T11E " CLEARFIELD REPUBLICAN," GOODLANDEIl & LEE, CLEARFIELD, PA. EITAI1LUHKU IN lelT. Tun larg-eel t'lrcalatlss of any Newspaper tflaakalBa - 'i 1 , , 1 . . .. I . . - ' Terms of Subscription If paid la advaaea, or within 1 n.oatha....M ' K paid aftar I and before a month SO If paid alter tee aspiration of montha... OO Rates oi Advertising. Trtnalent adrartlicmsDU, par aquara of 10 lintior , S tlmei or leat $1 60 For anob ubiMtint itiMrtion M A Iralniitratora' and Kitaatora' noUoaa...... t 60 Anditon' noticm I 60 Cautl-.tit and Kttmtl 1 60 Diidolatlon not toe I 00 Prof ei on al Card, 6 Itnea or len.l year.,.,. a 00 1,401 noli mi, per line 10 VKA1U.Y ADVKRTISKMKNT8. I iiuara...... 00 I column $&Q 00 Sijuareiw 14 00 column.. 70 00 I iurai.......20 00 I ooliuun. 120 00 0. It. O00DLANDKR, NOEL B. LKK, PublUhart. tfnrcls. I OH PRINTING OF EVERY PESCRIP J tioa neatly eaeruted at thia pinna s. T. MiOCKHANK, - ATTORNEY AT LAW, CLEARFIELD, PA OlJoe In Cooit lluure. ap IS.TT ly t.. w. .en.'i.i.oron, ram. o l bitk. McClLLOCCn & BUCK. ATTORN EYS-AT-LA W , Clearfield. Pa. All legal bu.lneaa promptly attended to. Offlca on second street, lo tbo alaaonio building. .anlo,'77 W. C. ARNOLD, LAW 4 COLLECTION OFFICK, CUHWKN8VILLB, .26 Clearfield Connlv, Peun'a. 75y TBI).. B. Ml'BIUY. emu. aonnoa, MURRAY & GORDON, ATTORNKYS AT LAW, CLEARFIELD, PA. sT-OBic. in Pie's Optra House, icoond floor. ijr'74 FRANK FIELDING, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Clear-Held, Pa, Will alttjuil to all buaineii a tit runted to him pKiiuptly and faliiaftillj'. novl2'73 WILLIAM A- WALI.Ati. h mar r. wallac. IAVID L. KRRkl. JO HI W. WKIflLK T. WALLACE & KREBS, (tiuiaeaaur to Wallace 4 Field, ok,) ATTORyRYS-AT-LA Wf( 11-12 7:! Cleat-Meld, Pa. tosnvu a. u'atALLr. da -url w. m ci anr, MoENALLY & McCURDY, ATTOHN EYS-AT-LA W, ClearUeld, Pa. Legal b 11 ait. mi attended to promptly with) liifllity. Offinaj on Second atratt, abo Iba Firit National Hank. jan:l:7o Q. R. BARRETT, ATTORNKY AND CoiINHEIaOR AT IjAW, CI.EAKPIKI.I), PA. llarinff wig nod bif Jurlj("hip, haa rfinmad iho uraclioo of th law lo bia old office at Clear- flflj, Pa. Will attend the court of Je Sertoli and Klk oountiei when ipcciiillj retained in connection wiib ritcnt ennn!. l-.u.ii A. G. KRAMER, A T T O K N E Y - A T - L A W , Real Ketate and Collection Agent, C1.BARFIELI, PA., Will promptly attend to all legal bnilneii en truaUd to hia oara. MTOflloa ia Pie'i Opera lUw. janl'T. H. W. SMITH, ATTORNKY-AT-LAW, 7a l lrartlcld. Pa. WALTER BARRETT, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Clearfield,' Pa. OITtoa la Old Weitarn Hutal building, eirnr of Baeond and Market 9tl. noTll,oo. ISRAEL TEST, ATTOHN BY AT LAW, Cleariield, Pa. jUrOOIea In the Court Uooaa. Ojll.'e! JOHN H. FULFORD, ATTORNEY AT LAW, leurtleld. Pa. M-6 Off ea oa Matket atraat, opp. Court Home, Jan. a, IB74. JOHN L. CUTTLE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. thd Heal Ratafe Agent, Cleat-Held, Pa. Offiea oa Third atraat, bat. Cberrj A Wain tit. ffaFHtspeotfullj oflera hie if meet la aellinf ind buying landa in Claarflvld and adjoining ountiaa j and with an experienced OTar tweniv mara aa a (Drveyor, flatten bimeelf that be eaa tnder latlnraotion. Lttb. JS;M;tf, J. BLAKE WALTERS, HKAL KSTATK BROKKIt, aao DKALKB IB Haw IiOfiH ,u,l Iiuiibor, CLEARFIELD, 0!Bo. in ilraham'a R't. PA. ' 1:21.71 J. J. LINGLE, ATT Ojt N E Y - A T - LAW, 119 (hreola, t ie arfleld t o.. Pa. y:pl J. S. BARN HART, ATTORNEY AT - LAW, Belieloiite, Pa. Will praotlna in Clearflald and all of tba Court, of :ba ztn Judieiai irtirioc. neat artaia nu.in.s. and collection ol alaima nada .paelaltle.. nl'Tt DR. W. A. MEANS, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, LVTIIERSUVRU, PA. Will attend profe.alonal aalla promptly. aaglQ'70 DR. T. J. BOYER, PHYSICIAN ANDSUKOKON. OOlea on Market Street, ClearUeld, Pa. T-OBoo honrai I to 11 a. ta , and 1 lo I p. a. D R K. M. SCHEURER, IIOMiEOPATHIC PUYrilCIAN, Olfloa In revidenea on Market t. April 14, I87J. ClearUeld. Pa DR. J. P. BURCH FIELD, Late Hurgtoa of the M Regiment, Ptnoiyltania Volanteen, having returned froai the Army, ofTen hie profenioaal aerTieai to tbeeitliana of Clearflald eoanty. ffProfeFtionalralli promptly attended to, Offlie oa 8aeoad meat, foraaarlyoeciipied by Ur.Woode. apfiM-tf DR. H. B VAN VALZAH, C'l.KARKIBI.II, PRKN'A. 0 V 'l CE IN MASONIC Hl'I I-DIN (i. fir ODIea hnara Froai II lo I P. M. May WILLIAM M IIKNKY, JusTim ?Y or Pbai b ai. S.'lTe, LUMRErl CITY. Colleetlon. nada and money promptly paid arer. Arttele. of agreement and dead, a I eoa.eyeaa. aeally aiaeaiad and warranted eor reel or no aharga. Miy'l"' JAME8 H. LYTLE, la hralier'a llulldlng, Clearfield. Pa. bealer In OroeeilM, Protl.loBS VegelaMea, Fraiti, Floor, Feed, eta., ale. arim-ir HARRY KNYDEU, BARBER AND BAIBt)HE.lKR lit. T on Market 81.. oppo.Ha Ooart lloaaa. A clean towal for arary eaeb'taef. Aleo mannraetBrar of M kluda of Arllrlea In llaaiaa Hair. Clritllrld, Pa. m.j It, '7a. D. M. D0HEBTY, FAS1I10SARLE BARBER A HAIR DRtFSKR. CLKAUFIELD, PA. Ph.-p In rooaa formerly aeeapled by Kauga) Market .treat. Jalj I., Id. JOHN D. THOMPSON, Jaetioa of taa Paaea aad bVrieeaar, CnrwearTllle, Pa. t.Colleo4ieaa aaada aad moaay promptly Hirer. fehll'Tllf CLEARFIELD GEO. B. GOODLANDEfi, hopncvoi. - ' VOL. 5I-WII0LE NO. Cards. RICHARD HUGHES, JUSTICE OF Till PEACE FOB Ittcatur Townnhtp,. Oieeola Mill. P. O. All official bnilner. antrailed to him will be promptly attended to. mcli?0, '7fV FRANCIS COUTRIET, MERCHANT, frenetavllle, Clearfield County, Pa. Keep, eonatantly oa band a full aaiortmant of Jiry uooda, Hardware, urooeriea, anu areryining omally kept In a retail .tore, wnicn Will be .old, for oaib, aa cheap ai eWewhera ia tba oounty. Frenchville, June 17, 187-ly. THOMAS H. FORCEE, DBALBB IB ' UENKKAL MERCHANDISE, ;r AIIAMTON, Pa. Alaa.eltaaaira manufacturer and dealer In Pinare Timber and Rawed Lumbar ol an Binaa. -0r.l.n aolieited and all bill, promplly tiled. I'jyinj REUBEN HACKMAN. House and Sign Painter and Paper Hanger, Clearfield, Peuit'a. l-,Wlll execute lobi lo hit line promptly and In a workmanlike manner. arr4,A7 G. H. HALL, PRACTICAL PUMP MAKER, NEAR CLEARFIELD, PENN'A. fatrPompi alwoyi on hand and made to order n ihort notice, riiiee noreu on reasonauia lenna. All work warranted to render antUfaction, and delivered if deiin-d. my26:lypd E. A. BIGLER & CO., DEAI.RRI IS SQUARE TIMBER, and manulactarera of AM. KIN DM OF H II) 11MI1I-.1I, I 7'7J CLEARFIELD, PENN'A. JAS. B. GRAHAM, dealer ia Real Estate, Square Timber, Boards, BIIINQLES, LATH, A PICKETS, U 1 0 73 Clcroi l I, Fa, WARREN THORN, HOOT AND SHOE MAKER, Market at., Clearfield, Pa, . In the .hop hlcly occupied by Frank fthort, one door went of Alleghany llou.e. ASHLEY THORN, ARCHITECT, CONTRACTOR and I1I II.DKH. Plan, and Ppccifioatioti. furnlihed fr all kind, of building. All work Oral clan, ritairbmll iog a epeoially. 1'. O. addrcii, Clearni-ld, I'a. jao.17 -77 If. R. M. NEIMAN, SADDLE and HARNESS MAKER, Ruiubarger, ClearUeld Co., Pa. Ketpton hand all kindi of Harnei. Saddle, Ilridlra, and Hone Furnlabing (ioudf. Hepairlng promptly attended to. Itumbarger, Juo. 10, 177 -if. JOHN A. STAPLER, 1JAKKR, Market St., Clearfield, Vm, Frevh 11 rend, P.mk, Rolli, Pica nnd Cakeo band or made to oriW. A general aifortmcnt lat Confactionarice, FrultP and Nuta in elite tw ice Cream and Oynlen in aeaeon. Kalooa nearly oppoiile the Pott office, Pricea moderata. March lfr-'7j. JAMES MITCHELL. DR1LRR 1 Square Timber & Timber Lands, Jell'Tll CLKAHFIKLD, PA. jalt. IrMumtAY WILL gllPTLV YOI! WITH ANY ARTICLE OF MRRCHANDIKE AT THE VERY LOWEST PRICE. I'OMK AND 8EK. (B:i73j:) NEW WASHINGTON, UTAH Bl.tS AND STONH VAHI. 1 Mr a. H. K. I.IDIIII I., llaving engaged la the Marlile buiineea, deairea to Inform her frieudi and the publio that ahe baa now and will keep oon.tantly on hand a large and well lelrcled Hock of ITALIAN AND VERMONT MAKIILE. and ir nreiarcd to nirni.h to order TOUlllrJTONEri. HUX AND CRADLE TOilUS, HOMMKNTh. do. vYard on Heed itreet, near the R, K. Depot, Clnrfiolil, Pa , Jel.,7o IIvcry Stable. rtl R undcrilgned begi leare to l tor in the puh- Hp that he ( nnw niHy prepare to eccttinnio- 4.lc nil In the way of furniihing Hupgite, Siiaitiles and lUrnritt, on tlie nbortrM notice and an rriiPoneble termi. Henidenoe on l.oruit utreet, between Third and Fourth. UKO. W. OKA R1I ART. Ilaarflelil. feb. 4, l74 WHOLESALE UQU0R STORE. At At, end of the new bridg., WT CLEARFIELD, PA. TLe pniprletor of Ihia e.tablishmrnt will buy hi. liquor, direct front diltiilere. Parllo. buying from tbia bouee will ba aura to get a pure article ai a auiall margin abore co.t. Hotel kecpera can be farm. bed with liquor! on ne.Ohahle term.. Pure wine, and hrandiri dlreet from relcy'a Vinery, at Bath, New York. IIEOIillE N. COI.lU TlN. CleaiSeld. June l, 1874 tf. S. I. SNYDER, PRACTICAL WATCHMAKER AB0 tB4l.r.B IB Walolioa, Clixks and Jewelry, Omtaai'. Row, Ji.l ,rel, l.lvAf l-ll..l, PA. All kind, of repairing in my line promptly at ended to, April 23, 1871. Clearfield Nursery. EN'COURA(iK HOME INDUSTRY. fpIIK anderigned, huflng eMiMinbed a Nur- I . . I11a. .......a L.lf aaiawi klawAavwi IvirairDPIU Run lUr'niTin, ip prriiamu .w mr- aieh allkinda of PR1MT TKKK.S. (M.ndard and dwarf.) Errrgraeae, Bhrabbery, flrape Vlnan, UOnannVirj, t.HWaMal irwt-r, i.-i I w i wj , and Rarpberry Vioea. Aiao, Hiberiaa Crab Tree, gainea, and aarly aearlet Rhubarb, Ap. Ordera promptly attended to. Addratta, a. v. wiunni, eej.J - Carwenitille, Pa. ANDREW HARWICK, Market Htnet. ClearUeld. Pa.. aaBnrarTl'BaB p iibalbb ib DARNEFS, RADDLES, BRIDLKH, COLLARS, aad all kind, of HOH.St rVKKHHIIHO GOODS. . ...i, . 1. a.JJUva' .m rtru.ka.. Comb., Illn..l., Robe., ele., alwaj. oa band and fnr Bale at the lowoMea.h prleea. All kind, f repairing promptly attended lo. All bmda "f klda. taken la eieheege t'l har. aea. and repairing. All kind, nf barne.a leather vwarnei i, m. i, i"i JOHN H. FULFORD, Vt ft tit At IMSLHAXCS AOttST, ClearUeld, Pan a 'a, R.pre.-on all 111. Ieadln Tire Iniuranoe f . i u rj Ih . NMHlrt I Oa.'n - .'I0.OM.0M Royal Canadiaa Ilome, New York t.yeoming, Muney, P. Franklin, l'hilad'a.M...MnH.. Pbaraia, Hartford .......... e.noe.noti t.Tit.114 1,S0",8 .6 l.HSI.I'U I, .. Il,l Ilano.e., N.w lark ,.-.. Ilome. Col , 0. lla.lfnad . Wln.A.I PrwTldehe., wa.ningioa ..raMiikoai rffietina aa Lafaraaee aa prop erty of any kind, ahoald eall at my oliea, ea Market atrret, appo.il. tba Coart lloaaa, end aaa my Hal at eowpeoie. and ratea before lnorln. ai'iin . a vi.a., Clear.eld.Pa., 0-1, V '7 It 2,527. "THt WAUR MILL." Llrlen to the water mill All the lirelong day How the ellckiog or tile wheal Wear, the hour. away. Lanxuldly thu autumn wind Ntlra the greenwood leave. From the Held the reaper, aing, llindirig up the .h.are. i And a memory o'er my mind Aa a .pell I. cat i Tin mill will n.rer grind Wilk th. walir i hl la pait. flummer wind, reriva ao mora Leave, atrewn of ar earth and main, And the aiekle no'er ean reap Tna gathered grain again And the rippling at ream flowa on, Trannnil, deep, and ttlla- Never gliding bark agaia 'Pa the waiar mill. Truly apeak, tb. proverb old, W ith a meaning vaet: "The mill will never grind With the water that ia paal." Take the leaeon to yourself, Loving heart and true ; Oolden aaa. are fleeting 1yl Youlli ia p.aalng. loo. Btrive to miika the moal of life, Lore no happy day i Time will never briug you hack Chance, .wept away. Lear, no tender word unaaid, Love while love .hall laat Th. mill will aever grind With the water that la paat. V'nrk while yet (be daylirht ahinoa, Man of thought and will ; Never does tbo streamlet glide I'aelea. by Iho mill : Wall not till to-morrow's run Reams upon your way, All tbat you ean oal! your own Lira In this to-day. Power, intellect and beallh May not always last The mill will novar grind With Ihe water that is paal. 6'HT.AT UOMES. Tho cliirilerinir mtaiiifiits Mint cntlier about our dear Saxon word "homo" nro numcroiiH. It Miirgepui to im a tumplo ol'lovunnd trull), of penco, con solation, rind rent : tho ci'iitro of iov nnd liarniony, of nil llint ia beautilul and uesiruulu: una so wo mine vo re gard licnven as a linmc, diirurinir Irom our earthly ones only in perl'ection. Ul every renhty in tho world wo fan in our mindit form an ideal, of nono n more luiiulihil than ol homo. There Hhotild ho nil that tends to cultivate and refino taste. Hooks to invito ono to scan their contents : music to soothe and cheer; well iliiwen pictures, an artistic and harmonious Mending or eolors which quickens tho senna of tho lieautilul ; plants, sineo In cuch swell ing hud and lilosotning flower lessons ot Invo and trust may lo loiind. i bis is our local homo but, and to say, and ideal too Bcldom realized. r.very home is n happy ono until vou see beneath the roof," said a writer in the olden time, nnd grievous it is that tho peaceful looking roofs so freuuent- 1y cover disharmonies and inilillVrenco, or fathering storms. In theso uncon genial nlioiles, each member of tho household has his or her opinion on overy subject, if they are strong char acters. Hitch ono tenaciously advo cates his sido of tho question; bitter, grievini; words ensue, and coldness creeps into tho hearts, till homo be comes dreaded, and only a meeting- plnco for food and lodging, where wearily drug tho hours nnd days. Ho important nro tho seemingly little things in a homo-lift), so many arc the causes that produce theso sad results, that it is difficult to know on which to descant, or how to make tho weight of their importance) felt. Uur Domes should Do tho strong olds of our country, since in their in fluence nro tho minds ot our future citizens nnd statesmen formed, and girls nro nurtured who will raise up other homes fashioned after the models of those they havo known. f.vcry vocation in lilo requires yearn of preparation. A life work do, minds a 1 1 lo study, nut a woman whoso mission and whoso work it Is to make tho home, too oflen outers upon her duties w holly unfitted and unprepared, having given no thought to tho weight her iiifluonco will havo there. She neglects her mind, forgetting that tho impetus to improvement and culture must emanate from her. V'ho neglects her body, forgetful that good health alt.no begets good temper. Slio neg leetB her manners, forgetting that hers will leave their impress npon every in mate, while slio overlooks no fault in others. Sho descends to idlo gossip, too little mindful of n woman's homo life, nnd fogett'iii; that, its in old Romo tho I.aivs mnde tho home, so she now is tho presiding nnd conferring deity. Tho training of boys also is rarely that which will fit them to bo loving and thoughtf ul. If mothers would re nlir.o this, nnd educate their tons for husbands, nnd to be gentle men indeed, hull tho sorrow cf home life would be avoided. Wero bovs tauiht to bo courteous, kind, and nttentivo to their sisters, nnd wcrp mado to understand that they had a duty to fulfill in tho home, wo need no longer say as now, that husbands nro nlso greatly respon sible for tho too universal wretched ness. They too often address to their wives sharp and discourteous words, 'Which they forget nnd wo remem ber," a young v.'il'it sadly said to mo the other day. Jully ubcorhed in their own pursuits, oblivious to tho trials nnd needs of their wives, they offer no word of cheer to those who havo labored wearily in dull monotony all day. They give no md in tho educa tion ol children, mil deem that their sole duty lies in providing peetuiiury sup port; failing to read in tho careworn, patient face, from which tho girl-bloom lios too soon faded, silent plcadin? for a little thoughtful tenderness, a little loving aid. J ruo, they love their wives devotedly; but lovo, without Iho nameless little tender acts which it should engender, Is as thn flower bereft of its perfume; nnd, alas I too often such love drives nwny devotion Irom the grieved heart, w hile cold duty takes its place. All must realize tins need ol our country, nil must gnevo over tho'1 wrecked lives and hopes ol many households ; but to women the sorrow must bo keenest, for tho fault in creat- cst degree is theirs, theirs alone tho powor to rectily it. Let them mnko it their idon- so to fill their nn- pnintct! place, that from their abodes may cmnnnto and descend innuenccf that for revolving years shall bless other households. As our language is tho only ono which contains tho word "home," would our country were the one where tho homes exhibit tho noblest possibil ities that the word can itiggost. ' Qi'AKr.rt CtiTtNtss. A Quaker hav ing been cited as a witness in a case heforo tho Session!!, ono of tho magis trates, who had been a blacksmith, desireil to know why bo would not take off his hat. "It is a privilege," said the Quaker, "that the laws and liberties of my country indulgo people of my religious modu of thinking, in." " If 1 bad it in my power," replied tho justice, " I would havo your hat nailed to your nena. -1 inongni, sou. Obadinh, dryly, " t hat thou hadst (rivon over tho trade nf driving nnil." CLEARFIELD, HC1ESCK ON TJIE FARM. Tho mere mention of tho word sci onco or scientist appears to be obnox ious to many of our farmers, who de nounce Hciontifio ugncultiire as a veri tablo cheat and a snura, Of course, it is not to bo denied that thcro has been, nnd is at the present day, nn immense amount of charlatanry among tho self- etylod scientillo agriculturists, but the saino is Into of nil othor professions or hrnnchen ot scienco and art. J ho mod ieal profession, important as it is to tho welfare of mankind, ia overburden ed with quackory, but that does not invalidate tbo claims ol the rikilltul physician and surgeon to honorablo ro cognition by tho community. Tho greatest obstacle to tho advance of true scienco in all the learned profes sions, is the crowding of legitimate channels with charlatans, who stand iu little fear of punishment if discover ed, so that tho unlearned or even nn becilo froquontly assumo titles to which .i i r .i.. iiiey nuvu nu rigiii. But tho farmer, in A majority of in stances, has misunderstood the mean. ing of tho term science and scientific agriculture, believing it to bo some thing fur beyond the comprehension ol persons who have not boon specially trained in school or collcgo. JN'ow, genuine science, at beat, is merely com mon sense nnd observation combined, and all preparatory studies are little moro then good tools, with which a man works out problems iu alter years. Ot course a mechanio cannot do as good work with a few or poor tools as bo can with plenty of tho vory best, but ho may still be scientific; tho sumo is true with the farmer, and tho better his preparatory education, tho more rapid will be his progress; but because ho cannot go as deep in his investiga- tious as siinio others, it does not follow that no investigations should be mado. i he idea appears to havo got abroad that scienco in funning means chiefly tho analysis of soils and tho food of animals; this orror, for it certainly is one, originated from the investigations and writings'"! such men a liouesen guult, Liebig, Johnson, and contempo raneous authors, whose life moors wure mainly in that direction, and wero, in many instances, carried far beyond what was necessary lor prncticul utili ty. It is not, however, necessary for a man to be a thorough chemist, geol ogist, botanist, or a specialist in any ono brunch of science, to bo a scientific former, (jood ploughing is a scientific operation, producing both mechanical and chemical results, there being an abundant opportunity tor tho display of a high order of scientific intelligence in tho sitnplo act ol turning over tho soil. To ascertain just how deep to plough in order to produce tho best ro suits on every different kind of lurid, requires a great amount of study, and many carefully conducted experiments. Then, tho ploughing provious to put ting in a crop is often followed by the stirring of the soil among the plants, and the frequency, depth, the best time lor performing tho operation, cull lor some very close calculations, and in vestigations, which are undoubtedly of a scientillo order. In the feeding and caio of animals scientific investigations are constantly required, and although a farmer may not bo able to conduct various analyses in a chemical laboratory and determine the composition of bis timothy or do ver tiny, nnd learn which is tho richest food for his stock, he can readily ob tain tho knowledge sought by experi ments in feeding tbo two kinds sepa rately, and noting tho effect npon the animals. Hut it is scarcely necessary in these days of cheap books nnd peri, odicals lor a farmer to spend much time in practical experiments of this kind, for tho value for food ot nearly every known linage plant was long sinoe ascertained, and a man would bo vory foolish to spend his time in re peating experiments where no new discoveries are likoly to bo made. Tho groat want of tbo day is not new dis coveries In scionco portaining to agri culture, but tho general diffusion nnd application of what is already known to a comparatively small number. Thcro is not the loust need of any now forngo plant or grain, but those wo nl ruady possess should boeome better known among tho tillers of tho soil, nnd this can only bo brought about by a more careful pornsal of books and periodicals devoted to natural sciences. livery farmer should know enough of botany to enable him to distinguish tho commonly cultivated grasses and other plants from those growing wild In his uncultivated lands. When lie has learned this much, he will know 'he noxious species from tho useful, and enough of their natural habits to cnnblo him to more readily destroy tho ono and encourage tho growth of the other, than if ho remained In total ig norance of botanical science. Tho same is also truo of entomology, for it re quires no great amount ot study to learn tho difference between the com mon moths and butterflies, or to dis tinguish the bugs from beetles; and yet this little knowledgo would fre quently bo of great assistance to the farmer in enabling him to know bis frijiids from his fires among insects. Even what would generally bo termed moro "smatterings" ol science in tho branches named become valuable when applied or employed in farming ; hence the importance of ilnir accumulation, and tho carlior in life tho bettor. A". Y. llWy .Sus. . PASS VH. Nil A P. At tho last session nf tho Legisla ture a committee of which Senator Yerkes is chairman was appointed to look into tho fishery interests of tho State. This committeo wo understand has arranged with the Heading Hail way Company, which controls the Susquehanna canal, that a plan for a fish way through tho Columbia dnm, conforming to tho natural bottom of tho river, shall bo prepared in consulta tion with the engineers of tho railway. This first movement of tho committeo in dischargo of its duty is very good, and possibly may result in securing a fishway throtigli tho Columbia dnm .ht will let tho fish through. Thus fnr tho efforts to this end havo been signal failures, the shad being linablo to ascend tho rapids of tho Fish Com missioner's fishways. The ponnlo of the upper waters ol tho nusqucbauna have beon looking lor their promised shad for a long while, and mnst bo qnito tired of waiting lor them. Pro. bably they havo given tip the expecta tion of over seeing their brilliant sides flush upon tho banks of tho streams as they fall in satisfying numbers Irom the embracing seine. Wo fear that they harecauao lor their despair. It may bo, and we do not see why It enn not be, that a proper avonne can he made lor tho fish through tho Colum bia dnm ; and if this Is effected, tho upper waters of tho river will event ually be as woll supplied ai the lowor ; and yet the fiihwny will not, pcrlmps, PA., -WEDNESDAY, JUNE 27, 1877. bring tho fish to those who so long have hungered for thotn. Tho future trouble in the shad sup ply will not bo with fish ways but with the fish themselves, nnd for a reason that will keep tho fish out of tho riror oven at its mouth. X early lor several yenre shad have been growing scarcer in luuourjiguciiuiniu.aiiu iu uiseurer ino reason why is a liar more important duty of Mr. Yorkes' committee than to solvo tho problem of tho Columbia fishway, which obviously does not need to be solved it there uru shortly to bo no shad in the river below the dam. Tho marked diminution in the shad supply wo think will bo found to have just commenced, and tho signifi cance of its occurrence just after tho Susquehanna has been stocked with black bass will naturally strike the committee If they find tbo fact to be us wo understand iU 1 1 lias only been siilllciently plentiful iMbo river to af ford much sporl to the fishermen. I.nst year tor tho first timo good strings of large fish rewarded the rod. Hut lor several years tho small bass havo beon numerous enough to make sorious havoc among tho young shad and to keep millions of them from find ing their way to the ocean. The bass is a very uulivo and voracious fish nnt: io a iV'iT uuinu unu viiihvuiiib linu mill we think tho committee will bo able to abundantly satisfy itsolf upon inquiry that thoy do destroy in vast quantities tho young shad. If this is so, tho bo ginning of the ond of tho shad fishing n tho Susquehanna is imminently i,,.ni.,nn,i wuk 1 1... h.. ra..is I,; threatened. With tlie bass yearly in creasing in site and numbers and yearly cutting down tho supply of young shad going down to thu ocenn, it fol lows that tho present decrenso in tho in-coming shad will each spring become more dourly perceptible, it it be true tbat those that come back to tho river to spawn are tho same that themselves were spawned in it. Some think that this is not the source, ot our supply, but that tho maturo shad aro acciden tally guided in tlie selection of their spawning ground, ascending tbo river which they find 'fullest of" water U8 they pass up the coast. Susquehanna fishermen say the shad uro always most numerous in years when the river is highest. Should this theory bo cor rect the black buss will not du us tho dnmago we fear; but tho current of opinion is that generally tbo fish revisit tho waters nf their Infancy. Wo hnpo that the committee will look into this important matter, that if, the danger from tho bass is such ns it seems, measures may if possible bo adopted to remove it. We con better spare tho bass than tho shud, tor there is no comparison between lite quality id' tho two fishes, nor their value as food. The abundance of tho shud in their season, their size, their delicacy, nnd tho facility with which they are harvested unite to make them tbo fish of fish for poor and rich. LaneaHer Intrltijeneer. AFFECTION IX BIRD LIFE. The fidelity nnd affectionate intima cy of married bird-hie nppeora most conspicuously in pairs of tho grosbeak family and in small parrots. Here is perfect harmony of will and deed. Tho two sweethearts appear unwilling to lenvo ono another's company for a moment all their life; they do every thing together eating and drinking, bathing, and dressing of feathers, sleep ing and waking. Various degrees of affection and harmony aro discernible on closo observation. Among the small grosbeaks, pairs of which sit to gether, tho intimate relation is nevor disturbed ; oven over tbo feeding cup there is no quarreling. They stand highest in this respect among birds. Love tokens are exchanged by pressing of beoks together a veritable kissing, accompanied by loving gestures. They nre also more sociable, and oven at nesting timo more peaceable, than other birds. In the case of other gros beaks, when tho male bird Bits by tho female in tho nest, there aro various demonstrations of affection, but also slight occasional disputes, especially about feeding time. Next iu order como tho small parrots, which also np- icar almost inseparable. Tbo mulo ird fcods his companion with seeds from tho crop. This goes on quite regularly during the hutching, and un til tho young nro somewhat grown. During all this timo tho ben bird, which broods alone, never leaves tho nest bnt for a lew minutes, and tho cock shows such alToclionatu care that thu whole day liu seems to do nothing but tuke food and give it again. 1 even this loving union is marred from time lo time, oven during the hutching time, with quarrels thai even come to blows. A,'ain, the mule bird of a pair of chafllnchcs only occasionally aits on tho eggs or young, but ho watches the nest very carefully, singing lo his mate thu while, accompanies thu hen in flight, ami helps her in feeding the young. Chamber's Journal. Warning to Orii'M atkk. Ono ol thu saddest cases not only sad, but unusually tragic is thai ot Mrs. Isaac C, I'urkius, ui Chicago, thrico married, thrice divorced, nnd finally n pauper corpse, and all owner to a lovctlor tho fatal drug opium. Her last husband was Mr. lauuo C. Perkins, of Hyde Purk. rurmg all these yours slio con tinued tho use of this puralyzing sub stance. Slio sank lower and lower nnd became a hopeless slave to it. She dragged the husband down with her in her descent. This terrible habit stripped him of money and property and plunged Itiin into a life, of miser) nnd poverty. Little by little his effects havo been surrendered. Year alter year ho saw hi, wife gradually assim ilating to a thing uiinutiirul, until iho exhausted and drugged nature yielded up its life, and its spirit took its flight. What is thu result? Tho husband penniless, ruined, and half crazed, has in ud u an appeal to the authorities of Llydo Purl, for the paltry sum of 130 with which to give his wile's body a decent burial. Tho sum was given, thank, to .the genorosity of the Hoard of Trustees.. . What a full! From ro spcclubilily and happiness to opium and a pauper's grave. Hei Eaters. The mooted question as to whether toad, cat bees has boen settled by M. llrunef. a writer in Lb ... ... Nature, who assorts that, going into bis garden ono day. just before a storm, ho observed tho noes crowding into their hives. Near ono of tho hives was A toad which overy now and then rose on his Tore legs ami made a dart, with surprising quickness, towards blade of grass, lie was found to bo devouring bees which were resting on tho grass blades awaiting their chance to cuter tho hive. M. Jlrunet waited until twelve victims had been devour ed, expecting Iosco tho toad's rniacily punished with a sting, but no such re sult occurred. Tho toad was twice removed to quite distance from tho hivos. both times ha returned to tho spot in a few hour". . REPUBL 77 K OR 1 a IX OF rRAlIilES. WnY TIIKY ARK NOT F.NCROACHED I'PON 11 V UOIIDERINO WOODS. In a paper in tho idnrrimn Natural ist, I'rof. j. I). Whitney, after showing the insumctency ol tho ordinary theo ries to explain why prairies are not encroached upon by bordering woods, offers the following explanation of his own : "Let us turn nt present to the geo logical sido of tho investigntion. Tbo whole ol Now Englnnd and Now York, and a large part of Ohio and Indiana, together with Iho wbolo of Michigan and of Northern Wisconsin, constitute a region over which the northern drift phenomenn have been displayed on a grand scale. Consequently almost the wholo of this area is covered with heavy deposits of course gravel and boulder materials. Those deposits, if not nt. tho surface, are near it, and tho finer materials dopositcd on them, by alluvial nnd other ngoncies, generally brm only a tbin covoring for tlie course deposits beneath. Hut as we go south and west from the region indicated above, we find the underlying rock tho "bed rock" as tho ( 'nlifornia miners I would call it tleeply covered with , , . 10090 ' true, but we ob. sorvo nlso that theso aro qnito differ ent in character from what they aro to Iho north and cast. Wo como to a region where tho drift agencies have I ',n "7 limil in their action. Tho hulk of the superficial detritus has been formed from tho decomposition ol tbo underlying rock, and this detritus hns been little disturbed or moved from its original position. If erratic de posits exist, they are usually deeply covered with finer mnterinls derived from close at hand. A great area ex ists in Wisconsin and Minnesota over which not a single drift pebble has over been found, either nt the surfaco or at any depth benenth it. Tho strata have become chemically disaggregated and dissolved by the percolution of tho rain through them, the calcareous mat- ler hns been carried off in solution, nnd there is left behind ns a residuum tbo insoluble matter which the rock originally contained, and which, con sisting largely of silica and silicate of alumina, forms by its aggregation a silicious nnd clayey deposit ol almost itnplicable fineness. It is tins fino ma terial which makes up the bulk of the prairie soil; and as the writer con ceives, it is this fineness which is es pecially inimical lo tho growth of trees. Exactly as we see tbo desiccated lakes in the midst of forests gradually filling up with finely comminuted materials and becoming covered with a growth of grasses or sedges, which is not af terwards encroached on by trees, no matter whether tho ground becomes completely dry or whether it remains more or less swampy, so wo havo the prairies, which have certainly never at any time beon overspread with for ests, and which would always remain ns they nro, providing the climate un derwent no radical change and they wero not Interfered will, by man. it is for tho vegetable physiologist to sny why this fineness of tho soil is so un favorable to tho growth of trees; it is for tho goologist and physical geogra pher to set forth the facts which they may observo within the lino of their own professional works." EDUCA TWX AND CRIME. The subject of "convict labor " or ol the employment of prisoners, which a committeo of the Legislature is now examining, is undoubtedly very impor tant, and involves a great many ques tions on tho solution of which tho most experienced students of penology uro not at uli ngreed. Tho inquiry lias, however, already suggested other subjects of far moro general interest than that of tho employment of prison ers, and subjects which do not require for their discussion tho training of a specialist, Mr. Kichard Yuux, in nn experience of many years in tbo man agement of tho Kastern l'cnitontinry mid in tlie careful study of penal sys tems, bus gullied a knowledgo which entitles him to speak as with authority, and we have no doubt that his testi mony heloro the Legislative committeo was as Intelligent and well considered ns anything thu committee is likely, to hear. Vol there is just ono point in nil his long address which the general publio will notice and understand, and which has already attracted moro at tention than would be betdowod upon years discussion ot convict labor. 1 implore you, gentlemen ot tho Jeg i8lutare," said Mr. Vaux, "to look at our statistics, they show that our prison is occupied lo a very great ex tent by iinnpprcntieed convicts. . Ol all the young men under tw enty live yearn of ago admitted to the prison seventy five per cent, aro wilhout a trade and ninety per cent, uro educated. Tho Stute hns douu so much for intelligent labor and nothing for trade education, Something should bo dono to make trade education us dignified at intelli gent labor." W hat a terrible satire upon our boast ed lreo school system is convoyed in this word "educated I". Nine-tenths nf thu young criminals sunt to tho pcnilentittry have enjoyed its advan tages, but three fourths of them havo never learned to do an honest stroke of work, i Surely there must he some, thing very wrung about a system which thus recruits thu great army ol idlers anil criminals, nnd it is not won derful that many thoughtful men be lieve, though they scarcely dure to speak it aloud, that our publio schools uro an evil rather than a good. Nor is tho fault in any wise obsouro. Our public schools accomplish iitllo because ihey attempt too much and becaunu what they do attempt 'is not what a bread common sense would suggest. Wo uru nil so wise now-a-dnys, or so bent upon becoming wiso, that we have no lime to bo hunest or useful. And our children must bo wisor still, nnd learned in all Iho mysteries of modern science. They must hnvo their poor little brains crammed lull of all kinds of impossible knowledgo, of names and dales and numbers and unintelligible rules, till there is absolutely no room left lo hold any of the simple truths ot lienor and duty and morality which lormer gonurutiuiis deemed more un I porttmt that nil tho learning of tbo if . i.- n'. . i..,.. i t.:..i. looks. They are taught to read, w hicb i, well, but nobody thinks of teaching them bow or what to rend, and the use Ihey make of their knowledge is to sliid; dime novclsand flash newspapers. They are taught tovmululoono another in the repetition of unmeaning words, hut nobody thinks of inoulcutiiig in thorn habits ofself coutrol,trulbfuliiess, modesty, industry, sobriety there is no time to attend to those things. There is just ono thing that i, ever held before, thcin tmt one man is ns good as another, if not a little better, and that every boy among them may expect to becomo President of the United States and ever' girl the richest lady in the Intnl. Tho result is that they leave school utterly ignorant ol all that it is most essential for thorn to know, and with just sufficient smatter ing of so-called knowledge to destroy forever their usefulness in the state of lifb to which they bavo boen called Every obsorvaut reader knows that wo ao not miBrcnrcscnt the practical working, in four cases out of fivo, of our existing common school system It is no wonder that it furnishes crim inula. If wo bavo not given these boys and girls an idea that labor is some thing beneath tliCm, at least wo have done nothing to toach them to work. And out side of tho schools there is no provision for their learning anything. A umucu number ol boys are allowed to Pick tip, as best they can. some su pcrficial knowledge of a trade and im- mediately to assume the airs of accom plished workman, but skilled lubor, in Iho sense in which our fathers under stood it, is nearly extinct among tho American born, and nobody attempt. anything to revive it. As lor our girls, thoy come out of school not only whol ly ignorunt of every kind ot domestic industry, but with an actual distaste, if not a contempt, for it, and fit lor nothing but to read flash novels and wait for oomobody to come and marry them. If we maintained those schools on purpose to instruct our youth in idleness we could not succed better. And idleness is tho parent of crimo. It is necessary to rccognizo existing evils before wo begin to talk about rem edies. In this case the evils are very great and aro year by year increasing ; thu remody is not a simple ono nor easily applied, but a remedy thcro must bo. It is to be sought first of all in checking the expansion ol what we call our educational system and bring ing the public schools back to the sim ple and solid work which "common" Bchools ought to do. Whether indus trial training enn be grafted upon them, or what provision can best be made for it, is too elaborate a problem to cuter into here, but that thu welfare of society, which is the one purpose of our public schools, demands something be yond what they now accomplish, will not bo disputed by any intelligent ob scrvor. i'liilaililpUia Timet. , II A PI' Y iaSllA MIS'. Thcro is no rulu which philosophers can devise, says Iho London ijiectntor, lor choosing either husbands or wives wisely that has very much effect, for j the young do not trust tho old upon that subject, nnd choico lor women, especially, is by no means so fife ns wo all affect to believe. Not one wo man in fifty, unless she is for some reason such as fortune, rank, or beau tya great "catch," has anything like a real power ot selection nmnng ad mirers and oven when she has she often gives itaway, in obedience loa passing, possibly sensible, possible blundering f ancy that she has found an ideal. Hut wo should have said there wero two broad rules still worth teaching, bo causo they had some chanco of being believed, and they wero tboso: Let tho woman's first requisite bo a man whose home will be to him a rest, and tho man's first object bo a woman who can make homo restful. It is tho man with many interests, with en grossing occupations, with plenty of people to fight, with a struggle to maintain against tho world, who is tho really domestic man, in tho wife's sense, who enjoys home, who is tempt ed to mnko a friend of Ins wife, who relishes prattle, who feels in tbo small circle whore nobody is above bim, and nobody unsympathetic with him, as if ho wore in a heaven ot ensound repar ation. The drawback of homo lire, ils contained possibilities of insipidity, sameness and consequent weariness, is never present to such a man. lie is no more bored with homo than wilh sleep, llo no moro tires of his wife than of his own happier moods. He is no more plagued with his children than with bis own lighter thoughts. The worry and the snmeness and tho weariness arc all outside, and home no moro insipid than iis berth to a Bailor or his tent lo a soldier on active ser vice, lie gels from tho homo just tbo change, the lihp, tho pleasant stimulus which tho idlo man receives from the society ho happens to enjoy. Thero is not much champagne in life, anyhow, but for the active limn mnst of the lit tle is nt homo. Rural Home. HOW RICH MEN JlEdlX LIFE. Jt must bo Important to rcmcinocr, or il would not bo so seriously asserted, Unit Cornelius Ynnderbilt began litis with nn old pirogue, running between Slulen Island and New York city, cur rying garden stuff to tbo market. With S2,0(K orfJIl.OOO raised from this source, he entered stendily upon increasing enterprises, until he had nmnssed the enormous sum of f ."i0,0(W,000 to (SO, OUO.llllft. A. T. Stewart first bought a few luce, at anetion.ond opened his way to success in a dingy Iitllo shop on Broadway, New Y ork, near tho sito of tho whole sale establishment. Years of rigid honesty, shrewd management, and wisdom in things both great and small, made him tho monumental merchant of tho nineteenth century. Daniel Drew, in bis early life, was a catllo driver at Ibo munificent sum of seventy fivo cents a day, but drove liimscll into nn estate valued ut from SM.OOO.OIIO to :i0,00n,u(l0, nnd then lost it. (ieorgo Law, nt 45 years of age, was a common day Inboref on tho docks, and nt present counts his fortune nt something like f) 10,000,000. , lEobort L. and Alexander .Stuart the sugar, refiners, in their boyhood, sold molasses candy which their widowed mother had made, nt a cent a stick, and to-dny they are worth probably 5,000,000 to I'll.OOO.OOO npioce. Marshall O. Huberts is tho possessor of 1,000,000 or fi.OHO.OlRI ; nnd yet until lie wns $5 he did not have Find ho could cnll his own, II. H. Cloflliri, the eminent dry goods merchant, worth, it Is estimated, 10, 000,000, 115,000,000, or 20,0110,000, commenced the world with nothing but energy, determination, and hope. Study. To stndy successfully, tho body must be healthy, tho mind at ease, and timo managed with great economy. Persons who study many hours in the day should perhaps have two sepnrato pursuits going on at the sama time one for one part of the day, and tho othor lor the other; and these of as opposite a nature as possible, that tho Blind may bo retreshed by change, and all the bad effects of lassitude avoided. Thcro is ono pieco of advico In n life of study which wo think no one will object lo, and that is, every now and then to bo completely idle ; to do nothing at all ; indued, this part ol a life of study is commonly considered as so decidedly superior to the rest. that It has almost obtained an exclusive preference over those other pnrta ol the system, with which we wish to see It connected. CAN, TEMS-$2 per annnn in Advance NEW SERIES-VOL. 18, NO. 2(5 THE PL A G VE IX THE EAST ERN WAR. Tho unxiety of .Europe concerning iho complications ot tho lurco-Kussiun campaign is likely to be Increased by tho entrance in the field of battle of two unexpected hostile forces, inimical to both sides in tho conflict, and threat ening, moreover, to carry devastation into neutral territories. Cholera and plaguo, Irom their recruiting stations in India and Mesopotamia, are on the march, and under the fostering condi tions of .war it is impossible to i'orotoll the limits ot their invasion. Last year cnoiern was on us route through. 1'ersia townrd the linssian possessions on the Caspian, and early in the present Bpring grave apprehensions wore aroused as to tho virulence and rapid diffusion ol the epidemic. Within a few weeks sev eral outbreaks have been reported ono at Akyab killing twenty-flvo per cent, oi llio r,u ropes n population in thirty houra, and uuw foci of infection will doubtless bo multiplied. On tho other bund, plague, which has been gradually extending its ravages for Bomo years past, had, oven before Iho commencement of actual hostilities, spread to tho regions north of Bagdad wilh alarming speed. I'nder those circumstances tho war now in progress not only threatens disaster to tho com bnlants themselves, but menaces all Europo with a visitulion of pestilences which no precautions may bo able to avert. Tho part played by disease in previ- ous conflicts belween Jiusaia and Tur key lias been so terrible that these premonitions cannot full to bo watched with extreme concern on both sides. In tho campaigns of 1828 and 1829, which rcsul'.ed in tho treaty of Adrian oplo, tho victorious Russian army was utmost literally destroyed by the plague which broke out in tho nrmy ol Mar- shul Diebitseli soon after it entered tlie principalities. In tho month of Octo ber, 1828, alone, 20,000 Hussinn Bick wero received in the Roumanian hos pitals, w ithout counting tho field hos pitals ; nnd iu February, 129, one out of ovory four liussiun soldiers who w ere tufecn sick died. During tho ten months from May, 1H28, to February, 12y, there were no less than 210,108 men borne on the Hussian sick list, so Unit on Count Yon Moltko's estimate of the whole liussiun lbrco, non-com-baluuts included, ut 100,000 men, every mun had, on an average, been twice in the hospital, nnd Count Von Moltko estimates that this first campaign cost thu Russians nearly one hull of their actual effective force. During the sec- ond campaign of 1820 tho same high authority reckons the loss inflicted by disenso on the Russians at UO.OOO men. The Sultan and the foreign envoys at Constantinople wore kept in complete ignorance ot tho learlul state ot the bostilo army ; and as their own was ravaged, though much less terribly, by tho sume influences, tbo Turks actu ally made a humiliating peace with Diebitseli when bo had no loss than 20,00(1 effective bayonets nt tho fort of tho Balkans, and, had the truth been known, might have been compelled to surrender at discretion. Not more than 15,000 liueian combatants return ed Irom tho crossing of tho Halkans and rccrosscd tho Pruth. Thcso aro evil memories under tho shadow of which this new war begins. Nnw York IVorhl. SCIENCE AND CREDULITY. The present age. wo suppose, prides itself on being scientific, if it is any thing. Tho achievements of civil en gineering, tho subtle problem of chemi cal nnnlysis extended to tho furthest limits ot stellar space, and a hundred other applications of scienco, mark tho times we live in. Tho i'acl cannot bo disputed ; yet there are other facts equally well attested, which are not quilo so flattering, nnd which servo to show that the scientific habit of looking at things is by no means very widely ditfusrtl. How is it that tho vagaries of tablo turning found so many believ ers ? When Faraday producod an ap paratus to demonstrate its fallacy, how many converts did ho mnko ? Look at Iho tens of thousands of people in America who credit a lortiine-teller ; who would as soon doubt the influence of iho moon on the weather as their own existence. No; thcro nro many scientific men in tho world, but the mass of our people is not scientific. It is even niicstionuhlewhoLherthesnr.nH ol knowledge could ever mnko itBO. It becomes all iho moro important that cveryono who has tho opportunity should cultivnto, as far ns he can, tho seientifle temper of mind ; and ho will do well to bogin with a respectable ob servance ol Iho rules ol evidence. lttoN of 'A NTigriTY. Tho oldest pieces ot iron (wrougbt iron) now known aro probably tho sickle-blade loiind by Jielzoni under the base of a sphinx in Kernae, near Thebes; the Made lound by Colonel Vyse imbedded in the masonry ol the Grent Pyramid, the portion ot a crosscut snw exhumed nUNnnrod by iur. J.ayard, allot which aro now in tho British Museum. A wrought bar of Damascus steel wns presented by King Porus to Alexander the limit, and tho razor steel of Chi na for many centuries has surpassed all European steel in temper and du rability ol edge. 1 he Hindoos appear to havo inndo wrought iron directly from the ore, without passing it through tbo furnace; from tune immemorial, anil elaborately wrought masses of iron nro still found in India, which date from tho early centuries of Iho Chris tian era. Another Pi.oi.oii. A young cler gyman, who is a successful pastor, was telling a retiring missionary that he entered collego and the theological seminary with the intention of becom ing a missionary, when the veteran broke out wilh: "Ah! you turned. Inielt alter putting your hand to the plough r "Mo, wns the answer; "1 just took another plough."" Honesty. livery man likes hones ty in ono way or another. This man likes to see it in another, enjoying the alght of It as that of a costly luxury which ho cannot Bfloru to indulge in ; while that man, wilier and truer, hav ing lost all else, hugs il as his priceless fori line, and gloats over It as bis secret and sufficing treasure. Nothing undermines one's faith in a man's liberality to tbo church ao much aitosee him slick, his hands down deep llito bis pockets n, tho contribu tion box is traveling Ins way, look as tonished, and then remark to his next neighbor: "I've got on my other pants." llioiiTioi's Vinueance. Home one having urged Tasso to avenge himself upon a man who nnd done liim many injuries, he Bairl, "I wish to take from him neither his property nor his life, nor his honor, but only bis ill will to wards me." MVCJI IN LITTLE. Tho lurost remedy against scandal ia to live it down. Love tboso who advlso, but not thoso who praise you. One ungrateful man does an injury to all who aro wretched. Frowns blight young children as frosty night, blight young plants. Wo believe, indeed, that It is more laudable to suffer great misfortnnes than to do great things. Yo will listen to any one's convio- '1-t.e hf ArnV h-awaet VDlie f'.Mt.lo tn .-.. a T " as not her death nuite snddon?" said a condoling triced to a bereaved widower. " Well, yes, rather, for hor." A bibulous old Frenchman said tho reason. ho eouldu't drink water was becuuse it tastes so ol sinners since the flood. It was a Connecticut editor who wrote, "Is there a balm in (iilead ?" and read next day, "Is there a barn in tiuili'ord?" Now they aro fighting over the woman-preacher question again. Aa if Aaron was any hotter than Uur, in the prioslhood. Lady (to waiter)" Don't put that ico into the goblot with your fingers." Waiter " Lor' ma'am, 1 don't mind ; my bands aro very warm." It is pleasant to shako hands with a girl whoso fingers aro covered with diamonds, for you feci tbat you have a fortune within your vory grasp. The labor of tho body relievos us from the fatigues of the mind ; and this it is which tormg the happiness of tho poor. - .-...,. , . What this country need,, says one oi our town ladies, is a religion which will make a man feel that it is just as cold for bis wife to get up ana make a fire as it is for himself. An Irish housemaid boasting ot hor industrious hnbils, said that she arose at four, pnt on tho kettle, pre pared the breakfast, and made all tho beds before any one in the house was up. " Plenty of milk in your cans this morning ? " a customer asked of tbo milkman the other morning. And the milkman nodded gravely, as with a wink in his eye, be replied : " Y'es, chalk full." At the bottom overy religion is nnti Cbrislian which makes the form tho tb ing, tho letter the substance. Such a materialistic religion in order to bo at all consistent, ought to maintain a muteriul infallibility. A gentleman bad occasion'to cor rect his daughter, aged four years. Alterit wasoverandsbo had satawbile, sho went to her mother and inquired, " Don't you think it would do Papa good to go out doors ? " "O, yes," said an old lady, "tho modorn cook-stove is a great invention; and when my boy James gets through his studies iu practical engineering, so be can como bomo and rnn.it, I'll buy ono of 'cm, but not afore," The conversation turns upon the fastidiousness of tbo times. "Why," 8uys a member, " they'll soon say mar riago is Improper." " No, no," replies Douglas Jerrold, " they'll always con sider mnrringe good breeding." A llhodo Island mnn has written a locturo, entitled "Whom Shall 1 Marry?" It is a fine work; but, so fur as 1 am able to sco, holds to tbo old opinion tbat after all thcro is nothing bolter than a woman for a mnn to marry. True religion is always mild, pro pitious, humble ; plays not the truant, plants no faith in blood nor bears de struction on her chariot-wheels ; but stoops to polish, succor and redress, and builds her grandeur on the publio good. When, in 1854, Jerrold proposed to visit Venice, the Austrian Kaiser for bade. " We havo ordera not to admit you inlo any part of the Austrian Em pire," said the official to whom Jerrold applied for a passport. " That shows your weakness, not my strength," said the applicant. "John," inquired a dominie of a hopeful pupil, " what is a nailer?" "A man who makes nails." "Very good. Now, what is a tailor?" "One who makes tails," was the equally quick reply. "Oh, you blockhead I" said the dominie, biting his lips; "A man who makes tails ! did you ever I " " To bo sure," qnoth hopoful, "if the tailor didn't put tail to tho coaU be made, tbey would all be jackets." "Kb? ah ! well, to be sure ! 1 didn't think of that." All men, especially thoso who aro young, should be urged to bo positive in their belief. Base not your faith on ignorance, but on an intimate acquaint ance with tho inspired volume. Ho diligent students of the Word. Skep ticism has two sources in our day an overweoning prido ot intellect, which disdains lo sit ns an bumblo learner at the feet of (I ml ; and superficial knowl edgo of tho Scripture. These are the two fountains of bitterness from which flow waters that quench no thirst, and drinking which you will imbibe fever and delirium. Thero aro few men who would pass through a gold mine, having full permission to carry away wilh them iho very choicest specimens of its choicest treasures, who would not make good uso of such an opportunity. All along tho highway of life, God is set ting beloro each traveler opportunities to be nnd to do, which aro far moro valuable than the richest treasures ol gold or gemswhich earth ofl'ors. Theso opportunities are so many open doors which lead to the treasure house of God, prepared for all who seek, nntl offered to nil w ho ask. A long, lenn, lnntcrn-jnwed, lop cared chap, with a slouch hat and a squeaking voice, entered a saloon and said : "Gentlemen, how mnnyot you will drink at my expense?" " I will ! " was repeated by tho crowd in chorus. " This proves to you, gentlemen," con tinued ho, putting down a nickel for his own beer, "how little ran bo de pended on first expressions. 'ou love mo now, filled with the anticipation ol a good square drink. Y'our anticipa tions will be blasted, and thon you will linlo me. Let this be a great moral lesson to you." To reach backward and try lo take what time has carried forever away from ns this it well, becanso it shows that a dreadful dream has bro ken ; but to reach lorward, and, with a penitent, believing heart, seize upon that which every boiiI may surely grasp this is infinitely better, because it Indicates the end of all droatr., and the beginning of life. Now, having done this, no soul need mourn over what is lost, because tho timo for such mourning has gone by ; lot it rather go abont the Master's work, conscious only of tho riches that it ha received and shall receive forevcrmoro. A sick otllccr wont to a mineral spring in Germany for the benefit of his health, but the hotel-keepers re fused to admit bim lest he should die in tho houao. At tba last hotel a gen tleman came forward, and said : "This ofllcer is my near relative. Ho may hav my bed, and I will sleep on the sofa." The landlord consented, and the half fainting man was carried to th gentleman's room. When he bad rested a Iitllo, hi first question was : "May I ask your name, my kind friend? llow are yo related to m ? " "Thro oar Lord Jesus Christ for 1 learned Irom him that niy neighbor t my brother."