DOLLAR PER ANNUM INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TOWANDA: Thursday Morning, November 1, 1863. ~ My Grandmother's Story. | "Come uow, grandma, tell us a story," said L L, ee , as she drew her chair near the old Vv and took her little sister Barrie upon her " Tell us a good long story about the -ad old times when proud lords lived in glo bus castles, high up ou the beetling crags ; t,j their flaunting baauers waved proudly in morning sunbeams, and the warder's call [ wildly on the rushing breeze. I love to Lur stories of those fine old days,when, when Ll>s were all as one crown d queens; and gay t -its and warlike lords knelt before them lite verv slaves." [ • >0 my love : I cannot tell you a tale of e olden times to night. You can read plenty ['them in a few years Hut 1 will tell you a [ me storv, such a one as transpires in our irV midst,in the charmed experience of many (:Drubbing heart, of whose inner life we know kUhing. 1 will tell yon of one yon already mow T a heart story of Margaret the rusher-woman.' ' What, that silent, yet bustling old fudge? jnnot see what yon can tell about her that r , u s,i be like a story. We know her well Dough, and she is always tue same always 'ork, working, and petting that l.ttle 'due red fairy that is pretty enough to be a king's Ughter, to be sure ; only >h wears such old i-t off clothes. When we want a j-tory, We now we want something grand, dreamv, ro antic ; not the humdrum affaire of poor old 'liding washer women "Ah, Ellen ; your twelve years wisdom to teach y . that the history of such as old i-gant cannot be interesting ; but as the , v < of life are unrolled by the busy fingers me. you will learn that the history of the >j- the fearful, mysterious human heart, is :ne in a measure, through all the varied -cii* foldings of tbi* shadowy existence.— .-.-•.ret has had her dreams —high, glorious, .- rfnl dreams. I knew her in her joyous jhood, when she was the pet of fond L r.i, the idolized favorite of loving liroth and sisters The sunny radiance of hap f -sever smiled on the rosy lip 11. r dark [j glanced in the bright beams of hope, for •r-p rir's eve the world was bathed in ; rainbow splendor, and she dreamed not 1; sorrow could ever eflaee the glorious tints ...... >:i of her life's openimr sky. Everything ■ charm for her rivmig spirit ; when the ; naming i • >ked forth from his orient n :ws that the (lumbering world, the hap; y | 1: ' with a son)? in iter heart to bleud I ;ad gu
  • t, was mere beautiful right-eyed Margaret Clifton." ed beauty of a loftier stamp that of h : • - > tnies of the dark old fore-* 5 : I ' ' .rig sympathy as the nighein [• * *i erp'untive melody through the f tr, *-d tf.ea. mtil the inanimate forms of - ■ s- :aed vo-al with the low voiced echoes V">.s they <-wept on viewless pinion 1 ■ oy*::c cerulean, swel'ing the hr r wmt hones of praise to Him whopmr I- - iiy spr ; from on high to flood with j g r'.h,—who studded the I "'*r? of uight with gems of eternal f.• 1 penciled with hues from the f I.. 1 ' - " the gorgeous coronet of the | .. 11 w&s a T ' s ion of beauty, in I. **1 '* r;a i the personification of loveli-j Cenl *l character. But thecharm '** ttpon her, the bright, the LY 1 - vet - The hi mi tread awhile in r ae bowers 0 f dream I y- 3 of hctnan excellence, "and sweet | " er beauty that sets | a: ° n the reverent brow jto dream ' 11. l urea as, that wrap tlie yearn ... u e golden glo jof paradise ; and v ** '" f -°ld. hard brush of reaiitv ap -1 urinc . PWtore.and rainbow "tints I- -f, P 2r pl e hues of morning f the dark shadows 0 f the storm - f t . as one of her pcre. romantic ra- I ' - car oTe; and when she stood in r"" i: ' --'J • re the shrine wnere hu '*. - U .^ ir * or woe, DO | I —*• thrcog bul beat more I quickly a-i the solemn words were said whose spell mu.-t last while the life si ream ebbs through its mystic channels." " O, now you are making a real love story of it. Who would ever have thought of any thing romantic in Maggie Nelson's history?" " Much of the romantic abounds iu tha his tory of every persou. Could we unclasp the l sealed volume of the hearts that throb unnot ! od around us, we should read the tale of bliss or woe, which is only saccessfully imitated by writers of fiction." "Imitated! Why do you really suppose that people have such feelings aud sufferings as we read off in stories 7" " Stories of fiction are of course e.vaggera tions. so far as the writers are concerned : vet no human imagination can realise—llo pen | however graphic, dilineute the sorrows that i corrode the secret springs of life in many a j heart that is veiled from us by a mautle of | coldness and reserve. We seek the dreams of imaginative writers to wile away the idle hours, and forget in their perusal the hearts that are suffering, wasting away uuder disap pointment and fruitless exertions ; —that are throbbing with anguish under our very eye. and break : ng under concealed tortures for which human language has no sign." " But did she love uuworthily ? Was she won like other silly damsels by a fair face and fine speeches 7" " No. Site made a good choice, so said the world. Horace Nelson was one of the world's favorities ; an only son, the beloved of his father, the joy and pride of his mother and sis ters. lie possessed talent of no common order, had won the highest collegiate honors, and had been admitted to practise at the bar with a high reputation for foren-ic abilities. All went brightly for awhile with Margaret. The years swept by on happy pinions,and the young wife became a happy mother. Aud when the bright blue orbs of her young son looked smil ingly upon her from day to day, she felt how | grea*. was the responsibility resting upon her glad and loving spirit to train him up for hap piness, for honor, and high usefulness. His morning had dawned brightly, but what was the noontide of his life to disclose ? Y ears passed on. and the mother's love and priJe grew stronger 111 the heart of Margaret, and so absorbed was she in the guidance of that young immortal entrusted to her care,that she failed at tir.-t to notice the occasional long absence of the husband she adored. Hut as t me sped by with noiseless wing her heart be gan to fetl that a change had passed upou that heart where her own reposed. t?he could not own to herself that he, so loved, so trusted, could fall from the l. gh place where her ador ing soul had enshrined him ; but at last the fearful truth was pressed upon her bleeding heart, and she bowed her head in agony to the painful assurance that her husband was a hope less inebrmte. Then come the long days of alternate hope and tear ; the lonely night vigils which sorrow held by the desecrated shrine ot wedded life ; the biter tears of ho;.less mi> ry, that l in g Ino relief to the breaking heart. Seasons of weary neglect passed a Way ; the roses paled on the cheek of that devoted wife, yet she still hoped on—hoped even against hop, that the hour of redemption might yet arr.ve, and the 1 idol of her young love be freed from the blight ing eur-e that rested on h,s scul. Cares pressed heavily upon her, other chil dren clustered around her, —unhappy recipi ents of a mother's hop ess love. Day by da v. and year by year, that, 01.ee bright home grew | dark ail gloomy \ and at last the spectre, want, threw her baleful shadow over the ! circle ; and such wretchedness as cannot be portrayed, was the bitter portion of Margaret Who can imagine the agony—the darkness and desolation that presses on the heart of the lonely and neglected wife, as she sits throegb lorg night honr. watching The radiant stars '.ht shine coldlv on the.r thrones of light while he who swore at the aitar to protect and cherish while life should last, is debasing the godlike intellect widen proves hp,a|ia to the angels. How cfter. -lie knelt in her desola tion. ami prayed that he who hashed To peace the storm? waters of Galilee, would stiil the wild tempest of sorrow, and once more bind her brow with the galarndof peace. S.'ie had removed with her husband to a distant city ; her parents were dead, and their wealth had passed into the hands of strangers. A sad lot was hers, yet she never wavered in the high faith which had shed a halo around her vouug -pint ; and she walked humbly, trustingly, though sorrowful ? along her wear? way, striving with woman's hopeful love to shield her boy from the contaminations of a large city, liut her son wearied -f the dose,hot air of the miserable rooms which poverty obliged them to occupy. He must play in the clear bright snnshme that glanced ou the flashing waters, and drink in the pore breezes of heav en, that came coed and fresh from the shim mering seas, or wafted the aroma of blossoms from the green fields and flowering sh-übs O that some angel might meet the children of the poor, when they congregate together In the crowded streets of great cites George Xel son had DO father ; no kind heart to watch over his young footsteps, and lead his uctive -p rit in the way that leafs to parity and peace. Dearly as he loved his mother, and the little sisters that looked sadly on him with their soft bright eyes, yet the sight of their privation was working a curse ou his sensitive spirit. None can guess, save those who have wit nessed the result, how wrong and sorrow can warp the young -oul, and drag it down from it loveliness and innocence. Disrespect, an ger. itirtJ, took the piaee of that coufldiug love, which is the child's only safeguard from sin j and when George was eighteen he was insured in the degradation of poverty, and no stranger to toe mysteries of iniquity. A deeper grief was wearing its mantle of gloom for the sod of Margaret. Two of her little ones sickened, and in a few days passed frotn the darkness of their wretched borne, to the bright garden* above, where argels train the blossoming Tines in the fadeless bowers that bloom on the banks of life's glorious river Qogbt we to taonra thus sadly when the young PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. O'MEARA GOODRICH. " REGARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUAF.TER." immortals seek early their homes on the spirit -Lore ? They escape the sorrows that blight the trusting spirit—the low sad wail of misery shall never thrill their young heat t-strings.for they staud on the flowery margin of the crvstal fountain of-life, and learn the glad song that rings from the lyres of the blest, though the lapse of eternal years. Yet the head of that worn mother bowed in bitter grief over those sweet young faces, as they were laid on the coffin pillow ; and her sou! yearned for that rest which they had gained. Darker and darker grew the skv above her, more desolate the wide world nround. The Lusbaud to whom she had plighted her soul's truth when life's young morning smiled on the sweet flowers of hope, and become a thing ot terror and scorn. The light of intelligence that once lit up the beam ing eyes, had given place to the rolling, va cant stare of idiocy. The intellect that once held the listening multitude in rapt admira tion, had been shrouded in a pall of self deg radation ; and he who had sworn before the holy altar to to protect and cherish the fair girl by his side, was now dependent upon her labor for the scanty food which his abused nature required. In the frightful period when the pestilence went abroad on destroying pinion, breathing blight, and terror, aiike at noonday or at the solemn midnight, Horace Nelson was among the first who fell a victim to the terrible scourge. When the holy stars looked quietly down on the rippling waters, and the hushed breeze scarcely woke an echo amid the silent leaves, the dead cart bore from that miserable home the once loving, high-souled man of hon or, to ret in the pauper's burying ground. Hut two days elapsed ere little Flora, the last remaining daughter, was folded iu the mantle of the shadowy angel, but the beauty that crowned the other dying cherubs, and rested ou their cold still lips, even in the coffin, was not here. The distorted features, the lirid hue, that characterizes the ftarful scourge, made the mother turn in involuntary terror from the face that had nestled so lovingly in her bosom. She sur.k in despair almost, and never >tirred when stranger hands bore forth tii it blighted flower, to brighten no more the dark pathway of her life. Hut when their footsteps died avr.iv, and the wheels were heard rumbling in the distance, she heaved a quick gasping sigh, and said J*i:e one of old. " The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away." Then the long sealed fountain of tears welled forth, and the sore and throbbing brain found relief, and the burdened heart at lest grew still, baptized in the soothing dews of I ire at. 1 hallowed trtt-t. Kneeling bv the dutch of h.-rl i-t rcma : ning child, she silently p utreii-oul her sorrows into the ear of Him who w itches the young sparrows when they full : and won out with sorrowful vigils with the dead and dying, and wasted with hunger and bitterness of spirit, she slept the weary deep of exhaut th in sinning, hough he knew it not) wt.s that wretched lad who now saw the utter de-o!atioit of tiiat mother who bad ever been t,o him an angtl of kindnes The stricken spirit struggled in that hour of grey twilight to rrha!l not forget von in the land to which I go, end if the beings of that sphere are per mitted to visit the scenes where the soul has been gladdened, I shall come to you often, though unseen ; and wait with joy to greet yon on that starry shore." " You will not wait lons. I cannot live now. I have poisoned the cup of life for you, and that corroding memory will soon wear out the links of life's invsterious chain." lie spoke but too truly. In three days Ag nes was laid in the quiet mansion where earth's weary ones forget their sorrows. One would think the circumstances of health would exert a restraining influence on the erring man ; but sorrow and remorse increased the madness that follows intemperance. Before little Margaret was a year old, her wretched father filled a drunkard's grave. Poor Margaret did uot !>ear this ail unmoved ; she had been more or less than woman if ihe bad. But she still trusted in that God she had worshipped in her youth—who adorns the green meadows with the smiles of Lis love, —who beedeth the cry of the famHung raven, and careth for the spar rows of the field. 3he has lived for the lovely littlo graudchiid, who is now the only link that binds her to earth. To cultivate that in fant mind—to iuspire it with a love for aii things pore and beautiful—to lead it up to ma turity in that trusting love which is a shield and a support in the hours of human trial, is her.highest ambition. And she will go on in her secluded pathway striving to fulfill her mission in the manner most' acceptable to that Savior who toiled sor rowfully over the duon is to its inmates, and into which thev mu.-t consequently be driven by force. Much of course depends on the teacher, in this re spect, but stiil more on the directors. It is their duty to furnish the school-room with the necessary apparatus, whieh will never fail to make it at leari in a measure, an attractive place to study. But me thinks I hear Johnny and Tommy and Jenny and a host of other say we don't only come to study, we want to play, and have a place to play too. Here we have the secret then, the scholars do not wish to go to school, because they have no place to play. There can be no necessity for me to say any thing of the justice of this claim, nor of the benefit arising therefrom. But the great thing seems to be a place, sufß -iently near the school, where the scholars have the opportu nity cf enjoying* their hours of c port. In travelling over the greater part of Fennsylva uia.we find nearly all our school houses situat ed at such places as to be entirely unfit for soch a purpose. For inrtance near a creek or some other body of water, which softens the ground to such a degree as to render it entire ly unfit for cultivation or habitation : or pro bably on a tract of land so rocky that the squirrels have difficulty ia crossing it ; or very likely two roads meet somewhere, cutting off a piece of ground nearly the whole of forty feet square ; or a steep bill somewhere ; npon which you will snrely find a school bouse.— Wby is all this this? simply because school directors are afraid a fine situation costs too much, and their school tax might be raised a few cents thereby. They will cause rivers of tears to flow from the eyes of their own chil ren, as well as from those of all the inhabi tants of the distiict, merelv for the sake of saving a few dollars as they think,but in which they are greatly mistaken. Kvery pennv ex pended for proper school grounds is a dollar from the Doctor's bill and w ill bear a hundred per cent, interest to all who invest it. Scholars are able to stody tw ice as much if they can exercise proper!} during the hours of piay than if they are deprived of this necessary requisite to the student O. do not deprive cur scholars of something wh eh they need as much as the food which sustains their lives ! Let school directors, if they want to save money, have healthy and intelligent scholar*, advance their schools, and confer a blessing on their posteri ty ; select the roost pleasant spot which they can find whereon to erect the " Peoples College." Then after the house it built, plant trees, lay out flowe? beds, end beaatify it io every possible manner, and schoiars will soon love their place of instroctioo, their t?ste will be healthy, Tigoroo*. intelligent and happy,and directors will have done their duty,and not ere this done, wili the object of Con srnou schools have been accomplished. R. K. B. A WORD TOBOTS. —The learned Blacksmith says, " Boys, did yon ever think that this great world, with all its wealth and woe, with all its nwne9 and oorrotaios, ocean*, seas and rivers, with ati its shipping, its steamboats, railroads, and magnetic telegraphs ; with all its millions af darkly groping men, and all the scresce and progress of ages will soon be given over the haods of the boys of the present age? boys like yoo, assembled in school rooms, or playing withoot them, or both sides of the Atlantic ? Believe it, and look abroad npoo ynnr inheritance and g-et ready to enter upon its possession. The Kings, Presidents, Gove rnors, Statesmen, Philosophers, Ministers, Teachtrs.Mes oftba fctare, ail are boys,*nose VOL. XXI. NO. 22 feet like yours, canuot reach the floor, when seated on the benches upon which they are learning to master the monosyllables of their respective languages Teacher's Adcocile. ADDRESS TO THE PEOPLE OF PENNSYLVANIA. —Pennsylvania has spoken in thunder tones in behalf of the Union, of Industry, of Freedom. Her people have met at the combined hosts of sectionalism, diaunionism, free trade aud all others who sought markets for their suffrages, and a majority of 32,000 for Governor,twenty Congressmen, and more than two thirds of each branch of the Legislature,attest the fidel ity of our State to the integrity of our institu tions, and the common prosperity of our coun try. Indiana, Ohio and Minnesota have joined the Keystone State in demanding that sectional discord, wanton profligacy, and the desolation of the National Government. The decisive battle has been fought—a nation ba3 been redeemed from disunion and dishonor by the verdict of Tuesday last. The issue was made by our foe 3 and accepted by our friend?, and millions to day greet the triumph as the unerring harbinger of our national disentbralment. • Let the friends of the right not be content with an ordinary victory—Abraham Lincoln can be called to the Presidency by a clear majority of the people of the United States, if all who shall rejoice at his coming wili bnt cast their suffrages for him. To that Majority Pennsylvania can and will contribute full fifty thousand. We have but to be faithful to oaf great cause, and it is done. Let every man at his post on the great day, and the largest majority ever given in Pennsylvania to a Chief Magistrate wjll be cast on the 6th of Novem ber for Abraham Lincoln,for Union, for Free dom, for Fraternity ! A. K. MCCLCSE. Chairman People's State Committee. People's State Committee Rooms, Phila delphia, October 11, 18G0. GEN". Scon's SNAKE STORT. —Daring a din ner given by Fernando Wood in his Mayoralty of New ork, in 1555, Gen. Scott, who was present, having beeu toasted, was called upon for his rattle-snake story. It seemed, that, daring the Florida campaign, the General and his s'aff were quartered for a night in a rough building constructed from the ground, and the door open at various places. Scarcely had the preparations for bivouac been completed,when a noise from below of rattling told conclusive ly that rattlesnakes had their bivouac on the ground under the floor Indeed, they were soon suen from above as a goodly battallion.— " I went outside and measured with my eyes," said Genera! Scott, " the beight of the floor from the ground, and saw at once I was be yond reach, by about two inches, of the tall est rattlesnake ever known. I knew as a bey from experiments, that the rattlesnake never jumped or darted. He stood up as far as he could reach C ily a: d then bit. I returned and told the officers that I intended, nevertheless, to sleep ou the floor, and pronounced it safe. But they left me alone in my glory, with my martial cloak around me—a temporary Sir John Moore—while they camped outside.— Indeed, I rather enjoyed the discomfiture of the snakes as they rattled me to sleep, and vainlv tried to reach the holes in the floor."* AN* UTVPI.F.ASANT BEDFELLOW.— The Rap pahartnook (Va.; Southerner says : "On Mon day nijrht last, after retiring, we were aroused by feeling something moTe in onr bed, appar ently between the sheet and tbe ticking.— Thinking it to be a mease, we arose, lighted a candle and commenced examining around the bed, and roach to our surprise, and horror, we perceived a hooded adder glide from the bed and disappear mysteriously. On Tuesday afternoon, while sitting in oar sanctum, we heard the venomous reptile in a waste paper box, and with some trouble end great danger, we succeeded iu ousting him from his quarters and qa'cklj dispatching him His snakeship measared 3ft Bin. in lenuth, and 4 in. ia diameter, and had we been bitten, death would have ensued in a few bour3. This is no snake story —the curious can see the reptile banging in onr office. GFTEIT EASTERN*. —A fatality seems to at tend the Great Eastern ; onlccky in its launch ing, uuiocfey in its trial-trip, deprived of its captain by an unfortunate accident, mismanag ed to the port of New York, and grossly mis managed in its Cape May trip.its entire career thns far has been excedingly unfortunate It was advertised to leave for New York on tbe 19th ult., but its psrotl ill-lock attends it. Its coal conld not be got en beard in time, while to add to tbe chapter cf accidents, its propel ler is said to be much out of order as to inter fere with its making a successful voyage. *3~A Juryman was asked whether be had been charged by the judge. " Well," said he. " the little fellow tbet sits up In the pulpit and stares over the crowd gh? as a lecture, but I don't knew whether be charges anything or not." Car*A pedagogue was about to flog a pupil for having said he was a 1001, when tbe boy cried out, " Oh. don't ! I won't call yoa so any more—l'll never sty ir/izt I trunk again in cH tbe days of my life." OaF*'Landlord." said a pedasrogue some what given to strong libations, " I would like a quantum of spirits, a modicum of molasses, in conjunction with a little water—bat deal largely with spirits, thou man of miiturea." GaT" I wish" said a beautifol wife to a stu dious husband, " I wish I was a book." " I wish you were an Almanac,' replied her lord, " and theD I would get a new one every year." Just then the silk rustled ! best deEnition we ever heard of 41 hearing FALSE witness against TOOT n: : ;hbor," was given by a little girl in school. She said it was when nobody did nothing and soose •body went and told of i\