaito '.ualo'f - JO"tt j - JOHN A. GREGORY, , COUNTY SUPERINTENDENT, ORIm lb the Court floim, Ctrflt)d, 1. Will tlwa;i bt fuund tt homt on tb LA8T FRIDAY aod BATUKUAY of mh Booth. IS E0U0WBDSH 4 CAREY, v BOOKSELLERS, Blank' -BooK Manufacturers, ANB STATIONERS, I 919 Jlarkel SI., PMIadelpMa. aaaVPapoc flour Baakl and Bant, Foolaaap, Latter, Koto, Wraapiag, Carlaia aaA Wall Papara. . fal,24.7ltp4 GEORGE C. KIRK,- JaMte of lb Pimv, tnryr tui CoaroTMoaf, Luthenbur- All bariaH tatruttod to hi will be piotontl; ltMdd to. Pcroont withiog to mjWj ft Bur vtivor will do w(41 to (If- kin ft Mil, u bo flftttor kiBMlf Uwl b wa raudr MtUfutkea. levd of eonvoyftiMM, ftrtiolojt of ttgrmmont. and all Ugm) paptra, promptly and noatly -uooutod. tt0nor73 , ' D AVI DREAMS, SCRIVENER ft SURVEYOR, Lutheratrarir;, Pa. Till rabMriber otTn hli nrritMa to pabllo la tho vapaeftj of ReH-nnor and Aarrcjor. All oalU Tor urvajriBg promptly atUadad to, and tboaaklaf of draft, ddi and uttMrlcfal Inita- mdU ot writ log, aitcaua wttaoui aeiay. warr Evil ted u b cornet or no oharga. aad Vja73 t: J;A. BUTTEHB?EGEE, J Claim and Collection Office, . ' OSCBOLA, Claarttld Oo., Pa. 'i ' u vOoavayaaclag and all legal paper! Arawa with amarany aad dlipalob. DrafU tnd pM af UokflU to aad (ram any point la Karopa proonrod. eU'?-k . THE REPUBLICAN, CLEARFIELD, Pa. WlDlfBSDAT M0RNIK4, JCVE , tUNLIQHT. A blua ban in )u ditlanaa . , . Tho orlip grota Madowa am aowly ikon, CloadloU drift la tbo ivmntr ikt, Btrdi an load la tbo Ingram thorn. Tba Uarai, Hko lovora, kiM la tho brtow, Aad ortr tbo flvlda of gloRy w hnai Llko rlpploi glaootog oa oaaay mm, Liko wiada daaot oa their fairy foot. Tharivor. Uniatrlnt; la tho aaa, l.ikt a fureat of Tmplar huiao ahowa, , llwtiuatMi aa a kaeoliag aaa, 1'ha gray spin ahluoa trm vattagt rowa. r9 wirier than iwallow dowe tbo wind, O'or tho briiigo and through tba valo, Tbo on ft no raaboi, and far bahlad Wrtatha of luatiuouj vapor aail. . To oaaloag patit la ally laao Noting the fpring by ilow degrotl J Of inmnar littla bat warnLb aad falo, Yi hat niagio la inch aiorua aa tbaao I Tba brtait azpaadi as to algbt dew, Wood rlolola spring In bauota of dorr. Hopa brlghuaa to bar hrigbUot boo, Aad tba baart glowa with faith aad lova. The Sea of Galilee. A Simple Stoty, E. A. & W.'O. IRVIIM, ' ' . aaAaaai in Eeal Estato, Square Timber, Logs AND LUMBER. Oftao la not aovll'Tl t Ooraor Itaro holldlai. CorwoaiTllto, Pa, f ataaaT f Jaaalra Sura, OteoraoM, Pa. A.'.W. WALTER 8, h-, ATTORNEY AT LAW, , OtttiaVlaVtv,'' V.0ca la (ho Ooart Hoaaa. ' doo-ly aao. bf.aurr aaaaT Abaaat.. W.' ALBERT A. BROS., Maaafaatarart A aitoailTo uoalara ia Sawed Lumber. Square Timber, &o., WOODLAND ,a. PA" K A. ,, -Ortlora aolloltrd. Bill, illod oa abort aotroo asa laaauuooia Mm Addraal Toodlaad P. 0., Claarllald Co., Pa. , JJJ I7 W ALBERT A BHUS, - :'z'ZS, H. W. SMITH, " r1.' ?. ATJOBBT-AT-LAW, tl:lt7l ClaarBeM, Pa. ' ' WALTER BARRETT, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Oflaa oa Soooad 8L, Oloarlold, Pa. aortt,M FRANCO .COUTRIET, MEKCHANT, PrearbTlllo, ClaarUtM Coanty, Pa. Eaopa ooaataotlv oa band a full asaortatant of Urv uoo t, llarawara. i.rocanca, ana avarjuiiria aaall; kopl la a Mall itoro, wbiob will bo lold, for aaah, aa ebeap aa alaewhero la tba aooBtv. jrroaebvlllo, Jaoo Mtt ior-ij. ISRAEL ATTORN BY TEST. ' AT LAW, Claarfield, Fa. . , - - tr-OSao hi tbo Ooart Hoaaa. tlJ11.'" THOMAS H. FORCEE, BBAtaa w GENERAL MERCHAHDISE,...," , ..CRAUANTUII, I a. 'Alfa, ailaailro BiBBdraotaror aaoTdoaler la Bqaaro Tirabor aaa Hawoa i,Broaoroi an biboo. jarOrdcro lallcllcd aad all billl promptly SIM. (OJ.H'71 JOHN H.'0lFORD, ATTOrTREY AT LAW, ' o-a- f-lrtrflfld. Pa. ' o'Haa" aa lliirsat St, orcf Jostoh Bboaira , Brooorf atoro. ' . ' .Jao.S,U73. JOHN Lv CUTTLE, " . jt A.TTORNEY AT LAW. . Aad Ileal Batata Aftaat, Claarfielal, Pa, Mm Third otroot. bokObotri A Weloot. aav-aUaaoatfaUi ofoaa Ma aoniooBia aolliaa atd aaolB raada ia CloarloloV aad aJJololDg waaatlaa 1 aad with aa oaaorioaoaalooartaoBtT loato aa oara7or, Battoio klaiaalf that ko oaa aaaaor aatlafaouoa. - Lo o...- aBLAXE "WALTERS, - BE.Uj estate. broker, a .-,.. 1 Haw loogi ami lumW, . .CLEARFIELD, PA, .. . aaalo BaMlel, Raora No. 1; liIbTI 'f)-0i-L ING4.Er AM OlUJ B.Y nil p LA W, 1:11 ' baceela. Clearfltiol Coi, PH. ' j p '"ROBERT -WALLACE,'. i..ATioRNKY - AT LAW. nallaaatoat. UaarftMA Coaalf. Peaa'a. Bal III liil koalaoao praaipalp aUaadod Wa D. -L'. KrEB 8,:V" gaooaator to II. B. Baooiio, .. . XrAtr Awn Cou.ectiok Orrici, T4tl,lTl CI.KABFIIODjJfA. ' Joba IP. Orrrn i. 0. T. Aloiaador. ORV18 tV'.ALfcTXANDER, a. "' ATTORN Y&. AT LAW. ' .oltafoBto, Pa. (oor1l,'U.) ; J. S. B ARN HA RT,1 o. oVIIOBNKY . AT - LAW,.. - Will yraotlaa la JJbavraold aari all of tba Caaata of taa ata JaaaaaOi oaaraiar .otoa aooow aad oadloalioa al alalaaaamla aaaalalUaa, al'71 OYR08' GC-RDON, A IX OR FJ- AT LAW, ' MMat atrtal, (aorta alia) tltartold, Pa.' - jaTMII lata! knahroai aorap(lf atuodad to alaa. ja . I a -u 1 ..r :;""DR. J..J. BOYERa. " fiUBtOlAM AMD SUROEOK, ' " OB00 oa ilarkpt Slroo, Cioar I A Pa. pmm koaroiolu It a. at., aad la p. tA , .1. ; , . D R. H. M. SC11EUUEU, , .BOMXOPATUI0 PBYSICIAH, . . , .jOHao la Vaaoaio Balldlof, April 4, Iflt . . riooraald. Pa. iTdr::w,.a. means, PTITSICIAN A SDBOEON LCTIIKR8III-B0, PA. ; iU attaad profaaoloaatoallaproBiprlf. amlOtO KLINE, M. D.; PHYSICIAN A SUBOKON U AVISO kwat4 at fonnActd, IV, olTrt hit areftMttoaal aarrlaea to tbo paoplo of that ud Mrroaading ooantry. AllaaJla prai aptly 01. 11 (i. DR. J. p, BURCHFIELb, mu Sorg ooa of tho 8S4 BtoclnoaUPaanaylnala , Volaauori, harlnf ratarnad fro tba Amy, tn hit profoaaioaal aorvltoi ta thooitiiaaa r t;iaarU aoaaty. -. "Prtftiilonal oatla protaptly atttaladta. Olaa atrdit. fr.r"iarlroanWal hi Vr.Waoda.. , ' apraMU j6"hn b. Thompson, laitUa of tho Paaoa and Soriraaar, . , CarwratTllle, Pa. .Conattltai aiada aad aoaov aromptty - ,dk..Ai : Tn rmimi.fi or kvciiy irrciwp " tttoa neatl; tmatrd at thlr alK. CHARLES SCHAFER, : ! J.AGER BEER RBEWEB, CarCrl0, P. ' " HATrNO noted Mr. Eotroi' Tlrtwary ko bopaa t7 atrial attaollon to bttalaaia and tba tnaBufaetaro of a aapartor artlclo of BKER to roooWo tbo palroaao of all tba old aad man J Baw ouatontara. , , ot25aitj71 J K. BOTTORF'S PHOTOGRAPH GALLERT, Market Street, Clearteld, Pa. oj-CRtTMOS HADE A SPECIALTY. "TAX NEGATIVES node la eloitdj aa wall aa ia elear woathar. OonataBtly oa baod a foad aiaortroaot of FRAMK8, BTKIIKOSCOI'ES and 8TERBOSCOPIQ V1BWB. Frauaa, froai aaj atf I4 of noalding, atado ia order. , apr?8-tf JEW. BCHULER, . , . BABBEB AND HAIR DRESSER, Seoaad tttrttt, next door to- Plrit Nattoaal Haaw norl'71 Ckartelil, Pa, 1 ' ' JAMES CLEARY,,. , BARBER -HAlR DRESSES, ; SECOND STREET, , ... J.jS ' CtEASFIELD, PA. tl REUBEN HACKMAN, House and Sign. Painter and Paper " ' nanger, : .. " ClaarAtloS Paaa'a. ok. Will oxoooto Joba ia kLf llaa aroraptlr aad iBaworBraoalikoaaaaaor. apro.or G. H. HALL, PRACTICAL PUMP MAKER, NEAK CLEARFIELD, PENN'A. JOcfPoraps ajwaya oa band aad aiada to ordor ob abort ootieo. Pipoa bored oa raaaoaable Una a. All work warraatod la render eetleleeUoa, arm dalirorod If deelre t ' BfJIS:l;pd E. A. BIGLER A CO., squAre TIMBER, ' aad aiaaBfaotaron ar ALL KIBOB UP BAWED LUMBEB mi CLEARFIELD, PENN'A. The Set of Galileo, tho Sea of Tibs- rial, or Lake) of titnoaarctb, is s boat ot water formed by the expansion of tba bed of Jordan. Ilia about twolve and a quarter miles Ions from north to south, snd at its broadest part six and three-quarter miles from east to west. But its width is by no means regular, its sbapa being t lint of a pear or a leg of mutton, the broadest part toward the north, and tbo mors pro jecting sido toward the west, the east ern sdoro Doing uycoin pari son straight, except near the lower end. It ia full of fish. Its waters, think and muddy at tba extreme north, become clear and bright as they approach its nar row end ; for Jordun, which flows into it a foul stream, leaves lbs lakes pur and swoot river. The surln.ee is from six hundred to seven hundred feet be low the level of the Mediterranean. The climate is genial In winter, and not excessively hot in summer. With shores that riso but gently, in most parts, from the brtin,and w hone color is uniformly brown whero seen above the foliage at their buss, the sooner? would bo tame wore it not fur the Sne hills, including the snowy topi of Uermon, which can bs seen all round through tha transparent ether, and for tho Innumerable effects of light ana anaao. anruua ana blossoms sad to the beauty of tho ooasts, which vary continually, being loroelimos backed by broad plains, showinir at otbors the opening of long gorges, and elsewhere, especially to the north, be ing broken into many and charming bays, v oleanio action seems to bo en ergetic j thars are hot springs in tho basin 01 too lake, and vcrr serious earthquakes occur. Wild boar are to be lound on a plain to the northeast. Those who nave tormca a mental picture of this sea 10 often recurring in sacred story as who in ebidhoo.d has not have no doubt imagined a wator covorcd wtlb shins and boats. resounding with the noieo of sailors and fishermen, and flanked by many proud oities, rich in merchandise and iMorioua to luo smut. Alas, lor tneso vision! I The cities, and the men, and the' truffle ircre tlioro, but they have nuw disappeared eo completely that tba waters of tho lake may be said to loop amid a lolilude, At for the fa mous cities, 01 most 01 mem It oannot bo said with eorlainty where they woro, and the survey now in progress nrst Deems to give ns soma reliable data' for identifying their ruins; one or two remain, but not as cities : small, dirty Arab village! alone represent tnoso busy towns, wborein were dona "mighty works," such ns would have overcome, the obduracy of Xvrs and btUon, 'it bonus is thereon the west coast, rather below the renter of tbo lake. Its sea wall, brokon columns, lowers and acquedecta attest the glory of its anciont estate) but the modern Tiberias is but a poor collection of houses, chiefly inhabited by Jews who bare returned to J'aloslina. Its Bllb and' vermin have become a prororb. About four miles north of this, a heap of ruins, now named llojdei, marks tha lito ot that Msrdala whero'Marr Magdalene bad her home. XSortn ot this again Is the plain of Genesenrth, an area oi great beauty and fertility, along wntcn, sao to say, aro iseorai heaps of mine, denoting probably tho ftlaces ol old towns aud tillages where n our lord taught. Blackwood's. ' i i a aa ' i .The simple story of Johrj IlefTornon teaches ni that honesty aid palienco are lure to be rewarded, more lorciblv than that great moral lemon could' be impressed on ourmindsbyadidaoticar aisceurse. John Ueffornan was a boy when ho onlered the establishment of Messrs. UoldBtlcks & Moneybags, but ha bro't with bim a certificate from nissanday school teacher, saying thai be was an honest lad, wbo could loaro more verses and forget them quicker than any other toy in the class. ' Ilia em ployers were obliged to lust bis hon esty In various ways, but be stood the teat Booiy.i t '";....,;!. When Mr. Monoyhags saw bim pick up a pm from the floor he was sweep ing, ho thought that John mlht be guilty of taking things, and dropped a ten cent slim plaslor in the same place, but John honestly swept it Out without notioing it and brushed it into a ooroer, where he could pick it up at his leisure. Then sir. Moneybags overpaid him his weekly stipend by tbo amount of St, and waited to see what the boy would do. At the dead hour of nitLt the AI oncybags house hold was aroused by the furioua ring ing of the bell. Tha old gentleman put oa his dressing gown and descend ed to the door, where he found John ilefferoan with a tenr in-his oye and a dollar bill in his riirbt band. John declared that ha could not rest in his virtuoua couch, after discovering the misiaKe, unui 11 waa reclined. Why didn't rou keen it r" asked Mr. Moneybags. "I would not hare known that I had overpaid you "Keep it!" exclaimed John. ''Little do you know of (he precepts that were manned in my youlhlul breast by my aaintod grandmother. But I confess H; F. N AUGLE, WATCH MAKES A JEWELER, ' " ' aad dealer la Watche, Clock, Jewelry, Silver and rioted Vidro, &o., (,1,-TJ - CLEARFIELD, PA., JJ e U A U U H E V e CO.-a RESTAURANT,. . BesoBdauoet, ' - , Cl.EARMBLD, PENN'A.- Alwan aa band, Freak Ojitora, lea Croaoa, rujiu KMla. Croekere. OeAoa. CJiBora.' Tobaoao, Oaaaad frutta, Oajeo, LaauaJ, aad ail fctado of frolt ia oraeoa. JMTUILLIAKD aooaj aa moan aeon lall'71 D. Mel AUIIIIKV A CO. OHPJTBUUTMAN. . . Daalot la all klodl of FURNITURE, M trait Street, One door out Poat Ofllea, BB1I'7I CLEARFIELD, PA. V1LI IUIBAE . - - PRACTICAL MILLWRIGHT, ' ' LrillERPBrBO, tA. . Ajrnt for the Aaorlsaa Doolie Tarbioa Water Wheal anil ADdrtWI 't aaioaoa nnari, tan rur alah Portable Cot it Mill! oa abort ootieo. 115 71 TTOUEK AND LOT FOB SALE! XX Tho Ilouae and Lot ob tho ooroer of Mar hot aad F.nh atreela, Clearfield, i'a., ia for Bale. Tbo lot ooBtaiae aearlr aa aero of sreaaA. I bo boaaa la a large double fraua, oobtoliitaB t'loe rooBts. Par torras and otbor laronaaUeB applp to tba aobanlhcr. Bt the real orooo. BO.R. . P. A. OAl'LI. the temptation waa a atrong one. 1 was saving money to buy a Biblo for my wiuowea mother, and bad accu mulated the sum of fifteen cents. -With thidl dollar I could have completed tho purchase, and I admit that I looked at it with longing eyes. But honesty triumphed over temptation, and virtue is its own reward." "Keep the dollar for Tour honesty." said the benevolent old gentleman. "liuy your Bible, und he happy. I wouiu ass. yon to marry my duugnior and take you into partnership in the usual way : but It happens that my daughters are all sons, and you must vxcuso me ior me present. joun went borne with his bcartlwell ing with the oonsoioainess of having done his duty and made a dollar. The next day he invested that dollar in a ohnckaluck outfit of tho benighted ynung nosuien in ino nexi aucy. na tiflv,mMrwoa inrn pittuiot- Interesting Hollo. , The oldeat relio of humanity Is the skeleton of tha enrlicnt Phnntoh, en cased in lis original burial robes, and wonderfully perlcct, considering us age, Which was deposited elglito. il or twenty momns ago in vne Driuar Museum, and is jtislly considered the most valuable ol its archmological treasures. Tba lid of theoomn wbub contained- the royal mummy was In scribed with the name ol its occupant, Pharaoh jlrkerlimis, who succeeded tha heir of tho' builder of tho groat pyramid about ten oenturies before LbriBt. uuiy minx ni 111 me mon arch whose crumbling bouosand leath ery intfgumouts aro now oxciliua the wonder of nemerous fftwers in London, reigned in Egypt before Solomon was lanrn. and onlr ubout oloveD-ccntui ieS or so slier Misraim, the grandson of old father Noah, and the first of the Phnrsohs, hadbtcn ralhcrcd lo his fathers. Whytho ttdo-msrk of the doluge oould ecarouly have been oblit orntod, or the gopher wood kueo tim bers of Ihcflrk hare rotted on Mount Ararat, wljon" lliia njan of thejarly world lived, moved and bad his being, liis flesh and blood were contempora ry wilb tha progenitors of tba great patriarch. Ilia bones and shriveled skin are contemporary with the nine loon lb century, and Ilia date of tha crucifixion Is only about midway bo tweon Iiia era and oure. , . , All males between fourteen and six teen roara of ace are called lo mili-J I . . , i. I ykrr service Ml mo opanien itrjuuMn.- ed to a desk, and a five dollar bill was once temptingly placed within his renin; but John was secure in his uon osly, and wasn't certain that the bill was a good one. i ben ho was put in charge of tho bank deposits, and his character lor honesty waa established One day when bo was going to the bank, bo looked at tbo ticket as usual, and discovered that he was the bearer of 15,000 in currency. Ho then felt that the tlmo had coma for honesty and palience to be rewarded, and he Hulled tbe bills in his pocket and took the first train for the wtst. Ho is now one of tho most prominent residents of the Paciflo slope, where he hoi al ready bought s country -ecst on the coast, and expeols to buy a sent lo the nenato. Hut he still preserves the cbuckaluck outfit that gave him a start in life, and points with prido to the cank ticket, which proves to bis chil ren tuar. virtue ia us vwu rvwaru. SI. liouil Democrat. - Why Aunt Bailie Never Married. "Now, Aunt Sallie, do please tell us why von never got married, lou ro member you said once that when you were a girl yon were engaged to a minister, and promised us you would tell us about It some lime. Njw,aunt, pleaso toll us. 'noli, yon sea, when l was about sovontocn years old I was living in Utica, In tho Hlato ol Aow lurk Though I say It myself, I was qulto a good looking girl tben, and bad sev eral beaux. Tho one that took my fancy was a young minister, a very promising young mun, and roniarku- b!v pious and aloadv. Ho thought a good deal of rue, and I kind of took a ranoy to bim, and things went on ontil ws were engaged. Una evening be came to me, and put bis arras around mo and kind of hucired mo. when got excited and soma duslrated. It waa a lonur limn aao. and 1 don't know but what I might have huggod back a littla. 1 waa Tike any other girl, and pretty soon I pretended to be mad at it, and pushed him away, though 1 wasn't mad a bit. You must know tha house where I lived was in one of the back streets of the town. Thoro were rinse doors in the parlor wbic oponed over Ilia street. I'hese doors were drawn to. I stepped back a little from him, and when ho came up close 1 pushed him back again. I pushed him harder than 1 intended to; and dont you think, girls, the poor fellow lost his balauco and fell through ono of tho glass doors Into the street." Oh, nnnty! Was he killed!" "No: ho fell head first, and aa li was going I caught hiro by tbo legs of his trousers. 1 held on lor a moment and tried to pull him bsck, bat h suspenders gftvo way, and tbo poor young man Icll clear out ol Ins pauia- loons into a parocl or ladies and gen llcmen slung the street. Tbe moment he touched the ground he got up and left that piece in a terrible hurry, tell you it was a sight to bo ronieni bcred. Ilow that man did run I il wont out west, and 1 believe lis is now nrem Umir out in Illinois. Hut be nor er mart'lcrj. , Ua was Very niodost, and I suppose ho was so badly frightened that time that he never dared trust liimsolf near a woman again. Tbnl, girla, is the reason why I never mar ried. I fell Tory bad about II fur a long time for Ito was a resl good man, and I've often thought to myself that wa should have been very happy :r L : . I-.. L.,!..' : II 1MB buoj'ciiuvi a ..mi iiivu a.ji Ovenrork-A Sensible Protest. '? A great amount of very pornlcloui twiddle hai lately boen published on tba subject oi the alleged overwork in which many of the greatest, and pos iibly some of the least, men of the present generation indulge, in tba pur suit either of wealth and fnmo, or high social position. Work is divino. Without work, human life would be Intolerable, and man would be liltlo else than a sponge, an oyster, or a limpet upon the rock, which, only ex ists to imbibe the nourishment that they are too imbecile or too powerless tb seek. But liko all tho abundant blessings spread around mankind, -oik is only hosutltul and good in Its decree! It must be used, and not abused. ., loo much of anything is not good for ns. Yica itself is bnt virtue degenerated and dissipatod by being forced into extremes.. In liko manner, work, if not carried bevoad the point at whioh ail tha f unctions of mind and body are exercised without undue strain upon either, is one of tho greatest, if not tbo very greatest of all ihe blessings that are showered npon tbo human race. There ia fur too great a disposition in all conntrio to look upon labor aa something inflicted non man as a ourse lor his disobodi- enco, to interpret literally, and not according lo tbe spirit, the penalty luid noon Adam, and lo take advant age of tba misintorprclationt to shirk labor altogether, or to Impose It in- uly upon the .weaker.. This doctrine requires not only discouragement, but isprooli for tbe inevitable rosult of Us adoption would tie either to reduce men lo tha state of savagee, when the only labor undertaken would ba that of the cmise ol wild animals or the csptnra of birds and fish to provide food for the sustenance of life, or the establishment of slavery, when nono but slaves would work upon tha com- pulsion of their lord and masters. But work, looksd upon with the aye of renson, is the choicest advantage of our mortal state, the only motive power that keeps not only men, but the solar system and all the countless orbs of the boundless universe ol God, n a condition ol healthy and progres siva perpetuity. The Monarch of the Sea. According to Captain Sooresby's es timate a whale sixty feet In length will weigh seventy tons, or as much us three bundled fat oxen, wbilo the oil taken from il will be about thirty tons. 1 li ii a common saying among whalemen that it requires thirty fath oms of water for a three hundred bar- reler to swim in. ' Tha flukes of the riirht whole are of Totta niubbcr, and lor attack or de fence ore py fur tbo most cmcicnt weapon the animal possesses, sending a whale-boat and its crow full thirty foot into mid air, and often killiny many of Iho men. These flukes are not placed vertically, as in other fish but transversely, and parallel to the surface of the water ; so that whnlcs have Been known to swim on at the rate of a tnilo an hour after death, the onward movemont being caused b Ihe waves tivine to the flukes an a most life-like propulsion. Tho point of junction between the flukes and the main body of the animal is exlromely small, and the tendons at this part are easily severed wtlb a eae. Tbo head, from which tha wnnlo bono Is obtained, is a most singular structure, and nicely adapted to tho use of the cetacean. In shape it has been compared and very appropriately, lo a round-toed flat soled shoe with straight sides. Tho lower jaw Is from eit'lit to ten foot wide whero it nnlies wltb the body, but Becomes stunner toward the extremity, rcsemunng, when cleaned -of the flesh, a bluntly pointed orch about seven feet inlongth. Tbo skull or crown bono, whiob serves as tho inner law, is a single bona slightly rounded on the top, snd lour or five Teot wide at tbe nock, but also mailer at the -extremity. It is to this bons that the stubs of what Is usually termed tho whalebone are fas tened. Jliey ar in pieces oi irom two to ten feet in length, about twolve Inches wido at Itoe lop, tapering aowi f'cnlly and curving inward, till ut tin owcr end they aro more polnls.- The nieces radiate edgeways, from what may ba called tbe ridgo pole of Ihe roof of the mouth, about a quarter of on inch in thickness and half an inch apart. 1 dontly approaching a clviliz tion. Tho truth of the si; The Mormon Bible. ("able slock- If slwai watered: Dipping the Hand into Molten Iron Tho thing has been done over an over ao-sin, observed Pr. Carpenter i a recent lecture that a man unsgone snd held hii band In such a atrcnin of molton iron, and has done it wilhont tho least injury i all that ia required being to have his hand moist, mid if his hand Is dry, he has tnorely to dip it In water, and ho may hold hid hand for a certain timo in 'thnt stream of molten Iron without receiving any Ih jury whatever; Thia was exhibited nubhcly at a meeting oi ma Ornish Association at Ipswich, many years ago. It is one of tho miracica ol set once, so to apeak i it Is perfectly cred ibie to scienlino men, uocause nicy know the principle upon which il hap pens, and that principle il familiar to yon all, that if you throw a drop of wator upon hot iron, the water retains its spherical fbrm, and does not spread upon it and wot II. Vapor is brought to that condition by Intense bent that it forms a sort ol film, br atmosphere, between tho hand and tho hot iron, and fur a timir thnt atmosphere is not loo hot lo be perfectly bcarablo. Thero are a number of theso miracles of sci ence which wo believe, however In credible at first light they nmy np pcar, because they can bo brought to tbe test of experience and can be at any time reproduced nndor tho neces sary condiliona. Houdin, the conjur er, in his very Interesting autobiogra phya little book I would recommend lo any of yorj who nre interested in the study of the workings ef the mind Houdin tells ynrj that ha himself tried thia experiment. Rflor a good deal of persuasion; and ho says that tha sensation of immersing ins hand in this molton luctnlwai like handling lirjaiid velvet" I find in my scrap-book, sot down there thirty years sgo, an item which may be of intorcstatthe present time, when the Mormom problem Is ovl- lizcd solu- slatemont horein given was vouohed for in my preseaco by a man who was above deceit. The origin of the "Book of Mormon," so called, Ins been a pernio to many, much of It "being evidently the production of a cultivated mind, and yet springing to right from the nanus oi unieraui men. It was written, in 1812-13, as a. lit erary" recreation, by Kov. Solomon Spaulding, a graduate, of Dartmouth Collogo, at that time residing in New Salem, Ohio; and, oa ho wrote it, it professed to ba a historical romance of a lost race, the remains of whose numerous mounds and inscriptions are found on the banka of tho Ohio. After tha work bad been comploled the author had thought! of having il printed, and for Hist porposo fas gave Ihe manuscript into the bands of a nrintsr. in whoso office it remained for sovorsl yosrs, but the design of printing waa not earned into execu tion. ' Aa foreman in tho printing office wboro Mr. Bpaulding's romance was lodged waa employed Sidney JUg- don, who afterward figured conspicu ously in Mormon history j and there is no doubt that ha copied the manu script and subsequently gave it to Smith. Upon tha appearance of the Book of Mormon, iu 1H30, there wore those living to whom Mr. Spaulding had read parte ot bia romance, and they recognised bis verbiage in the book. Upon search the original man uscript waa found among tba papers of the deceasod elcrgyman, and on comparison lbs Mormon iJiols proved to have been not materially altered from tbia parent text. Of course thr discovery soon mode considerable talk. A great many people went to see the manusoript, and at tha expiration of a lew weeks it mysionuumy disap peared. As ibero waa a Mormon preacher in New Sulom at the time, with prosolytes at bis heels, tbe mys tery of tho disappearance was not very deep. -i Cameos. Rome is now the chief scat of Ike art of cameo cutting, two of which are produoed those cut in hard stone and those cut in shells. The stones most valuable for this pur pose are the oriental onyx and tho sand-onyx, provided they havo two diuurcnt colore in parallel layers. The valuo of tho atone is greatly in creased for this purposo if il has four or ore dulerent colors in parallel lay ers, if tho layers are o Clnn aa to as sist in making tbo device ol tbe oamoo. for example, a specimen of stone, which has lour purullol layers, may be usclul lor a cameo oi aliucrva whoro the ground would be a dark gray, the luce ligbi, me bust and boi- tnet black, and tbe crest over ihe bol met brown or gray. All luch cameos aro wrought by a lapidary'a lathe wilb pointed instruments ol aleel, and by means of diamond dutt. Shell cameos are cut from large shells lound on the African und ilrucilian coasts, and cen erally show two layers, ono whito and the other a pale coneo color or deep rod brunga. Tho subject is cut with small steel sbisels out oi the white portion of tho shell. Stones adapted tor cameo cutting are denso, thick, and consist usually of three layers of different colored shell material, How to Bxmx ax Article tor Pib lication. A great many pcoplero apt to bit upon happy ideas in society, and when they go home they write them out tor publication; ana mosio: those good folks know now bard it li to begin an article satisfactorily. word to them : commence with your very finest writing and most benuti fully -rounded sentences. Introduce your subject in your most elaborate stvle, be poetical, rhetorical, didactic aa your mood may bo, and when you think' fit gradually drop into the dis cussion of the suhject-msttcr. When tho article Is finished, begin at the opening sentence, and read it until you find you have commenced tossy sonic thing to the point. Slop at this pluco strike out everything before it, and lot vour article boein nist thero. You will then' probably find that it opens well, and tuat uy collecting o.i your labored composition in one place where it can be readily stricken oul, you will here tosved yourself nil the trouble thnt would 'nave teen noeosssry hsd it been scattered through Ihe article. Scribntr't for May. ' , ' " Nothing in music,, poetry ' or elo quence will thrill one with such ex quisite joy as to have hit back Itch und un artist to scratch il. It lias true aa singular that not one woman in a thousand can scratch a back as it ought lo be scratched. To do il suc cessfully requires a patlonro, a delica cy, a judgment that few indeed pos sess. Many wife has struggled on to accomplish her mission, being a faithful worker, a clevor oounselor, a keen manager, slid yet failing far short of success simply because sho oould not satisfactorily scratch her husband 's back, whllo I. So man bas deserted his homo and drowned his manhood In lbs flowing bowl. A Race Dying Out. From the amount of talk about In- ian mailers by Congress the Ameri can of avoraga Inlormalion would naturally asaume that tho Uuitcd States had upon its hsnds a copper- colored population ol at least uuii a million, and lite same American wou m be st . brat greatly inclined to doubt the slatuniont that, selling asido the so-called civilised tribes, Ihore aro loss than 200,000 Indiana within the limits of our entire country. In 1800 the number of the ''uncivilitcd" waa set down at 44,021. At the present time, aocording to tbe Commissioner'! re port, thero are out iB.ow. onouiu thia frightful ratio of decrease con tinue, the beginning of the next con tury will sec this portion of tha ab original race ol North America swept from tho face of the earlh. Tbe "un civilised" tribes, wbiuh go lo make up the bgurce quoted, Incluiio part of the well-known Shawneoi, Delawaros, Wyandoltus, Scnecas,comancbei,oacs and Foxes, Poltawaltomios, Miamia, Kaws and Osagea, with a tew rvow Mexico Apaches, and remnants of other tribes once rich and powerful in Pennsylvania and Sew Ynrlc,but now almost extinct. Theso tribes, num bering 18,523 souls, aro worth, not in cluding their, land, 3,172,408. TI.ey cultivato 0,995 acres, and pro duced in 1871 a lolul of 102,000 bushels it vaiua i. Ttssci, ' Tba baada of frioailibip. pore aod aatra, . ' We twine around lb. b.arl, Vhiab eloeelr ellop;a lhruwa;b good aod III, , Jiot frora IU taltb wlU part. ... Aod. oh ! tbia boail, to tbrilllng Sweet, ' ScBda tbrooitb tho tool a Jay, i Dooide wbieh all tha paaaloaa pale, ;.: Aad lero llaelf If oojr I j . .. . Bo joaloaar, wltk akarpeaod laaga, ' loli-.tt lair t'rioB Jibip'a ball, , Hanging a dagger ia tbe baart, , ... And over joj a pall I, ( But laic-winged truthfulBOU aad fails llasg like a gotil.n atar 1 Vjkib tbe treeooee of her walla,1 ( 1 ' (bedding their ray. afar. '. i r- A solicitor who had recently been engivgcd by a prominonl life insurance company, returned to the office of It's omploycra tho other day, and com plained Hint he had been snubbed by a gentleman on whom bo had called. "Snubbed," Cried tho manager, "snub bed, why, what did you do that ho il.ould have snubbed ynuf 1 have solicited life Insurance from tha At lantic to tha Mississippi, and have never yot boon snubbed. ,1 have boen kicked down atairs. beuten over tho bead with chairs, ana) thrown out of lbs window, but snubbed I have never been." ;' "What ii i smile 1" asked a man of a Utile girl, 'Tho whisper ol'a laugh," aid the. ', of grain, or about 9 bushels to each man, woman and child. They have 42,100 horses, calllo and ahocp, worth $1,601,000, and they raise every year 2,000 tons of hay, worth (20,000. Kight of tho tribes have well regulat ed schools, sixtoen in number, em ploying in 1871 thirly-four-tenchers, and imparting instruction lo 064 chil dren, at a coat of $10,700 for the yoar. In 18il, beside lha grain yield, the Indian Territory produced $50,000 worth of raw cotton. In viow of these fuels, tbe extraordinary rata of mor tality apparent is fairly nnaccounta bio. It cannot bo referred to the change in lha inada of living, for the mortality is greatest among that por tion which has refused to adopt the manners and customs of civilisation Ons thing is plainly evident, and thnt thai the race n doomed, and thai nothing can save it from oarly extinc tion. Tunnellinq A Phofit. Tunnelling may sometimes be made to pay uireol ly as well ns indirectly. A caso in point ia that of the' new tunnel ot tho Bitltiinoro and Ohio railroad at the Point of Rocks, in connection with the new track lo Washington. The oxnenso of blanling this tunnel through tno rttcK was in me neighborhood oi $90,000. The rock taken out was utiliiod for ballast on-the track ol Ihe road. A crusher waa put up noar Iho tunnel, the broken rock dumped In gravol rare and distributed whore il would do tha most good, frosidont Garrett estimates, the value ot lbs ballast thus manufactured to bo ns much as tho outlay for tba construe lion of the funnel. . , . ; A'GoodRule Mr. TUuoiloro Thorn as adopted somo rules governing the Cincinnati musicul- festival, which il strikes us would be well applied to other cnterluinmculs. Tho doom of lha ball wore opeued an hour before the singing began, giving aniplo time fur the audience to get their seals. When tho orchestra struck up, Ike doors were closed, aud wcro closed until the first piece on the programme wus finished. Between the last two numbers in .tbo list a pause was al lowed lor tho departure of thoso wbo did not wisu to roinaiu until ino ouo. Then Ihe. doors were again closed and kept olosod until tho very last note of tbe ooncorl bad died away. W u ere oua Gold ooes to. Il is estimated that fifteen psr cent of pur gold product ia melted down lor man-1 ufaclure, tbirly.fivo percent, gooe to Europe directy, twonly-five per cent, goca to Cuba, fifteen por cent, ta Bra-' iil,fiv per cent, lo China, Japan, and India, leaving live peroent, for domes tic tiee. Filly per cent, of that which goes to Cuba, and llrasil ultimately which goes lo Europe, from whonre four-fiflhs of their wholo supply goes to India, whurl it is absor bed and dis appears from sight in a mysterious manner, For mauy years ibis absorpn tion . of gold, and silver as woll, has been going on in lbs East Indies and China. A four-hundred acre sugar bcel ficU hss been seen, recently, by the cdilor of the . Pacific Mural tret, at Havil villo, Yolo county, C.il. Tho beets were In rows, about fifteen to.eiyhtccn inches apart,, and were up' four or fire indies. Twcnty-Ove Chinamen, with hoes, were "sweeping in broad plutoou to and fro across tho field, extirpating the few smsll weeds thai had made their appcaranco since planting." Theso beets belong to the Sacramento alley Beet Sugur Company, whieh has 1.000 acres uT them under cultivation. Thero it a fascination In tha betel nut more extraordinary than tbo to bacco passion. The consumption !of tho latter in chewing alone, in tiuf Lntted clats, la a modem pbenoiuu-, non. An invotorutecbower .ay kayo, moral resolution enough to break elf tha habit, though it rarely happens that an effort is made to do so, as an apology ia found for continuing a brat tice mat is positively destroying ID foundations of health. Unee addicted to chewing tobacco, to abandon it Is an scbiovcinsnl fuw bavo the huppi- noss to perioral, notwithstanding tho melancholy mortality of men in tho meridian of life who are constantly being destroyed by the subtlo influence) of-that strange plunl on ttho nervous. system. Thus sudden palsy of the heart, palsy oi a limh, palsy ol one half of tho tongue, and even instanta neous death, arc traceable by phvei. cium to excessive use of tobacco. Bnt, ihe vico of betel nut chewing is still more remarkable. .When this is es Uiblishtd Ibcrcsoeius no retreat.. Tha. victim wears out his teeth, gums and digestion, and dies with an uusatitfiud longing fur another quid., Jlclcl put trees thrive In mosl parts of trofixnl India, tho Indian Archipelago and the Philippine Islands. They grow up gracefully about 'thirty lust-,' rarely moro thun eight inches in diameter, it is an urcea catechu. I'unang' is the universal namq pf ihe nut in lliosu iilaoei who're It .Is, Jiioducc'd ;' hence l'ulo Pciinng tneunsa betel nut island. At sixyenrsof sge the tree commences) bonring nuts of tho sise of St small pullet's egg, of a bright yellow color, onclosed in a husk similar lo thnt of ihooocoa nut; within is s sporival nul, very much like a nutmeg. Broken, a bit of il is wraj'ped up with o piece of unslatked lime in a peculiar leaf, lha SiH bctclpipcr, extensively cultivated for that purpose, 'llio gums and mil'-' cotts membrane ol me month are quickly slainod a brick red; lha leetU crumble to a level with the gums, and in that condition an iiiroterabo betel chewer is wretched. without a supply.' Thoro aro large plantations of bote! mil trees in Juva lo meet the demand for home consumption and that in dis tant provinces. To augment the plea sure, thoso who can afford it add to bacco to tho liwo. , , 1 The people of t'opehhngon havo aj' way of removing snow from tho streets which scents st onee practical and ex peditious. The town authorities give a email sum ol money to owners of. horses and wagons as a sort 01 retain ing foe, for which they aro bound, im mediately after any tall of mow, to send their horsoa and wagons und cart , awav also much per day. Ills dumped into Iho river, or upon that Ico, il in 0 river Is irotcn. so well docs the plan work that a six inches, bill ol snow ia ollcn removed wiluiu a -doy and a half. ' i Rolling Mills. It ii estimated .1... r ...: I... tuai ui!o-ieuiu u, uiv otitiiu jujuiuhvi. of the United Slates is dependent for support upon the production of iron. i be vnluo ol Ihe metal annually man ufactured is $900,000,000, and 040,000 workmen are employed iu the indum try, the aggregate of whoso wogc reaches $OUU,000,000. There has been a vast increase of furnnco capacity an J additional machinery put in by our. rolling mills during Iho iast eijjht or ton moiitiiB, and there is every proe- peel of still further growth. OBI Thoro are now about three hundred thousand Indians in tho juriaditiun nf the United htutos. bevonty thousand of theso are in Alaska, and cut na fig ure iu ony discussion 01 our govoi u. . mental Indian policy, . .According lu official reporls, fifty Ikousnnd may ba classed as civilized ; twenty thousand , as partially so ; and tho remainder . ono hundred and sixty thousand arq, ' snys Col. Bnundinot, as wilj aa when. Lolumbui ursl planted tho cross and -ths standard of Spain on tbo shores o this continent. A very handsomely dressed young man, who was wailing at his horao's head for his girl, Sunday nflornoon. and desired to demonstrate to thu watching neighbora how familiar ha ' could be with such an animal, put tho head of the noblo beast in bis. bosom, mid just tben tho animal snecr.ed, and well anybody ttho has seen a horsu 1 sneers can picture lo himself ths stato i of that shirt bosom, collar and tost. just na well as ono of tbe old masters ., oould do il. A Sunday-school teacher was sur prised on Sunday. She had been ex. . plaining the story of tho .crucifixion, ... !,. ..i... nr :!.. i...... ..,.. .a w ,v. .in,, u. tii.tu wi , n uu .vviiivu to take gront Interest in lite story. ' When she thought they fully under stood tho subjoct, one ol'thom sudden, ly burst nut and suid: "By gully, I bet you they wouldn't have doue il if Buffalo Bill bad been thero." .a t. To mnzsls a doa press II against 1 Hi car ahd full tba irirjrjvr. A Connecticut msn purchased a horse of a neighbor, which upon trial did not prove the kind he anticipated. Not earing to keen tha animal, no ap plied a dye to his bids that made Mm a loroly black, and resold hint to tho aforesaid neighbor. The animal waa subsequently sold to tliearst purehss- er. bis appesrance having in lha mean time been again changed, and now both parties dosirs lo know "which ines Bhoori suo tiro- olhcf '' An Irish physician was called to ex amine the corpse of another Irishman, ' i , i , , .... . . wuu uau urrjn mnrunrca .uy wumv ii his counlrymon. "This person," ssid he, after inspecting the bod), "was so ill thnt if he had not been murdered ho would have died half an hour be- fore." . . -: - That kary tells us of a woman beg.-, ging alms from lain, who, when ebo saw him put bis band in his pncheti cried out: "May tho blowing of liod follow you nil your life I" but wheu ho only pulled out his sunfT box, immedi ately added, "and Dover ovcrtuko yc." A man in Schuylkill, who minted La be a minister, suid he beliovod he had, been called lo "labor iu Iho Lord's vlnoyard." Ilis brother, w ho w as less noted for his piety, said ho hud mis. Isken Iho word "barnyard" for Unit oP'vineyard.'!-- a. i .. ! . A Bultiinoro lightning rod man full fifty feet to the ground, but escaped serious Injury. Half an Lour before tho accident ho hud been suspended from the Ibp of a shot tower by lbs same apparatus which ufltrwurd 'jjavai way. " ' - " Tho west is a -gretrt coenlry. Ji Minnesota farmer lost a gimlet I bred years ago. The other duy ho cut down the tree near his baM, and found in it a throe quarter inch. augur. ' ' - Speaking -of newsp-tper selocllotn, ,tlio Spiingrield JiiyiMican very truly remarks thnt II- takes if tile ns mnoli brains to run a good pair e) suissors as it doei a pen. - ; ' A hostler in Lanuaalur, l'inn.,-lis been ft nod $10 und aoat lor wantonly tort 0 ring a rat.- ' 1 Tbe moat useful thing in a lung i iiii il breath. A criminal loui t-markiii' " k f mnn'a wu.