, TUR CLEARFIELD REPCBLICAIV CLRARFIBLD, PA. HTAH1.IRHBO III lltT itid lirirril Circulation of any MewBpapvr 1h North Central Pennsylvania. Tonus of Subscription, If uiJ tdrwiet, or wlthia I montha....t2 OO tf ii ntl alter 3 and before (l nonthe 9 5) If i alter the expiration of 6 noatki... 3 oo Rates ol Advertising, Traniient adrertlMmeata, per fquareof lOHoHor .mb, 8 timea orlcia $ Oo r or each aabaequcnt IneertloiT 60 Vlininlitratore' and Exeeutort' notioee t AO Anrtitora nnticea M, f &o Cniitmna and Katrera 1 f, IMMolatlnn notice! , Aft prnfaa atonal Cardi, I Itaei or leil,l year..... I 00 Local notleea, per lino SO YEARLY ADVERTISEMENTS. 1 itiuare ..$8 00 oo1ama.. $51 AO 2 i4urfl ......14 00 ft oolumn.. 70 00 S ituri 30 00 I I oolomn ISO 00 O. D. GOODLANDER, Publtabcr. awjiers Cards. jY w. smite, , ATTORNEY-AT-LA W, t I I 7S Clearfield, Pa. J J. LIXGLK, A T T O R N E Y - A T - LAW, . 1:18 . PhUlpaborg, Centra Co., Pa.,jrijpa OLAN1) D.SWOOPK, ATTOKNKY AT LAVT, Curwen.Tille, Clearfield coanty, P.. net. , '71-if. QSCAK MITCHELL, ATT0R.NEV AI LAW, CLEARFIELD, PA Srofllua Id tho Open lino... oot, 'lU-lf. l R. Ii W. BAUKETT, Attorneys and Counselors at Law, CLEARFIELD, PA. Jeauary lO, 1618. pKAEL TEST, ATTORN RY AT LAW, Clearfield, Pa. i14)rOffl(. odi door east of Shaw Iloase. 7"M. M. McCULLOUGTT, ATTOKNKY AT LAW, CLKARFIRLD, PA. :fTi.w in Mnsonie building, Second lirwt, ap ,.,.lte tii. Court House. Je2,'7ttf. C. AiiNOLD, LAW & COLLECTION OFFICB, Cl'KWENSVIl.LK, t-M Cleernold found. Penn'e. 7Jy g T. BKOCKBAXK, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CLEARFIELD, PA. olliee in Oprre House, ap SS.-ly gMlTH V. WILSON, tllloiHry-ul-Lair, CLEARFIELD, PENN'A. JNrOIDcf in tb. Masunlo Building, over the Couuty National Il.uk. uiur24 SO. U 1.1 1AM A. WALt AI'R. HARRT r. WALLAI.R. BAVID 1.. RRRBS. JUIR W. WRISLRr. UfALLACE KREI1S, I T (Smoessors to Wallace k Fielding,) A TTO UN E Y S-AT-L A W, jAil'TT ClearfleM, Pa. I F. snydeh, ' J a ATTOKNKY AT LAW, CLEARFIELD, PA. haii-e aver tin County N.tloal BaiiIT. June , 'fstf. IH'.S. 11. Wl'RRAr. CTRt'i 'inOR. JUilllAY A GORDON, ATTORNBYS AT LAW, CLSAKFIELD, FA. i"Offlse a Pii'l Open Hour., seeond door. L1ASI A. IIAGERTY, oi'KICR over T. A. Klerk d. Co.'s (tore, CLEARFIELD, PENN'A jCWill ahead to all U1 business with pruiuitDcM Bd ad.lil. frb 1 1,'00-tf. ! B. H'BIALLT. DAKIKL W. M'CI Bt-T. oEMALLV & McCUKDY ATTORN KYS-AT-LAW, l learlleld. Pa. Left.l baaln.it atuod.d to proanptl witbj j.l.lit. OtBoa a Boooad atraH, abov tb. First N'atioaal Baub. Jn:l:7 y q. k;umkr, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Rl EUI and Cotloetioa Agent, ll.BAKt'IULO, PA,, Will promptly tttenil to all leg) buiinoit oa trualed tn bii or. JUrOffico ia Pie'i Ojiera Hubio. . Jnl '76. JOUN L. CUTTLE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Real tUUia Ageut, ClBrfltld. Pa. OiTiot ob Third atroot, bol.Cborry A Walont, sxtt-hoapootfally offon fall rrieoita lliag and buying Uodt ta Oltarflold and arljolBiBg oiuatiot t Bal with aa iporitnooof ovoriwoBiT Tara m a arroyor, natun blaiiolf that B eaa rio4r iailifaaHoi. Vob. U:Uitt, ghiisldniia' Cards. U K. M. SCUKURER, D IIOMdOPATHIO PIIY8IC1AN, Offl. Id raridcaea oa First si April Mr 1171. Clrarrld, Pa. Jyt W. A. MEANS, IMIY8ICIAN A SURGEOaV, Dt'BOIS CITY, PA. Will attand profai.ional aalls proaiptl J. au10'7R Yy. T. J. BOY EH, L'UYSICIAN AN D Si) KG RON, Offlct ob Market Street, Cltarflrld, Pa. Office hourt: I to IS a. n., and 1 to 8 p. JJR. J. KAY WRIGLKY, nOMOlPATUIO PIIVSIC1AN, adjuialnf tba nil'leura af Jamar Wri(F, Kiii., oa theiiad St, Clsaro.ld, Pa. JIJll,'7S If. Q . JENKINS, M. D., 1' J I Y S 1 C I A aN A K D S V R G E O IS , CI'RWKNSVILI.E, PA., O0iri at rrsidraea, aeraar of Rt.t. and Plaa "r..u J.n tik, 1981. If. I)' I!. II. B. VAX VAI.ZAII, i CI.KARIIKI.n, PKNN'A. OI'FU'K t.N RE-"II)KX(.'E, roRNKR OF FIRST I AND I'IMg CTRKKTK. A- OBr. boars- Froai II la I P. at. Mar it, mil. yi J. P. BUIiCii FIELD, Bartaoaof lb. lid E.f lai.al, PtaBtylrante Volaauan, havtag rataraad tnm lha Am, ol.rt bis profaaai.aal larrlaas I. tba.ltls.as f Ci.art.lj aoaatjl. V'I'rof.fti.aalaalla proopllF attaadod to. ' i. H.0.a su.ai, f.morl;Mnpl.d bt '' Wd. ar4,'U.tl B. WINSLOVY, . PH YSHUN HUBOEOD, CImiI.IJ, P.aa'a. Tks Dt ba.lag rawatlt leaabMl la CUari.U, bia miaa, I. ,a. m ( Ibll ataialip. 0M a, Krf auau. kaaldaaaa InM ' Usata CLEARFIELD GEO. B. Q00DLANDEE, Editor VOL. 55-WHOLE NO. Cards. 1 OH PKINTINO OF EVERY DKSOMP f tnn amttlv iMotad .1 ibis aDIm TimTlCES' dk CUNHTARLEH' FEE Wa baaa prlatad a Urr. aamlnr of tba raa mbb, ana will aa tba rao.ipt or twanty. Dm Mats, mall a Anna to any aldr.u. wis WILLIAM M UENKV. Justicic or Tai Pbacb and Hcbitbnib, LUMBER CITY. CotlMtiona made and aioney prompt It paid over. Artiolta of af;rtDeDt anrt deed of ouBVoyanoo aeatly eiaoalcd and vamtnlpd oor reot or bo ohr(s. 21;y'S JOHN D. THOMPSON, Joitloe of the Peaae and ScriveDcr, CurwcuavHIe, Pa. ft.Collettoni aiailo and mooev promptly paid over. tebmitf HENRY BRFTH," (ulTRBn P. 0.) JUSTICE OF THE PEACE FOR BULL TOWNSHIP. llty t, I878.lv JAMES MITCHELL, paaLka la Square Timber & Timber Lands, Jall'TJ CLKARFIRLD, PA. V. I10YT, Land Surveyor and Civil Euginee r PBILIPSBURO, PA. fiGAl builnrss will He attend. ! to promptly, Deo. 15, IHSO-lv. REUBEN HACKMAN, House and Sign Painter and Paper Hanger, Clearfield, Penu'a. fea.Will aieenta Jobs la his line promptly and la a worltuanlik. msnner. Rpr4,n7 IJRANK FIELDING . AND WILLIAM I). 111GLF.R, .iTToit.rf:ifi-jT-i..i ir, CLEARFIELD, PA. No. 17tb, m if. . J F. McKEN KICK, DISTRICT ATTORNEY, CLEARFIELD, PA. All Ufil business entrusted to bis eart will re eoive pri'mpt attention. 4rQffioe in the Court House. AUU,I8TS-I)-. JOUN A. STADLKK, BAKER, H.tk.t ft., Claarleld, Pa. Fre.b Bread, Rusk, Rolls. Pies and Cakes oa hand or made ta order. A general assortment of Confectioneries, Fruits aad Nuts in stock. lee IreADn and Oysters In eeeson. balonn nearly oppoolte the Poslomoa. Prioes moderate. M.reh la. 'TV WEAVER &, BETTS, tR At KM 1M Real Estate, Square Timber, Saw Legs, AND LUMBER OP ALL KINDS. M-triiOrm on fteeond etreat, ia rear oT tor reoiu of lieorge W rarer A Co. jauV, '78-tf. RICHARD HUGHES, JUSTICE OF TUB PEACE FOB iHcutur Totmtihip, Oateola Mllli P. O, All official buiinoM antra it ed to bin will be promptly attended to. enohlV, '71. HARKY 8NYDKR, BARBER AND HAIRDRESSER. Bbop on Market St., oppodtt Court Honaa. A clean towel for avery oup toner. Alio dealer ia Uvat Itranda of Tobarev and Clgara. OUarAatd Pa. ma 10. 'Ts. JAMES H. TURNER, JUSTICE OF TUB PEACE, Wallaretou, Pa JS0Ti1e hat prepared bimaelf with nil tbe neeeatary blank for mi under tht Pen, cm aad Bonnty lawa, ai well aa blank Cecili, etc. AH legal anattera entraated to bia eare will recelvt prompt attentioa. May Tth, IBTV-tf. ANDREW HARWICK, Market Htreet. Cleardeld. Pa., M FACTO B SB ARB BBALBB IH Harness, Bridles Saddles, Collar, and JJorse-Furnishing Goods. fJr-KW klBdaof repairing promptly attended to. Haddlara' Hardware, Horee Uraibt, Corrj Uomtia, Ao., alwaya an hand anrt for eala at the luweatoaah price. (March IV, 1079. Q. H. HALL, PRACTICAL PUMP MAKER, HEAR CLEARFIELD, PENN'A. 4TPumpa always qi, hand and aiado to order en abort notice. Ptpaa bored on rtaeonable tanaa All work warranted to render eat ta faction, aad delivered if dealred. Biyl6:lypd fjlrery iStnblc. rHR anderiigned bega leave to tntorwi thepab X Ho that ha ia sow fully prepar t arcommo- late all la tne way of larnliBing ll.iea, Huggtea, tladdlea and Harneii, on the ehorteit notice and an reaaonahle tern a. Kaaidenoe on Locuit atraet, aaiweea ibird ana roarto. (fKO, W (JKAHIMRT. lUarlleld. Feb. 4, U74. THOMAS H. FORCEE, PIALBB IB GENERAL MERCHANDISE, CwRAHAMTOfV, Pa. Alao.eitenilrt aanufaotarar and dealer la Bqoare Timber aad ttawed Lumber of all klnda. ifOrdera aolioited and all bill prompt! ailed. Ijyf 1 S. I. SNYDER, DD A CTJP A I W1TPIIU A V WD jWatchos, Clock nd Jowolry, aVataai't Ana, Mmrhtl ArM, ' I l.K.AHFItLU, PA. All hinds af rapalrlni la at line' promptly at ended ta. Jaa. I.I, l7. VtrarUtld Inntrantt .fr""i. CARROLL L. iinftLI. KM1HK A VIIHH.E, r-nf, Repraaaattba fallowtnf and etbar arsl-elasi Ca'l Compaaioa. Assats. Lir.nool London A alobe 0. a. Br.$4.aul. Lyeoailaf oa seolael Aeasb plans.... b..oe,tiia Pbe.aia.of Hertford, Can t lit ! Insaranoe Co. af North Am.ria ,4:tt.ftT4 Nonb Britl.b A Mmaatlle U.(. Br. I.7KI.RU Keotllsk C.ai..r.il U. B. Braeeb..,. 7,He Waiartowa 7.."ls Trarelar, (Life A A ia.ll 4,i.4H Omoe oa Mubat HI., aip. C.rt Hoan, Ckar leid. P.. Jaao I, '7t lf. West End Drug Store, mmjt. IN ORAUAM'fl ROW, u (Halfway belweoa Uoeaop'sandFlaeh's store, J CLIaRFIKLD, pa. TO I aadersled bae epaaad ap a bras; Itere. wltb a fall eepply af perfeotly para Bad lrs.ll trars, Idedletaee, Cbrmleels aad Totlal Amelee. Tbeea ttratrs baea baasi ..laeiad wlih (reel sere aad are gaaraalaMl ia be aarfootly pera aad reliable. I wul teaaiy araoa.l attea. tiiia be tbU aopartaeesat, oad will abMrfall, aire aay ad.iea aaa latemeiiea ta reward ba medteiaea bee af akaria. BR. V J. BUVKB. Claariala. Pa, tea. 1, Ilee-it & Proprietor. 2,705. THE OLD YEAR AND THE NEW, BT ALI.KH W. kOafUKRAXa. Another year baa baa gone b?unj rticall; Loat in tbe great ooan of the iaat ; Aa from lha skr (ha tint now-flakea fall Aad dliappoar 1b depth of ooeaa vast. Another page In tlie great book of life We'te written In tbe fear that bow la gone; Tbera ii oar reeord ia the dallj at rife. Our Uiurei aianr, our trinu.hs woo. We turn In aorruw from the aln-itainej pae To look upon an uf bar pge dtirrit(en yet ; With h ii b rnolve we nil r.ur fj'jwsra rngagv T write a reeord we will not rrgret. W e'll writ a pi'irer ani (llrloar oree 1 Mnre lo?e t" Him on high aad all below We'll writ oar better tnmicbt tod nobler deed, Aa tltoNew Voir aguUeo raoomntiouuie and go, And thankful for tbe mrrolee of the pat, Trutiing fur what the future hat in itore ; Thus wa will gather treaaura that will lait When to ourlirea tlie. New Year oornen no more. i'BBFiKLD. I'a. Januarl lit, last. THE TERRIBLE YEAR AT UAXD. THE END OF THE WORLD TO COME IN EIGHTEEN HUNDRED AND EKIHTT ONE MOTHER BniPTON'S I'ROI'nECr 05IEN8 AND EXPLANATION" OF THEIR FALLACV. Tb. world to an end shell eome In eighteen hundred and eighty-one. Molhae Skiptom'l J'topktcj. It would bo diflicull to duKcribo all llio BiniHtcr predictions that have, aa by common ixmn-nt, bucDoonounlritluii uiion tbu cominir yi'ur. Tliu sooth- auyora, diviners, orttclu mskon., antrol ourii, and wirards autm to bavt) com bined lticuHtiiit;irttoilUun it. super- stiuous peoplool t'Viiy norl, and some who are not willini'io admit I hut they are aupurnlilinus regard the year 1881 witb more or Iuhn anxious expuctalion and dread. Aa tho eanb, on Sew V car's Day, swung out into another round about the aun, it went to moot a bout ol'evd omens. It will go cursed by tbeomaucy and hiblioniauey. Aoro niaoey and ineleoroinancy will glare at it from comuu ufid shooting slurs. Oneiroumncy will intereupt its path with visions tl evil and noinaney will shake the ominous, backward-reading nuiueruls '1881' beloru it. U will be btaet with scare irow (inures by arith muney, and with menacing phrases by alk'homancy. Yet there is no reason why persons ot good digestion did not go to sleep on New Year's night confident that, alter having encounter ed the average quuiility ol storm and sunsbine, the one horse bull that we call the world will bring them sale through the perils ol its hvo hundred million mile flight round to the start ing point again. THE 0II17.KII MARVEL. Timid persons fust began to look forward with some tilurni to the yeur that is about to open, when, several yeuiB ago, the key to llio somewhat prophetic symbolism of tbe (ileal Pyiumid ot Jypt was made public, bucked by the name and reputation of the British asirunomer, l'iuAa iSluj tb. Others, using ilr. Smylb'sobservations and measurements, have gone much lurtber than he did in drawing start ling iulerunces ; but no one can read his book'wilboul perceiving bow pow erfully it mtiBt allecl those who buve the slightest leaning towards supersti tion or cteiluliiy. besides, this rucord of explorations and experiences in the heart ot gypl s greatest marvel has all tho charm and interest of Dr. Schliemann's description! ot his dis coveries in Homer's Troy. Such a book cuuld not well bo neglected by the world of readers ; and, by the na ture of the human mind, many of its readers woro sure to bo imbued with its ominous dogmas. So tho belief, or at least tho suspicion, spread that tho secret chambers ot the Ureal 1'yramid, under Divine guidance bore tho most mystical character in all history. Mel chisedek, King of Salem, foretold, among uther things, thai the Christian era would end in 1881. MOTH Ed S1I1PTON. In Bpito of our belongings and our contempt, and .because this is tho year of 1881, llio majority ot news papers published in the r.nghsh language have lelt that their read ers had a right to see some por tion of Mother Shiplon's prophecy, and buve given it to them generously. indeed, so many various scraps ol this precious document havo been printed at one time and another that it ono should put them together it would take almost as many years as Mother Shipton lived in order to read them ; and we cannot help thinking that ingenious penny a-lincrs havo sup plied versiclesto the good dame to help her out, with a nolilu disregard ol au thenticity, and a discreet knowledge that tour hundred years and over are likely to render anything of a legend ary character more or less corrupt and incorrect uny way. It is a curious document, this old lady's prophecy, lint sinceone of the features lulled to f i a 1 tall in the year 1828 she having deelured, it is said, thai London stieets should be deluged in blood when the dragonof llow church and tho grasshopper ol the Uoyal Ex change should meet, which event hap pened, without the expected result, at a time when both ol these vanes lay together in a stono mason's yard wailing repairs sinco that timo peo ple have not expected so much ol Mother Shipton as they onco did. "Around lha world tnouphts shall fly In tbe IwiobliBi of sn eyo Water eb.ll y.t more wonders de, Mow .trengo, It .ball be true." runs ono ot the quutniins in a copy that may be as doubllul as all thereat, propbes) ing alter the laul. 'Throuia Iba bills seen sball ride, Ana bo borea or as. be at bte slriei tlid.r walare men sball walk, bbali ride, sball sleep, sball talk," runs another; and although alio skips tho telephone and the phonograph and the pbutopbone, she winds up with something having rather a special in terest to our owu gouoralion : ' Fire aad water eb.ll woadars de, K.(land sball adasil a Jew Aad il. world ta aa eod shell eume la elfhlooa hundred and eiabty.ooe. As England has, with considerable emphasis, and moro than once, accept ed tho remarkable tun ol old Isaac Disraeli lor her 1'rime Minister, this baa been taken as a tiillilluiont ot the prophecy. So Lord lieac onliold's dra matic personality ia made a principal figure in tht murky cloud of evil prophocy that bangs over 1881. ' riRIIIELIA. ' ' As if tho evil eye ol Mother Shipton, and the mystical menace ol tho Ureal 1'yramid, were not enough for one poor twelve-month bear, lha "horrors of the perihelia" have been denounced uHn the coming year. About two years ago certain pamphlets were cir eulated about tba country purporting 10 Da written by men ol euionuej, aud predicting that awlul consequence to mankind would result Irom all tbe great planets reaching Ibeir perihelia, or ncareet point to the aun, together. According to thee prophet the sinis CLEARFIELD, ter effects of the perihelia were to bo gin making their appearanco this Full, whon Jupiter passed his perihelion, and noxt year the scythe of death was to bo nut to the harvest in the lar east. and toswoep westward, with a swathe as broad as the continenls, until it reached the Pacific Ocean. Tho nar row Atlantic, was to be no more than a brooklet in tho path of this terrible harvester. Plagues, famines,, pesti lences, fire, earthquakes, floods, and tornadoes wore to scourge tho human race until only a Tew remained, like Noah and his family, to repooplu the earth with a sturdier and more Uod fearing race. PRACTICAL SCIENCE. So much alarm was caused by this bocus-pocus of pretended science and propheev. i hat somo i cul m.m nfscienco -Mr. Proctor amonffothors were at tho pains to show that so far as these predictions professed to rest upon Hcieimtio facts they were baseless. Tho great pianola will not bo in peri helion together at any timo. It is true lliul several ot tho chief planets wi reach their perihelion within a few years, and that is rare tor them to bo grouped so closo together as they will be at onetime this j car. It is also true that remarkable coincidences have been observed between the existence of great storms on the sun, that pro (luce oloctrical disturbances and psssiblo meteorological changes upon theeut lb, and tho presence of Jupiter near his potibelion. Astronomers have also suspected that the iufluenco of some ot the other great planets upon the earth can be perceived, but they bttve never discovered any reason to believe that tno combined lorco ot all the planets could, under any csj-'iimstancos, produce upon the earth a thousandth purl of the evil elFoct ascribed to them by the ostrologors, if indeed they pro- duco any evil effect whatever. ASTllOLOOY. Slill tho astrologicul almanacs for ibis year are repeating subslnntiully the samo predictions ot evil things to negin, it not to culminate, in 1881. llecause, as they suy, the tuvuges ol Black Death in Ihcmiddloiigcstullowcd llio nearly coincident perihelia of four greul planets, they predict similar con scquuhucs trout llio configuration of llio planets now. But neither in their premised nor tbeir inferences does science recognize any validity. lu trulh, however, tbe astrologers, not less than the astronomers and all star gazers, will have plenty of pho nomina in the heavens to occupy their attention lor tho next twelve months. The sky will not present such brilliant pageants again this century. There will bo a remarkable series of conjuuc lions, and double and triple conju na tions. The most interesting ol the greul twenty-year conjunction of J n pi ter haturn in April, ibis conjunction is one of tho strongholds of the astrolo gers. As it occurs in the ring Taurus, which they say rules Turkey and Ire- laud, lliejr it-l eeklv, on suunt rrt' fo- cent occurrences, in predicting very momontous effects in thoso countries from tho conjunction. Thcro will also he conjunctions of Jupiter and Murs, Venus aqd Jupilor, Saturn and Venus, and the far-away giants Uranus and Neptune will play a part in this ro markable planetary levco. Venus will reach her greatest bright ness in tbe Spring, and will be so hril limit as to be visible at noonduy. Ilur delicate crescent will be a favoriio ob ject in tho amateur astronomer's tele scope Saturn will open still wider in its wonderful rings, and will bo one of tho chief attractions of the evening sky for several months. Jupiter will not loso much of his prosent brilliancy beloro he becomes a morning star in April. Mara will begin to brighten in tho latter part of tho year, and then his snowy poles and shadowy conti nenla will again becomo tbo admira tion of those who gazo through tclo scopes. In short, there will be no end of attraction in tbe starry heavens, and all tbe prognostications of tbo sooth sayers will not bo ablo to darkon the sky of 1881. WnATHIIALL WEDRl.XKt The editor of tbo Science discusses at length tho valua ot the different articles of food which generally enter into daily consumption. Chocolate, ho says, Irom ita largo proportion of albumen, is the most nulrittvo bever age, but at tho sumo timo, from it quantity ot tat, lha most diflicull to digest. It aromatic substances, how ever, strengthen the digestion. A cup of chocolate is an excellent resoralivo and invigorative oven for weak per sons, provided their digestive organs aro not too delicate. Cardinal Ilicho lieu attributed to chocolate his health and hilarity during bis later years. Tea and cotree do not u fiord this ad vantage. Albumen in tea leaves, and legumin in Coffee berries, aro repre seated in very scanty proportions. Tbo praise of lea and coffee as nutri livo auhslunces is, therefore, hardly warranted. Tea and coffee, though o themselves not difficult ot digestion, lend to distuib the digestion of albu minous substancos by precipiiulmg them from Ibeir dissolved state. Milk, thorefoie, il mixed with tea or coffee, is more difficult of digeslion than il taken alone, and coffee alono without cream promotes digestion ufler dinner by increasing ol llio dissolving juices. Tho volatile oil of coffee and the tin pyreumulic and aromatic mailers ol chocolato accelerate tho citculution, which, on tbo oilier hand is claimed by tea. Tea and coffee both excite the activity of the brain and nerves. Tea, il is said, increase! tbo pover of digesting tho impressions wo havo re ceived, c rentes a thorough meditation, and, in spito ol tho movements of thoughts, permits tho attention to he fixed on a certain subject On tho other band, il tea is takeu in excess, it causes an increased irritability ol the nerves, characterized by sleeplessness, with a general feeling ol restlessness and trembling of the limbs. Coffee, also, il taken in excess, produces sleep lessness and many banef ul effects very similar to those arising from lea- drinking. Colfeu, however, produces greater oxnitoment, and a sensation ol restlessness and heat onsues. For throwing off this oondition fresh air is tho host antidote. A Californian who had failed in a lawsuit brought to obtain a divorco Irom his wile chanced to read that the tireek poet Anacreon was choked to death by a grapo seod. Transport ed by the thought thus auggesled to bim, be broke out in exclamation : "ByJovol l know what I'll do. I'll buy a vineyard." a -aw i m "And how does Charlie like going to school I " kindly Inquired a good man of a little six year old boy. "I like to go well 'nougb," roplied the boy in genuously, "but 1 don't iika laying alter 1 get there." '9 & i PRINCIPLE, NOT MEN. PA., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19, "ALL'S WEI THAT ENDS IV.LL." At tho form'Ain ot Khakcspoaro's "All's Well Tht Ends Well" lies Boo caccio's story I "tidella at Narbona." The English fot may or may not havo understood Lilian and studied bis llionio in its riginal language ; it is probable that o availed himself of tho translation bj William Painter con tained in his Palace of Pleasuro," a collection of )manccs published in 1575. Tho mm incidents of the nov elette reappear t tho play, now char acters being aaed by the dramatist. Gillotta becomellelena, and Beltramo is anglicized inti Bertram the Count ess, Parolles, anctho Clown havo no existence in tho taliun story, and of course the moro unio scenes ol tho play, in whiclAK"roll"o Rom-ialty ligures, are .-otTe etilribiiu-d to Shakesnua. Upol tho story of Udells of Nurbons, it may bo notod, was also foundod " Viirinia," 0ne of tho oldest of Italian cuuidics, written by liurnado Accoltl, and printed in l.ilj "All's Well That liuh Well" was first printed in the first fUio eolloclion of Shukospouro's plafs, 11)21. It has been judged howovjr thai "All's Well That Ends Well" umo into existence some five and tweny ycuis before that dato, and was realh tbe ctmedy which Francis Mores, in lis littlt book called "Paladis Tamia," published in 15'J8, relerrcd to under tno till ol "Love's Labors Won," no other ,)lay bearing that name, having boon discovered, while, as Mulono Las urgid, no other piny could bavo boino thatnamo with so much propriety as "All's Well That Ends Well." Coleridge is tf the same opinion, describing tho plaj as "origi nally intended as ilio coutturpart of 'Love's Labors Liui,' " Dunaiiiis the name of ono of tho Lord's Attending upon tho King of XaVarre il "Love's Labors Lost," and two Dumiuns, French Captains serving in (he Flor entine wur, appear in "All's Well That Ends Well ;" otherwise the pltys can hardly bo said to resemble each other, or can bo only cotihidered as compan ions with little corrtsponttencebetweon them. That the comedy has come down to us in a cotrected and altered form has been oft el maintained. "No intelligent poison'declnres Mr. Furni vull, "can read the play without being struck by the contrast of early and late woiu in it. the anil tormiihly ol tbe rhymed I ti Iked between Helena and the King is due, not to etiquette, but to Shakespeare a curly time; so also the end of llio play," Ac All the ) cur Hound. HOW FOOD IS A D UL TERA TED. There has been so much loose talk about tbe adulterations of food, thai it is important to find out what aro tho exact facts regarding them. If tbe general statements of some of the alarmists who havo written on the subject have a correct basis of fuel on which tn . -hi..; praclicod to so great an extont and is of such a character that what we cat and drink is alwars liable to contain poison. 1 uo rialional lioara ot irauo has lately awarded prizes for essays on the adulteration of lood and drink, and lor d raits ol laws for it prevention. Tho essay of Mr. O. W. Winger, ol London, received the first prize, and it is cer tainly a very clear, practical, and ex haustive discussion ot tho subject. From thut essay, and also from tho essays winch took tho second and third prizes ollereil, we will make up a summary of tho facia. llio public will be relieved when they boar that there is no satisfactory evidence presented to show that dan gerous adulterations arc at all common among ns. There in plenty of adul- leratioD, beyond a question ; but It is almost universally ot a sort rather to defraud tho purchaser than to injure tbe health and imperil the life of the consumer. Tbe article sold is not wholly what il is represented to bo, but the substances introduced into il, or mixed with it to cheapen its manu facture or to give moro attractiveness to its appearance, aro usually innoxious. When the London Lanctt, twenty years ago, undertook a thorough anal ysis of lood and drugs to detect adul teration, it found that about C5 per cent, ot tho samples examined vfuro sophisticated. Somo of them, as, for instance, tbo mixture of flour with mustard, wore although harmless, and, indeed, demunded by the taste ot the public ; and tho most serious of tho others have sinco that day fallen into disuse, lea was then almost univer sally adtiltuiated ; the practice has en tirely ceusod since that lime. Alum wub commonly found in bread ; now it ia very seldom used in bread muking. 1'ickles were invariably contaminated with copper; now thai adulteration is very rurc. The watering of milk, ol course, goes on slill; but both hero and in Englund effective measures for lessen ing the extent ol the fraud have been introduced, imitation butter is sold in great quantities ; but oleoinargerinu is not injurious to health, nnd the only necessity With regard tn it, so far as the laws aro concerned, is to compel Us sale for what it actually is; to pre vent its being palmed off on purchasers aa geiiutno Duller. Wines and spirits show a larger proportion ot adulteration, but gener ally this has bciti simply dilution with water. A good wine iu watered, an interior is mixed with a superior qual ity, and then toned to the color and flavor of tho best by the addition of loroigu substances, such as burnt sugar and tannin. Molasses, water, and aall aro put in porter and stout; glycerine ia mixed with beer, and various sub. stances are added to liquors and wines ; but they aro almost invariably of a sort to justify tho conclusion reached in 1873 by a Committee of lha English House ol Commons that "in the nia'ttir ol adulteration, the public werecheated rather than poisoned." Sugar ia adul luralod with glucose; butler and cheese aro colored with annotto; spices are mixed with various foreign substances and chickory, burnt augur, and roasted peas aro put in coffee; hut people can eat tbein all without danger to life, and generally without direct danger to health. Poisonous coloring mallets are somolimes used in conleclionery, but even such cases are rare, Mr. Winger has been ablo to find only about twoniy or thirty caaos In England during the last five year in which it would have been lust to proa- ecu to a vender under tho more aerioua charge of selling articles injurious In the health, except only the cases nt somo expensive drugs and tbe lew case ol milk Irom diseased cows. And yet "m arly or quito oso sixth ol the food sold is adultorated so as to cheat the consumer pocket." In the matter ol drugs, however, the adulterations are more alarming. Aa wa bar befora pointed out, It Ia of prime Importance that tba physician REPUBLICAN. 1881. should be ublo to rely upon a drug not only as pure, but also us of standard strength. Any deviation in strength, quality, or purity from the standard sot down in the pharmacopoeia, which seriously affect the medicinal or cur ative effects of the drug, is dangerous, and should be mudo severely punisha ble. Thcro is also a kind of adultoration ol food and drink which is fortunately uncommon, porhaps, but which is so dangerous when it does occur, thut legislation must provide heavy penal ties for its suppression. Tho use t occulus indicus in "beer, tho contami nation ol tinnod goods with lead or ethor poisonous metals, and poisonous coloring of conleclionery, are examples ol such adulteration. And in the case of drugs we have children's powders or aluopinaj dratuarhto wonta-tningr. poi sonous doBcB of opi ii in or other narcotics. Wo must, thorelore, treat adultera tion, first, as a means of cheating; and second, as deleterious to health, mak ing tho penalty in tho second case, of course, much heavier than in tho first. Xew York Sun. ABOUT HOME. Tho Herald says that tbo Kov. Dob ert Collyer delivered a lecture on tho 10th in Chickoring Hall, beloro the Young Men's Hebrew Association, on "Something About Home." During his discourso tho reverend lecturer said : "If preachers over exhaust tbe Bible so that they must find a new store ot texts to preach from 1 think this is sure to bo ono of thorn, 'There is no place liko homo.' It may bo but a butter sort of prison or bouse of bondugo or a more meeting houso, with short inter vuls between the long services, but it is home. Mr. Mill had a ruthless way with his boy, John Stuart Mill. lie would maku a great man of bim. He made the man, but ho lost tho child, because ho let him havo no real child, hood. Tho condemnation, which is never quite uttered, but it is alwavs felt in the siory of a great man's life, is tn me liko tho resentment ot a soul robbed of its birthright to all the joy there is in tho mourning world It is tho same thing again, in a less noble way, wilb Charles Dickons. The boy was robbed of bis childhood, as il seems, through the general worthless ncss of his father. There is not a man or woman in tbo world from whom 1 may not sooner hope to got a favora ble verdict than from thoso boys and girls of mine, if for any roaMin-under tho stars I filch from thorn this ono gift a homo. They may stand on tho crest lino of forty years and say in their hearts, 'My father wronged me ; ho robbed mo of all that was best in tho best days I shall ever see. 1 bail no real homo.' A man or woman may have to face bard work and pinching times, but then wu can all face them together and koop good cheer in the simple things that cost nothing and cannot ho bought with irold. The m.k nig ol many a man has lain in the seem ing failure of bis poor striving father. YY ealln ana ease, it we are not wise, may prove to bo anything but to our advantage." Ibe lecturer concluded by rolemng to tho defective systems ol cducutiou obsorved in tbo homesof many children. 1 heir parents, bo said, gave them no room for expansion of thought. What tho fatbor and mother were, the chil dron should be also ; they should play, eat and pass tbeir youthful days alter the stereotyped lushion ot their ances tors, in a way which must bo mani festly injurious to the risinggoueralion, and ono which cannot always leave the most pleasant impressions in tho minds ol children treated in this injudi cious way. THE CZAR AND JUS FAMILY. Paris Dl.pateu ta the London Telegraph Some further detuils respecting the morganatic marriage of the Emperor nl iiussia are published In the Figaro. 1 bo ceremony came off last Summer at tbe Castle ol Tsarkoe Solo during llio manoeuvres at tbo hrasnoi camp. Tho witnesses were Count Alexander Adlerberg, Minister ol the Court; (Jen. Kyteef, ono of the Czar' Aides do- Camp, and an intimato friend of his Majesty, Count Milutine, .Minister ol V ar, and Uenura! lions .Mchkolt, now Ministorof tbe Interior. There is, it appears, no truth in the report that the Czar askod bis uncle, tbe Emperor William, to grant the 1'rincess Dolgo rouki a high title. Tho second wile is styled tho Princess Yotiiicff, one ol the titles bolonging to the Komanolts. Al first, aa is well known, tho marriage was not woll rocuived by tho different members of the imperial family, somo ol whom tho CzurewiU'h, for exam. pie spent the Summer at the baths of llupsal, while others, as llio lualid Dukos Coustuntino and Vladimir, came to Franco. -But, little by little, a spirit of conciliation has gained tho upper band, thanks in a great measure, ac cording to Fiijarn, to lha initiative of the Duchess ol Edinburg. The aamo change is noticeublo 'among the other classes ot liussian society. At first tho marnago was only alluded to with the utmost reservo in tho higher circles, while now it is openly mcntiorod even among tho people. There has even been a rumor at SI. Petersburg that it was to bo officially announced ero long, and it is again reported that the Czar will resign a portion of his duties to bis oldest son at the Now Tear. To be Carried in Your Pocket. Keep good company or none. Never ho idle, if your hand cannot bo uso fully employed, attend to tbo cultiva tion of your mind. Always speak the truth. Mako few promises. Live np to your engagements. Keep your own secrets, if you have any. W lion you spoak to a person, look bun in the lace. Good comsny and good conversation aro lha very sinews of virluo. Good character is above all things else. Your character cannot bo essentially injurod, except by your own acta. If any one speaks evil of you, lot your lilo bo such that no one will believe bim. Drink no kind of intoxicating liquors. Ever live (misfortune exoep ted) within your income. When you retire to bed, think over what yon have boon doing during tho day. Make no haste to be nob, it you would proa per. Small and steady gains give com- petoncy, with tranquility ol mind. Nover play at any came of chance. Avoid temptation, though yon fear yon may not withstand it. Earn money before you spend it. Nover run into debt unlosa you can see your way. to gel out ol It. IN over borrow II yon can possibly avoid it. Do not marry unlit you aro able to support a wile. Never speak ovil of any one. Be just before you aro genorouo. Keep your sell innocent it you would be happy. Save when you ara young, that you may spend when you ara old. Head over the above maxima at least onoe a woek Exchange NEW CORN FOR FUEL. AHAIII THE "LAST ItESonT" IN THE WOOD LESS NORTH W EST FACTS ABOUT ITS I'SE. There aro localities in tho West and Northwest whore scarcity ol Inol has forced poonlo to burn corn again this Winter. The frequont recurrence of the fuel famine in Ihoso places leads a correspondent of tho St. Louis Pioneer I'rcst to suggest what lie calls a prac tical solution ot the problem. Coal cannot bo found, and tho use of wood will soon exhaust, the available supply of thut article; corn is the only sub stitute, and must be tho fuel of tbo fut ure. For stoves it Is snporior to any othor substanco, hard coal alone ex cepted, and it is choaper than anything that is likely to be used as fuel. Two or ihreewaurow of uoiu evill wtitjjj ordinary family a year's supply for fuel; and this writer alleges that tho samo corn sold in the market, and the proceeds turnod into wood or coal, will not begin to do it. Of course, be sneuks of tho fur Northern prairies. Corn may bo used in either a wood or coal stove without anychango cf grates, and mako a steady, hot fire, which can bo regulated as readily as a coal fire. Two bushels of corn in tho ear, it is estimated, will koop a comfortablo fire tho coldest day. liegarding tho squoamisbnosB about burning an arti cle that is used for food, ttie writer says pointed!': "1 would sooner have an acre of corn that can bo replaced in a single year, than to burn an aero of timber that takes years to replace, ovon on the score of sentimont." l'hcro is common sense in this. If it is cheaper for people on fertilo prairies to raise their fuel as they do their food, and give what little timber they have for othor purposes, scuiimenlulsqueam. ishncss should not deter them from do ing so. Moro cooked food is daily thrown away than would feed the hungry poor, and it is done without compunction. While thcro can be no excuse for this wastefulness, there is good reasons for burning corn, when il is of more value as fuel than tho pro coeds would be il used in the purchase ol wood or coal. S UN L 10 JIT. Tho sun, if you will only open your house to bim, is a faithful physician, who will bo pretty constant in al tend ance, and who will send iu no bills. Many years ago glass was something of a luxury, but now we can all have good sized windows.and plenty of them, at moderate cost, and there is no ex cuse for making mure loopholes, through which the aun cast but halt an eye, aud from which one can guin only narrow glimpses of tho beatifiil outer world. If buy windows aro too expensive, a very dosirablo substitute can bo had by placing two ordinary sized windows sido by eido with a wide capacious lodge at tno bottom lor seats or lor plant. A room with a window like tins cannot fail to ha cheery, and us effect in a aimplo cottage houso is quito sumptuous. There is likeu iso in its favor tbe tact that it is loss exposed than the deop bay window to outer heat and cold. In a kitchen or in a child's bedroom, or in an attio where the walls are low, two half windows set sido by sido and made to slide or to open on hinges, admit a broad, generous light, and give an apartment a pretty and pleasing rustic air. Lot tho builder endeavor to have all rooms In daily uso, especially bedrooms and sitting rooms, well lighted by the sun. "To sleep on unsunned beds in unsunned chambers, and to work day altor day in unsunned rooms, is the unrcpenled sin ol ball tho nation, vig orously affirms a prominent writer. But Hub should not bo said ol that part of the nation living in tbe oountry tar Irom those towering brick walla whose steps take hold on basoment kitchens, and in whoso depressing shadows many lives must necessarily be spent. In the country, with a whole sky to draw from, let there be light I 1 f any rooms in the bouse must iouk solely to tho north lor illumination, let them be tho parlor and tho spare chamber. People who come and go can bo cnuertul lor a while in a north-windowed apartment, hut tho constant dwellers in a houso need its sunniest rooms. Farm Hornet. WINTER II UTTER. How difficult it is to got good win ter mudo butter. Ollon 1 know by the taste just where tbo difficulty lies. Butter makers sometimes let the cream stand too long beloro skimming, and one can hardly believe, from the tasle, that their butler is really Ircsh. Somo times a butter flavor comes from lack ot care in keeping the rising cream undisturbed. The puns aru dipped into, and in skimming for butter the second rising over a part of the pan, which has a somewhat bitter navor, goes in with the heller cream, and spoils tho laslo of the whole. Then the cream may bo Kepi in tuo lar too long beloro churning, while the bultor maker waits lor enough cream lo ac cumulate to mako it worth while to churn. It would be belter in this caso to bring lha butter by stirring it in tho jar with a ludlo or pudding slick, if enough cream cannot be gathered within a woek (at longest in cold weather) to fill llio churn ao as to work il woll. In this caso, skim the cream off very slowly, or fiee from milk, and if yon stir each skimming in with the others as you put it in tbo larithis should always bo done), and then warm tho cream moderately beloro churning, it is no difficult task to bring the butter by stirring. 1 have eaten excellent butler mado in hub way. Hume per sons never mako good butter in winter, because ihoy keep their milk among bad od rs, aa in a cellar with turnips and other vegetable. Correspondent in American Ajriculturitt. STORMs'lNAEHRASKA. One of the faults of the climalo, saya a Nebraska loiter, is the .terrible alorins, tbeir frequency at certain times, and their suddenness. Ul these storms there are two kinds tho wind Btorin and the dust storm. Which is worst is hard to lull, A most unpleas ant peculiarity of tho storm is il ap pearance on the very shortest notice. Vcnnor, who is considered by some as a tolerable good weather prophet in the East, would be lost here. Some limoa when there are all the indica tions of an approaching storm, there is no storm, and vice versa when the air is clear and pleasant, a storm may conio scudding along in twenty min utes. The wind are often Tory se vere and are very baneful. They some time blow for week at a time. The common tree hero are the Cottonwood and box older. Many of these are blown to shreds by the wind, such is it force, and the sollne of the fibre of lbs wood. Olten tba wind blow so briskly that one can scarcely keep TEEMS-I2 per annum in Advance. SERIES - V0L. 22, NO. 3. his footing in the street, and if a grocer or dry goods merchant chances to leivo boxes or casks out ol doors be baa the pleasuro of seoingthom blown down tho street, and vory likely if his signboard is loose it will follow after. No wonder that runaways are frequent in Lincoln. Tbo soil is vory porous, and it takes but a few hours to reduce i a mudpnddlo to a heap of dust, anil then if the wind blows yon have what is known here as dust storm. Tho streets are not paved and the wind has full sweep. The air is tilled with dust at these times, and life is but a burden, and this lasts often for weeks. J t is impossible to keep clean. WHAT VOICES INDICATE. There aro light, quick, surface voices that involuntarily seem to titter tho slang, "I won t no ur ti to. rue man's 'words may assure you of his strength of purpose and reliability, yet bis tone contradicts bis speech. Thcro are low, deep, Blrong voices, whore the words seem ground out, as if tbe man owed humanity a grudge, and meant to pay it some day. That mun's opponents may well tremble, and his friends may trust his strength of purpose and ability to act. There is tho course, boistorous, dic tatorial tono, invariably adopted by vulgar persona, who have not sufficient cultivation to understand their own insignificance. Thero is tho incredulous tone, that is full of a covert sneer, or a secret "You can't-dnpe-mo sir" intonation. then there is tho whining, beoeoch ing voice, that says "sycophant" as plainly as it it uttered tho word. It cajoles and flatters you ; its words, say, 1 lovo yon, 1 admire you ; you aro everything that you should bo." then thcro is the tender, musical, compassionate voice, that sometimes goes with shurp loaturcs (as they in dicate merely intensity of tooling) ond sometimes blunt features, but always with a genuine beuevolenco. 11 you are full of affection and pre tense, your voico proclaims it. If you aro full of honesty, strength and puposo, your voice proclaims it. It you are cold and culm and brm and consistent, or tickle and foolish and deceptions, your voice will be equally triithtelling. lou can not change your voice from a natural to nn unnulural tone, with out it being known that you aro do ing so. SEDEXTARY II A HITS. The alarming increaso of late years in tho proportion of sudden deaths is I beginning to attract tho attention ol statisticians. It is largely due, no doubt, to moro general mental activity without a proportionate increase in bodily exercise. Tbe busy life of the age demands a constant hurry and ex citement, aud taxes tho physical pow ers to the utmost to keep np in the raoo lor money getting. One of tho disadvantages of introducing facilities of transportation is tbo temptation to cut short timo and distance by tbe bubituul use ot steam cars and horse cars evon in tbo daily transit from the dwelling to tho oflico. A sedentary occupation beget an almost uncon querable aversion to regular exercise, and the result of yielding to tho indis position is thut tbe mental powers, kept at a steady tension for years, will some day suddenly relax and leavo their abuser either lifeless or a help less paralytic To literary aud pro fessional men is vigorous and regular exerciso especially needful, and tho ex ample of its effects in a bale old age will suggest thcmjolves to every ono. The oxerciso needed to keep the mind in tone and the physical lorco unabat ed np to tbe four score years and ten, is not a daily spin behind a last step ping horse, but tho long swinging gait which pitta the wdlker over a country road al tbe rato of four or five miles an hour, and Bends tbe blood pulsing with invigorating hlu to every portion of tho system. Two hours exercise a day, so tar from being a waste of time, ta a positive economy, supplying tbe nervous force for moro and belter work in ten hour than the man ol street cars and carriages can get out of twelve. Aew London Iclrgrain. Tbe phrase, "It takes nine tailors lo make a man," though used in con tempt, has an origin that docs honor to the knights of the goose. In 1742 a homeless orphan lad applied lor as sistance at a fashionable London tai lor's where nine journeymen were em ployed. Tho boy's condition stirred the bencvolenco of tho nine who each gavo bim ono shilling. With thisslen dor capital tho youth started in the flint business, and in timo became very rich, and retired Irom trade. Then, in stead of having a conl-ol'arms, he em blazoned upon bis spoons and panels the grateful motto, "Nino tailors made mo a man. "Have a blotting pad, sirT" asked a peripalelio dealer, reaching out one of thiHO absorbents. "How do you fasten the thing on f " inquired Jones, after turning it over and over. "Fast en iton I " exclaimed tho poddlor,"what do you moan 7 "What do 1 mean i'vo had experience in this pad busi ness. 1 ve bought them lor the bead stomach and liver, and this is Iho first one 1 ever saw with no tacklo on it. No, I don't want it. Oooddayt" Tho man enw it was no nss tn argue with June. Ho packed his valise in his bed room, ihcn carefully raised the .sash and attached to tba well-worn handle the end ot a long whip lush. Softly ho lowered lu treasure, and thought how tho landlord would sweur when be arose iu tbo morning and found that bia man was not there. Slowly the valise descended into tho darkness of night, whon the voico of the land lord shouted : "Lot go, I've got it all right I " .W) wa "Charlie' Durling." We have ro coived your poem, entitled "When the liluebirds Sweetly Sing," and will nave il until the bluebird got here, VTe are alwaya obliged to carry over a lot of bluebird and robin and daisy poetry, but it cornea bandy in tbe .Spring when wo clean the windows "Now 1 nndomtand," remarked Ol denborg, with a sigh, aftor vainly try ing to got a viow of the stage over the bonnet in Iront of bim, "now 1 un derstand what they mean by the 'height of fashion ' " ' A Galveston man, who baa a mule for sale, bearing that a frioud in an adjoining town wanted to buy a mulo, telegraphed him : "Dear Friend : if you are looking fur a No. 1 mula don't forget me. -a use, si Maiden ladv'a Quotation slichtlv al tered from an old aphorism "When singleness la bliss lis lolly to wives. EDUCATIONAL. . 1IV1I.L. McQUOWN. In tho long run it is work alone that seta human lives to music, and reduces to harmony tho strife ot existence. D r. A . M . Hills preson ted M is M am ie Irvin with a volumo of poema, as a recognition of her ability as a publio reader. W. W. McCullongh, formerly loach 'f. iO Sandy township. Ibis county, is attending a Normal school at Paola, Kansas. Tbo estimated value of school prop erty in Clearfield county is ?183,1I0, which exceeds that ol uny of tho neighboring counties. Knox, Bradford, Goshen, Brady, Sandy, liulich and Huston township teachers are holding very successtul District Institutes. Mr. G. W. Emigh inform us that the schoola ot Uoutzdulo borough opened Mouduy, January 17tb, having been closed one nioiiin on account oi sickness. The ('berry Tree Record bus estab lished an "Educational Column." It is edited by Mr. McCirery ol the Cherry Tree public schools, and is made very interesting. Thcro aro now employed in the State ot Pennsylvania 9,732 male teachers and 1 1,013 female teachers, an increase of 1-5 mule and 40 femalo teachers over last year. Three vory useful School Directors have- (lied since ine tqieimig ot iuu schools in the Fall, viz : Wm. Murray, of (Jirurd; Jason Kirk, of Lumber city, and lr. 1). I). Crouch, of Cur wensville. Now Washington borough has con ti ibuted twelve teachers the present term to the schools of tbe county. Wo doubt very much it thero is another town in tho county which has sent out so many educators in one year. As in a man's life, so in his studies. I think it is the most beautiful and humane thing in the world, so to min gle giavity wilb pleasure, lhattboono may not sink into melancholy, nor tho other rise up into wantonness. Pliny. The following roport was submitted to tho Department for tho month ol December, 1880 : Certificate annulled, 1 ; examinations, 2 ; number ol schools visited, 41 ; number ol Directors acs companing Superintendent, 18; Miles travelled, HH2; official letters written, 48. At this writing, almost two weeks ahead of tho tune of publication, we cannot give any definite inlormation of thovisilof lion. Henry Uouck, Dopniy Slate Superintendent, to our county. If tho arrangements aro completed, however, circulars and other notico will be circulated beloro this item reaches tho public. Air. Jno. Shuflor, Secretary of Brady township School Board, informs us that their Board huspurchuscd apicco of land in tho Harislelt school district, and has mado nil duo arrangements I lor the erection of a now school huild ! ing tho approaching Summer. Brady I.. ..I, a n wu ti t ho limes in all imnrovc nicnis pertaining to their schools and school properly. During tho lust and oAd weok of December wo visited New Washing ton borough, and in doing so we travelled 75 miles. Wo wore accom panied by Messrs. Levi Bundurlin and Henry Stcirncr. of the Boll township School Board, and Messrs. John M. Cummings, Adam Broth and Henry Nctrjr., ot Now Washington Dorougn. Bradlord township has boon unfortu nate In not being able to retain tho teach ers employed at the beginning of the school term. Their iducos have been supplied, however, with very excellent teachers. Mr. M. S. Barnes, of Cam eron county, succeeds L. M. Mitchell at Woodland ; Mr. S. D. Bndey, of Pike township, succeeds S. J. Miller at Jacksnns; and Mr. 1). S. Lansbcrry succeeds Mertie liublor at Egypt. IntboSlateSupurimoiidunl'sBtatisti. cal report of Institutes hold in tho State, wo find the three lust Institutes held under our predecessor in 18iu, 1S7C and 1877. wore attended in tho aggregate by 402 teachers and 102 Directors. lhcir entire cost was 1751.50, of which amount Ibe county paid J382, or 54 porcent. ol the cost. Tbo three Institutes held by as in tho years 1S78, 1879 and 18S0 were at tended by MM teacners ana iuu ui rectors, and cost in tho aggregate 11.530, ot which amount tbe county paid 1352, or 3G per cent of tho enliro cost. Tho following persons were award- ed premiums lor exhibiting the best specimens of tbe several classes at the Institute exposition : rcholabr' WORR. Best .paeiaisB of snap drawiag-.M.ud irwla, W.terford sobool. De.t spocln.n of portrait drawing Msry K. 6boie, liiltiuctieiB ochool. Bert speeimra of landsoapa drawlaf J. Clarrle ll.jorty. TRArnaRR wosk. tlest school r.fiorl W. T. Hoaokasaa, Lawrenoe. Best poo drswiox A. R. Lambert, Lswreoca. U..I pro(rasine W II. Liddle, Sandy. Best Boecnoea af pea drawingLouisa Prtoee, Hon) til. la. Second best rpeelmea af peartl drAwinfLlfsle Bedding. Iloutldale. L. Scrin.tt, 1 , WM. PuStLBTOBAIT. j Cummittleo. Mr. Lewis Brown, ot Lawrence in. Icpendent, exhibited somo very excel lent pen drawing but by some mentis it was overlooked. A diploma, will bo awarded to tho above persons in a short timo. TIIR OOOD gt'ESTIONER. 1. He is a teacher, not a mere ex aminer. Ho questions tor tho purpose of imparting knowledge, not lor find ing out what the pupil knows. " I. tie asks tho questions in tho or der in which a subject should bn In vestigated, making his pupils for tb timo searchers alter truth, and himself their leader and guide. 3. Ho knows tho mind tho order of IU growth and the method ot ita thought and no auapisj nis worst to it. 4. Ho exorcises all the focullioa of the mind, and asks tho vory questions necessary to develop and strengthen them. 6. Ho asks lew question. Ho chooses carefully his words. Every scolcnco mean something, and every word I tbe right ono. C. He waste no time in delays, but pusbcB hisinqiiirios with a good degree of rapidity, and keeps up the beatcf intellectual lilo by rapid and sharp blows. 7. He knowa what he want, and drive straight lor it He allow do side issues, discussion", or inelevant questions lo throw bim off bis track. H. lie leads bis pupils to the moun tains of knowledge, where they ran see truths Ibey never saw before. U show tbera new view, of subjects, ao that tbey are olten astonished and do- lighted. 9. Ho never question! for the pur pose ol displaying his own knowledge, but keeps himself in tha background, and tbe truth in tba lore-front, When bo is through, bis pupil think of what Ibey have been taught, and dot of tha teacher. 10. lie is an enthusiast, lie be hove in himself enough lo give him the confidence necessary to secure bii success. 1 1. He novor leavo his subjeot until a definite, clear, Concise and conclusive result Is reached. This is kept a a valuable addition to knowledge, il leaves nothing at loos ends. Earnn.