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', --7 Y ' • • . .. . , • . • St \• .;. . . . .. -. . -;••!,- .- 1 .1 I- ;z- .I. i ~.. 1 - \ . ).,,, '''.' "--.', :-----,-----•--\ \ . -:'---'-• 1 . ~.. -• .). .„ i" , . ....., . ; . - . • . • t.' , . .:: 1, .... . • .. _ .. . - I , 1 . .• . , .. . .. .., . _ . . . .. , .. , . • , T N s :: - ~.!': I 1 `; . 1 • ' ( I I .'' 1 -. . . . ... _ .. . ,* _ - . • , . . - . . . . .. . - :,_, 1 • ;. . . . . .. •-...... . r .;• . , .... . . ... . -.-., • _ ;. ; - ; . . . . . . ..- _ . . •• . . . .. ••• - • , ,;. . • Tat Baron= is published oily Thump. . lay Morning, by li. 0. Goonarcat,at $2 per -annum, in advance." ADVEIVrISEMENTS, exceeding fifteen :hoes are inserted at rats ex= per line for first insertion, and mr. darn perline for .sibsequent insertions. Special notices in-' ieited before Marriages and Deaths, will bo charged ?Err= aims per line for each affertion. All resolutions ofAssodation. ; ommunications of limited or individual ntorest,al4 notices of Marriages orDeatbir .3 reacting lire tines, axe charged xso inns rpsr 1 Year. 6 ma. 3 ma. itlne OoltulT, $lOO 860 316 cislt 60 35 25 one Square, 15 10 - 71 ,t.stray,Carttion, Lost and Found, and other aivertiaements, not exceeding 10 lines, three weeks, or less, $1 60 A inainistrator's &Executor's Notioes —2 00 Aaditor's Notices • • .2 50 Rosiness Cards, APO lines, (per year). :5 00 Alerchants and others, advertising their esiness, will be charged 326. They will 1 :)c entitled to 4 column, donfined exclusive. y to their business, with privilege of quarter - y changes. Advertismg in all 021103 cultism of c.ubscription to the pager. 308 PRINTING of every kind, in Plain L . 1 ,13 Fancy colors, done with neatness and dispatch. Handbills, Blanks, Cards, Prim ;?blots, .to., of every variety and style, prin. .-. 0 (1 at the shortest notice. The Rum= ovrics has just testi re-litted with Power Presses, and every thing in the Printing can be executed in the most artistic .wanner and at the lowest rates. TERMS LiVARLLBLY CASH. Carbs. t TENRY PEET, Attorney at Law, .i._L Towania, Pa. AA?, 66. ~./ 1 D WARD OVERTON Jr ., Attor my at Law, Tonacale, Pa. Office in the .art House. July 13,1865. o f 1 EORON D. MONTANYE, AT '.l 'FORNEY AT LAW—Office corner of and Pine streets, opposite Porter's Drug Store.. wr A. PECK, ATTORN By /T law • Towanda, Pa. Office oVer the Baker; South of the Ward souse and apposite the Court Hoese. Nov: 3, 1868. IR. H. WESTON, DENTIST.- ..1-Z Office in Patton's Block, over Gore's Drag and Chemical Pura. JJanGB COUNSELLORIL. 13KE44 1 2 7 iLlt i N tr, E To Y w. f , , Pa. Particular attention' paid to business :1 the Orphatue Court. July 20, 1866. ir T. DAVIES, Attorney at Law, V • Towanda, Pa. Office with Wm. Wat c:s. ECos. Particul a id to Or 14as' q urt basinessar attention and settleme p nt of dece ..:uts estates. DOCTOR' H. A. BARTLETT, BURLINGTON ;BOROUGH, PA July '.!1,1868 44'1 B. FORD—Licensed Auctioneer 44 . TOWANDA, PA., sozad promptly to all business entrusted Lim. Charges moderate. Feb. 13, 1668. DARSONS & CARNOCHAN, AT TORNEYS AT LAW, Troy, Bradford Co Practice in all the Courts of the county. poi :coons made and promptly remitted. E. B. PARSONS, 1112 W. rt. catutecniN. ISS E. 11. BATES, M. D. 1., (Graduate of Woman's Medical College, Ytdiadeiphia. Clans 1854.] Office and residence Slo. 11 Park street - Owego. Particular anen t ion given to Diseases of Women. Patients t 3 ted at-their homes if requested. 'ay 26, 1868 • t i IitANCIS E. POST, Painter, ands, Pa, with 10 years experience. is con. h....at he can give the best satisfaction in Paint• e. Graining, Staining, Glazing, Papering,Ac. er - Partivular attention paid to Jobbing in the • April 9, 1966. I E. VAUGHAN —Architect . and vi • Builder.—Ml kinds of Architectural de .;furnished.. Ornamental work in Stone, • r , ,n and Wood. Office on Main street, over tl S Co.'s Bank. Attention given to Itu •i A rchitecture, such as laying out of grounds, April 1,1867.—1 y. [ERCUR & MORROW, .Attorneys at Law, Towanda, Pena's, • Thy undersigned having associated thentselves ••.'ler in the practice of Law, offer their pro• -. 'nal services to the public. LYSSES SIEROUD P. D. NO :113.0W. h.trch 2,1865. I OIIN W. 1111, d TTOnNEYAT . LAIV, Towanda, Bradford Co. Pa. General Insurance and Real Estate Agent.— ; , anties and Pensions collected. 2.7. B.—All • 1.1 , 1e , s in the - Orphan', Court attended to romptly and with care,. Office Berates new t. berth aide Public : bare. 00t.21, '67. J OHN N. CALIFF, ATTORNEY t AT LA 11-', Towanda, Pa. Particular at nt:on given to Orphans' Court business, Con. ancing and Collections. sir Once at the Register's and Recorder's Joe—Fool of Court Muse. Dec. 1, 1864. I P. KIMBALL, Licensed Auc ' tionier, Pottersville, Bradford Co.. Pa. • !..rs his cervices to the public. Satisfaction r.o pay required. All orders by p!, addre,sed as ab.•ve, will receive prompt st:t.tai 37. Oct. 2,1867.-6 m N. T. B. JOEINSON, TOWANDA, PA. Having' permanently located, offers i. , roies.lonal services to the public. Calls jr m tly attended to in or out of town. °lice with J. DeWitt on Main street. Residence at qtr.. Humpltrefs on Second Street. krril 18, 1668. • R. PRATT has removed to State a./ street. (first above B. 8. Rum!! 'Co's Easl: ). sons from a distance desirous con -4-1.! ing him, will be most likely to find him on tt rkt,y if each week. Especial attention.wlll to s.urg,ical rases, and the extraction of , ;a. or Ether administered when desired. July I N , 1.0;6. D. S. PRATT, U. D. FIRS. T. F. &. WM. A. MADILL, prirSICIANS AND SURGEONS, T , .e and residence i•t Wysox, Pa. Dr. T. F. MAdtll can be consulted at Gore's Drug Stole ;a Towanda, every Saturday. Dr. Wm. A. ILi HI will give especial attention to dies - sea Ct li.o Eye, Ear, Throat and Lungs, having :Lida a speciality of the above diseases for the eight years. T. F. 11.1. DILL, IC D. W. A. MADILL. MBE= BENJ. M. PECK, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Towanda, Pa. ill business Intrusted to care will receive prompt attention. 0 !See I:. ti.e Mike late!) , occupied by idercur Mor- W. sautb of Mani House, up stairs. I) • NIASON & ELY, Phytictans 11 on Pine street, To .la, ht I , le residence of Dr. Mason. t. •tt tt - e...tr:tttentit-n given to diattAses of Wo.• t. , .1- .1 titt-e.ses of Eye, Ear and Throlt. .'• U. D. 116ZiDY OLIVEU ELY, Y. D. t.r:i T. NEWELL, COUNTY SURVEYOR, Bradford Co.' Pa„ will promptly attend t • .i 1 ~ u sinese in his line. Ptrtienlar attention t to running and establishing old or disrpn.. 1 I nes. Also to sarTeying of all nnpattented 41 soon as warrants are obtained. tayl7 -- • kv B. KELLY, Dentist. Office • over Wickham k Black's, Towanda,Pa. the various styles of work scientifically nz on 1 warranted. Particular attention is to the Alluminum Base for Artificial Toth. which is equally as good as Gold and ~ .:peeior to either Rubber or Silver. Please c4ll and examine specimens. eillorororm or Ether administered under di. of a Physician when desired. Aug. G, 1867.—tf. Euv ELL HOUSE, TOWANDA, PA., JOHN C• WILiO.I leisNl Vas Fintm.t 1141 ready to ac (,,nactadate the Travelling labile. No pains 4 . '" - ripen se will be spared to give satisfaction !,v those w.. 0 may give him a call. air North aide of the public square, east of m. , r , -cr's new block [now building]. _\MERICAN HOTEL, TOWANDA, PA., 'laving purchased this well known Hotel aa - rice Street, I have re-tarnished and refitted I , with every convenience for the actommoda ti.m of all wti: E i la nl i gy patronise me. No pains will ~p ared to all - plessant and agreeable. VAT 3, '66.—tf. J. 13 PATTERSON, ProP pATCREN.—The w/11-known Trot ting Stallion P ATM' EN,by the celebn• ted ihorge K. Patch. 0, out of Memoir tr mare 'tl *'wad during the fall season at Kingsbury e, Solomon's Livery Stabh, Towanda. Terms_ tip to innire. All mazes at the risk of owner. owners parting with mares, will be held re -I.oat.iule for insurance. • IWIGSBURY le SOLOMON. TORZOIi4, NOlre 2, MS- —2m- E. O. 131-0131:11E904;1z*blisher'f VOLUME XXIX. iarbs. m YE R Sc . lt IL L H , - SPECIAL NOTION. Myer, Foster Co., Will deliver -Moor,eed, Ideal, Graham Mont, or any tblag,elae their line in my pal of the Ctustotners will -ilnd an Order Book at the store of Fox. Stevens, Mereur Co. All or' ed,dera left In said book win be promptly atten d. to. - , - re ! Any Inquiries in regard to GHndin s g, or other business of the Mill, entered In said Bookorill be answered. . . , [ IdYKR, FOSTER ! 2, CO. Towanda, zone 24, 1888.—tf. ; ! QOLOMON• COO - PER--Has reniov• ed from the Ward Bonn and has :aphnod a SHAVING AND RAM DitESSING ELILOON ,_ , Two doors south of the National Hotel, iaad . adjoining Patton's Block, on Main Street, hi the basement. This shop is open 'constantly. tram gs. m., to 9 p. m., to accommodate all that will favor him with a call. '1 3 TwO ut Sier n t. eed workmen in this saloon, always to to wait on customers in a satidectory Gents and Ladlee Bair Cutting GI - the Wait fashionable stylus. Ramos honed and set ready tor eau and warranted to salt., Ornamental Bair Work. Switches, Waterfalls,' and Curls, made to order. Wigs made and repaired. Towanda. Aug. 18, 1868.—ti. TRE UNDERSIGNED :. VE opened a Banking How 'ln Tow** un- der the name of G. P. MASON & CO. They are prepared to draw BM change, and make colbseMoth In New York, Philadelphia, Ed all portions of the United States, as also England, Germany, and, Prance. To Loan money, receive deposits , and , to do a U. Banking btudness. G. P. Mason e was on of the late Lai et Laporte, le son & Co., of Towanda, Pa., and his knowle ge of the business men of Bradford and adjoin,ng Countiesand having been ln the banking business for about fifteen ye:lo 7ol re this house a desirable one, through to make collections. G. F. MASON, Towtmds, Ott. 1,1866. A. G. MASON. BRADFORD COUN'Tt • I REAL ESTATE AGENCY, H. B. McKEAN, Rsu. Elm= Amen Valuable Fame, Mill Properties, City and Town Lots for sale. • Parties having property for Sale will Hid It to their advantage by ,eaving a description of the same, with terms of sale.at this uguncy, as parties are constantly enquiring for farms &.c.llll H. B. WIRRAL Real Estate Agent. °ince Montanye's Block, Towanda, Pa. Jan. 29, 1867. REAL ESTATE AGEXCt I H. B HtIEEAN, SEAL ESTATE AGENT. Offers the tollowlag Farms, Coal andiTinlber Lands for sale : Fine Timber lot, 3 mute from :Towanda, rt. talning 53 acres. Price 31,325. Farm in Asylum, containing 135 acres. Good buildings. Under a Ike state of cultivation. Mostly Improved. Price 36,000. • I Fara. in West Itsrlinston—Pll -the Cree 4.— New house and barn. Under a tine state of pl . tivation. 95 acres. Price 35,450. , Farms in Franklll. All under gooecnitiva tion. Good bolldintis. For sale cheap. , Several very des' table Soncea end Leta in Towanda. A large tract of Cs !Lands in i logs county. Towanda, July 18• r 57. • M ERSBURG MILLS ! , The subscribers having purchased'o .f Mr Barns his interest in the Mnalsremo Mrus will miry on the business of Milling, and guarantee all work done by them tO be of the very best quality. Wheat, Rye and Buckwheat Floikr, dud Feed constantly on hand, rdr sale at the lowest cash price. t Also now on hand a large quantity ! of best Ground Cayuga Plaster for sale, MYER t FROST Myersbnrg, Sept 24, 1868. I..ERAYSVILLE PHOTOGI!:AGH GALLERY.—Satisfactlon gun} teed.— Life size, Large Photograph Cabinet pictuies, Ambrotypes ani Cazd Photographs, tn thel la test style and at reduced prices. Copying and enlarging done to order. We charge nothing extra for Groups. Babies pictures or Copper. heads with long faces. • Call and see our specimens. Our stocit of Albums, Frames, etc; HARNON Leßaysville, Oct. 22, 1868. LAKE'S Vir OOD Saws twenty•Bre cords of stove wood, shingle bolts or stave timber, per day. - Is driviniby one or two hones, areeasily moved from place to place, and can In - an hours time be sellop anywhere. This machine is complete Wilts serf, requiring the assistance of no other pow er. , fhe horses draw by a sweep, making It mu t h more safe than a tread power. It saws twi e as fast, and is sold for one half the price A n mber of these mills are now in use In Pike Renick and Otwell Townships, and areigiving nniVersal sat' faction. Those wishing ta chiges will Apply to H. W. BOLT.ES, Lellass ville, or 8. N. BRONSON, Orwell. Bppt. 22, 1568.-3 m• - i ~ HARDING & SMALLEY, Having entered Into a co-partnership for the :ransaction of the PHOTOGRAPHIC bash:teas, at the rooms formerly occupied by Wood an d Harding, would respectfully call the attention of the public to several styles of Pictures which we make specialties, as : Solar Photographs, Plain. Penciled and Colored, Opal types, Pomo lain Pictures, ,to., which we claim for derma= and' brilliancy of tone and Artistic finish, eau not pe excelled. We invite all to examine them as well as the more common kinds of Portraits which we make, knowing full well that they will bear the closest inspection. This Gallery claims the highest reputation for good Work of anylin this section of country, and we are pie. termined by a strict attention to buaineas and the superior quality of our work, to not only retain but increase its very enviable repdtatilm. We keep constantly on hand the best *artily of Frames and at lower prices than at any other establishmemt in town. Also Passeparteilts Card frames, Card Easels, Holmes' Stereo scopes, Stereoscopic Vies, and everything else of importance pertaining to the business. Glve us an early call, N. B.—Solar Printing for the trade on the most reasonable term. „ D. HARDING, , .29.'67. F. SMALLEY. ACARD.—Dc. VANBUSEIRK hat tamed a License, as required, of .be Gocalyeat Vulcinate Company, to Vulcanize Rubber an a base for Artificial Teeth. and has now, a good selection of, those beautiful carved Block Teeth, and a superior article of Black English Rubber, which will enable him to stip plytiall those in want of sets of teeth, - with tho e unsurpassed for beauty and natural ap peatance. Filling, Cleaning, Correcting Irreg ularities, .Extracting and all operations be. longing to the Su rgi cal Department skillfully performed. Cholo orm administered foe the exttactioti - of Teeth when desired, an article being used for the purpose in which he has perfect confidence, baying administered it with the mostpTeasing results during - a pmctica of fourteen yews. . , • Beiog vtry grateful to the public for their libetal patronage heretofore received, he would say that by strict attention to the wants of his patients, he would continue to merit their con fidence and approbation. Office in Beidleman's Block, opposite the Means Rouse, Tohranda, Pa.! Dec. 20,1867.-4 m: TVENTY-FIVE YEARS EXPERI , ENCE IN DENTISTRY. I .1: S., Barra, 11. D., would respeetfalilafarm the inhabitants of Bradford county t thi is permanently located in Towanda, Pa, jEle would say that from his long mad sucCesafal practice of TWENTY-FIVE YEARS duration he is familiar, with all the different styLio t f wo done in any and all Dental Establish ate In city or country, and is better prepared a any ,other Dental operator in the vicinity to do work the best adapted to the many and different case& that .present themselver - oftentiznes to the Den ,u be understands the art of andtinthir o artificial teeth, and has faci li ties for doing the e.' To those requiring, tinder 'seta of tee artificial he would call attention to his new kind of Tor which consists of poreelein for both plate and th, and forminga contina ooa •Il hi mo durable, more natural-in a , and mu , better ada pted to their= any other kin ..of work. Those in need of the same are Levi • • to call 'and examine specimens. ] Tooth fill- to last for years and oftentimes for life.— Ohl . • form, Ether, and " Nihau Oxide " ad min -red with l'erfect safety, as overtop? bon fire . patients within the last lour years can tea- liz.Patton's t ADD HOUSE, TOWAND . On Blal2. Street. neer the Wirt Meee, C. T. BMITH, Proptietot. 1233=3 I Mutt • i Ah 41Fir 'Jar. ' - , I , . i , 1 n'' 3242 'rz ' I PP 3za ? ' J. . ' , .1.--•• j 1': It is a fair autumn 4sy, H • - The ground is Ara** yellow 'This maples gliara tire,to gray, p i ed The groin is bo i n ! golden eh: Mir I hear the s qhalls • Pipe shrilly. 'Mid a 'st4bble dqe And rallied beets ikont b*r WEN Within the barn seer b The ifithilt Mee now areA t eltd. • Their patois watered tar and wid The sumo berries, riebly lied. Bedeck the Isis lis eithir idd!i r A dreamy calm is in!thel+- • - A dismay WO oli 141 4 . 1 i . • ,Abtirreb Ikea 'deist". Odr Than gbh', "bleb Sage Mel • I see the shcioka of ... ea Atm— '.. The yellowed mosses. mi the root The diamond dew4opsi of the ni., • That string With gems U. spider'. An azure base is batwing how About the ontlinelpf hills, And chanting ttrit-ro*l ward From marsbes,lials, ' kills. .... I „ l___ _LA ger many yews t he put • ••• :• • 4 solemn ;manses !to tnyilsoal— it limbered e'en my UM+ •. . • - And on my gayeanents stole, 'Twos sad, yet woe !ibises ali .. Of hope hnti title* 6ttiltwin, ed his autumn brings Mme l only joy, • No shadow hatmts my alind. !I • And why is this? The dead leaves • The blossoms wither a s l itf old ; And winter comes, With ariewy pall, To wrap the earth so chill and pd -The sea-fowl, etzling tabintrt the a Cell chant their plaitillvii monoto And why, then leaves and blossoms :. Should I feel joy alone? !! Oh, ask me not—l must ' not tell ; I dare not all my heart disclose— A fairy wove a magio spillil • - • Around me, when deCteyed the roit• Two gifts.dia falling biutuntlr bring Two sythbols of unfading bliss— Upon my finger glows alling, Upon my lips—a kiss j , _ • NM iotellautiuo. NABBY. Posr Orns. Comm X Ito (Wich is in the etas n* Kentuo • iron. 6, 1868. • q . Bad • news travels fast. W , hey .heerd from enuff of Le State s •to know that the butcher G ra nt —he s wich wunat afore!stoxi: in the • yof the Confederacy -- hez ',l been e cted President, and that Seymore ; and Blare, our gellerions! s tandard ear ere, hey beendefe4tedignomini sly. f This ended it I Thi4 Palette it 1 There fe no longer hope for De oca loom. e By. Our star is sot n kv er ehel I forgit tbe k h*atly ap ar mace nv. Deekin Pogrom's face, the fat4l nooze wnz- toldi him. Angle teat rolled from his . left eye, own his furrowed cheek--4 glitte d for a brief moment on the! tip n his brilliant nose, and phitiged o into spaCe 1 How like our hopes ! Nev er a word sed he; but Badly be kon •edMe to foller. Sadly ',he walk dto he square, mournftilli ho p lied down the- Confedritl flag wic hez waved from the pole fit i front o Bas coat's, tenderly he I ftilded it, and placed it under the b ar el of w h isky 11 in the bar. ' Thar 11, it rest,' wip ed he in a husky tone, 4 it will ever kiwi the breeze no m+ And vet / come with cmoshn, !the goo old man bursted into a 1 fihod nv ears, wich saved his life. ; !The die n nv moisture truce - lie .system m eit necessary for him to; dike su in to fill its place, and that snthi wnz , trengthnin. To 'say& him I took suthin strengthnin top.': , And Ben Butler is elected. excellent conservatiye, icharl Delia, who has forgo that shirts went out nv d to t 2o yea and! who still reads Ibo t Nation telligencer sposin it` th be a paper, is defeated, 4n4 Butler; wawa hung a Demo rkt,in Noi teen's and who wdo that 1 every mornin to giv him an 11 titej is fastened onto this here If happy but now distractid countr two!yeers more. Grashos Heil send the yaller fever tl the•Co now, and finish utup to-wttnet. Ilwon't say a word 4 to the ny this- most terrible ;'defeat. motr wood make speeches, wic alluz been fatle to Presidenshul rant, and Blare wood *rite to letters, wich is jnet ez bad. Be Blate 'fairly represents us, wich off all the decent ppoile , and, more ruttier prides lime' on bi gentleman, wich chilied-the ard 1 our i own party. ' The 1 nominee were ontorchnit, but{ don't reo 'em.l It's fate. ' , 1 • . I sigh, Deekin Po 'ri m sigh n m sighs, I the rest uv our cirkl wood ly they heven't rein ed front any; wher they hey gone to vo the :interest nv the ; Constitooi an4, , to aid in the maintainance n i lawit. i 1 ii, Sigh! I hey reason ;to sigh. Pollock will get the Post offia all. 1 Tho hie hauda aror,contamt by ]rein . takes into the hands nv gere—his hands rich handles ket and draws molassek and iz sekently degraded by eUrnin his liying,bis hands will papa out to kin, Pogrom the pup or wich , , Colliers takes 1 The .'peekiu, e thodght nv this, hust!nito teets; "I She' stop that paper o sez he,l the Corners shel 'go I hook in darknis nv ignerapce, II shel tight go for a letter_ norwill I hey lone written ter Int to any When a Ablishn face stop at the erall delivery I She l the Post - 01fis ! ; : ri . WilLthe new Admintstritshui prive a whole curnmrintty ova 1 mealy to give one nv los suppc a pishun ? We i shel bee. But, I coed endooestie less n posiitten— for principle I kin', marterdom squarelyialthe faoe I see other and more It4rible r follOwin this catastrnplm. Wat uv the -niggers ? Wel hcv,l at our poles, ' : all v the 1 envies who live between 'he Gariettstown, a yotin; ez reg though they were white men. shot hey em defilin t h e Isakrcd . , Jan. 23, 1869. KO ; Vottvg box es tho they wullt not fly a cussed rine. • I see dark lines afore our pooi. Stiste. They will hereafter hold the land wich. they'he \ v, bought, -and wicli • they live on, by 'a shqre tenure, and t hey will incittia''ad multiply ; _Pollock will buy . . their prodeme` and they, will work and get Money. This money they will. lend to us.—fer we' must her it to Ans. tain_ life—and they - will take ma gages onto pur land,. (Yi'hiin i , sa our,l mein Deakin Pog!am and rich.)' EZ we never ,' work ourzel,Ter, an will not hei, under the 'present ar• rangement, the means ny compellin the labor necessary' to our support, we kin never ,gay iu and the •*silt wilt bei thib beautiful . laud in ourn with we sedeerly love, will pass out uv the "hands uv the stronger. and better race into ' the control 'nv a weaker and less powerful. - The Deekin was remarkin ' suthin to this effect, when: Joe Bigler re , markt in reply, that the Deakin bed better throw., himself eau) tan arid-' poky UV his eons. ' Why„ to) , can't work any more than I kin, 'sed the Deekin !I don't mean yoor white sops I' sed thliterrible Bigler. 'They ain't uv no akkount. But in the nigger settlement- atrasirettatown- yoo boy more than tvrputy'vrho "viood? ' , The obt Deekin mailed out fly the room, while Bigler lift • his most feendiah laff. efitee 131 woof 1 The people will be deprived nv theirinnocent =easement. This Grant will send on armed •hireling, clothed in ojes bloo, With mttsketa and Bich, who will ',Meet in nigger's, and pertect on their farms and in their shops the °jos North enters who hey settled in our midst. We sbel see the gellorious Southern system decline stidily and shoofly. The whippin posts will rot and the stox will decay—the, yelp uv dogs will no more be heerd, and the cheer ful crack ter the p;stol and the shreek av the man wat has gotibis gruel will no more be heerd in all the land. Bascom, after he bez ' the few farms still unmorgaged in the visinity, will close and go to Lopieville and em bark into a wholesale grosery trade and jine the churbh, and give librally to Sandy-skools ; his grosery will fall into dekay and - Lie 'sine will hang by on hinge, We she! see Churches an ll skool-holistis i factrys and villages everywhere. The Po gram place uv 2,000 akers will be divided up into twenty farms, and onto them farms will be the bustlin Noo Yorker, the ceol, calealatin Yan kee, the stiddy, hard workin German —who will display his, grovelia na cher by workin himself 'humid uv forcin niggers to du it for him. We ehel be run over with Ilkiwl-tharms, deluged With academies, plastered over with noose-papers, stunned with machinery, drove crazy by the whirr, crash and clash nv niowin machines and reapers. And there will bt cheese made at the Corners. Penni backer's dihtillery well be turned in to A'theese factry, and weak whey will run - wher now the geeerous high-wines flash along the troughs. Ther will be no rectifyin at the Cor ners—the hog pens will be abolished and in their sted will be ekool-houses. And methinks I see in my minds'-eye Morasho the sperit, the goat nv the departed Pogrom, (for he won't sur vive it long,) a boverin over the sane, ez Hamlick's father did. The bless ed shade will look in vain for his house—on the spot wher it stood will be ati.acalemy. He will turn' to Bascomb'e, but .ther he will find a deestrict skule. ',To Pen iibacker'e'l he will gasp in a sperit whisper, and with a speritooal smack nv his spur Roost lips lere will hover over it, but the Betel' uv cheese in the place 'ay the strengthuin odors in with he de- Res, will send .a spiritooal shudder throe him A• gust. av a leer will ran down his speritooal nose, linger fur a minit at the tip like a dew drop on the rose,snd ? Then will the dissatisfied gust demand to be taken back to purgatory, i plan less' tryin An 'his serves. ES Deekin Pogram her only britened up wallet. A thot flashed over his mind with gave him comfort for a minit. ' Isn't ther a Booth for Grant ez thee wur. for Linkin salt he. 'Ah sed I, in alarm,, 'wood ,yon kill Grant to hey Colfax in his place? We mite kill Colfax, say you. Mars ? spotlit they'd elect Sumner ea Presi. dent nv the Senit I Kill Sumner ? Good Lord, no 1 They'd then elect Butler Speeker ny the 11( use, and he can't be. killed. No 1 No I We bed better bear the ills we hey than fly to them we know not uv. Its gone. All is up with me and us.. I steel stay in Kentucky for the pres ent, the wat may become uv inn the Lord on ly .knows. ease ,Sey , hez and , on• Inje • in hen, the -Bodily Repairs—Basktring racial Deficits —How a Lost Nose May be Bepleced—; Hare ;Ups, Holm is arks, do, A man, now and then, has the Ws toitune to loge his nqpe. What would be the- greatest conqueror that ever lived without this useful appendage ? Many a mau would as soon lose his -life as his nose ; hence the skill we see exerted to supply its place when lost. Of old, the or gan was modeled, as far as,possible, in the form of the old member, and then the permanent. structure was shaped out of beaten silver, which was enamelled .so as to match the complexion. The metal !proboscis was commonly 's-cured to the face by means i - of a pair of spectacles, which skilful!) bid the line of junc ture. Tbere was one advantage is this artificial nose, it needed no pocket handkerchief.'- but then it suffered-the drawback of possessing no power of smell. Gotta perch& has - lately been used in place of ; but, by means of the rhino 'plas tic operation, the skilled surgeon has of late years taken all the repairs of the We 'out of Abe +bards of the or ihoprictic artist. The surgemicalls' in Dame Nature to his aid atone. Having made a figure in wash-leath- . er of the amount of, skin requited to fora the new member, he marktilhe, triangular outline 'upon the patient's forehead, with thi base uipward. - 'He now dissects - the skin down ; to the bone, lifting the: aelhiler theme, tO- . do- Per rtkrig • ~ m y Took , nt eta abet lack and , r ea We = ERE TOWANDA, BRADF,OD,.COUNTY, PA., NOVEMBER' 26,1868a_ PETROLEUM V. NASIVE, P. M. JP (Wick iz Postmaster.) MOATDOOIa OP DlMMltlionolt nol[ MIT QTARTIgh getherwith all the blood,' vowels that nourish it, The 'stamp, or so much 4;4 ' • the n , .e as is , retained, having been pa down io as to gibe a good shape the fiap of the skin it Ewletell upo li Itself just between the brows, so as to maintain the circula tion, and. then it is fastened Upon the superetructure by`sutures. In "a. few days, adhesion, takes place, the Mr oulatiosi te thormighly rteetabltehed, aid it ,ery filly- - ;prebosele i s ' the re sult. Hareliii;apeittires in the cheek, are now • repaired at the sTallest no. tic* With admirable re pita. .. In shOrt, the skilled operator , . thinks no More of shifting patches of skin abiiiit from due pirtof- the frame to another than the , gardner thinks of re...nodding i bam place In c the grass- Flit. Even lips • are made ; but not to this . manner. ~ .Whew therm have to: be restored thei r modeler is called in, who models 'the features in .ailyer, and colors it.. In these slays Of 'arti fichilAeightening by edict; even this deception may pass must er; but all attempts at kissing must be left out, for obvious reasons. . A very ingen ious method is adopted - of repairing the hearing„when there has been no loss or' rupture of the drum of the eat'. It often haPilens that the shell, or folds of skin which form the out eard elf, is d feC,&e. Some 'dun ning,icraftama ,noticing. this, Ms contrived- to mould - flowers so-that they shall fit, in the opening of the ear: I saw a pair of coevolvuli thus fitted and ea fastened with wiree that they Icioked like adornments of the head-dress 1 and, no dmibt, were very tifieful in collecting the sound and dtivint it upon the auditory nerve. . We think we have shown that art is capable of repairing, after a fashion, it is true, every conceivable damage to the outward form; but \it is just as far as ever, however,' from at tempting to imitate the bvisg prin eiplo within. The smallest nerve fibre, the minn'est' artery, show a workmanship it never even 'dreams of copying. Nature keeps her se cret, and will Continue' .to do so till the - end of time.-1" Bodily ( ,Repairs," in Once a Week. TIM GEXQIAN BEND To the Editor of the iTtiville Courier Mary has got tbe cur -1 Vatdre of the spiue,called the Grecian "Bend." Site cit?ht it at SaratogC, •here she has been lon exhibition du- ring the searon.l She has returned, however, bringing with her several large:trunks tallt.of second hand clo thing r -that ie gattnents, which she he s worn once. • As I was •pasiung by a dry girds store on Fourth street, Mary Jane was pitching forward at such a rate I thought she was about to fall into my arms. I held tnit -these imple• ments of industry accordingly. She didn't fall worth . 4 cent. tegarding not .the example set by one first par ents, she maintained her curVillinear form,: and placing the tip of a gloved forefinger :on my outstretched palm, she . said in a fmhinable drawl of a cursed.Fiftn AveneodLe,— * "Aw, Yoba, it its you ? Deluited." She picked up that infernal 'latent and language at Saratoga also. "Why Jennie dear, this is an unex pected pleasure. (Grabbing both the little hand's and ceiling them up to gether.) I was not looking for you for wane. weeks. Yon are ill. lam sorry. Shall I assist you, to your. carriage ?" She looked somewhat like the half of a parenthesis, lint more like an in terrogation point!. I wee certain she had been eating unripe fruit, and was suffering from cramp colic, and wondered why 00 did not go I home and take something. • Bat she said : "Never wee betfew in my loife. I was fassiced . to Wave that sweet place because I had uathing abiolutely to weave? "Nothing to wear I Why what become of all your clothes ? Did you have ,a ilre,or did you exchange them for Bower-vases and plastevof•Paris statues of the apostles 7" , • "Haw stupid t 1, had wan all my dresses once, and it's nawt the stoyle to appeah in the same appawral twoice." "Confoutid, the style I Bat I am glad you came,hoo.e, if you did come almost naked and so changed that it is difficult to realize that it ia a yon.— You are among friends. now, and I hope that you will shortly recover yonr, speech and year figure." She was mad, and expressed her sel finite naturally and intelligently as otlows ' H I Honda I suppose it is the chief dat of one's friends to find fault with one. I declare I am tired of friends, and or this little . provincial town where the primtpre manner and styles of the backwoods still prevail. If one goes for awhile into good so ciety abroad and ;returns somewhat civilized,one is 'sere to incur the jeers and ridicule of barbarians,here. Good morning." I Saying Which, she dived in another dry goods trap, and was soon en gaged in tumbling and ' cheapening the fashionable fabrics of ttel hour. I never saw such a change in a person in a few short weeks. When I parted with her at the depot, a - few weeks ago, she was the very picture of health and periOnification of physi cal beauty. She was natural and unaffected, and so tenderly demon strative as she well could be in a crowd composed of paterfamilias, who nstead of attending to his bueinees and. baggage, though it was necessa ry to see me and Mary Jane safely deposited on th*K train. - It is my be lief that the old gentleman wa4 afraid that I would secrete myself some where in the car. I wish now I had. The energy with which. Mary Jane attacked the dry goods convinced me that I was wrong in my green fruit 'supposition and that she was suffer ing from something beyond the reach of peppermint. I naturally conclu ded that: it mast b that terrible die cue knewn as the spinal complaint, brought on by carrying toe,. 'heavy panniers and supporting long 'trails. I forthwith diligently consulted all the medicine works' which treat of that aliment, and 'accumulated all the information on . the subject that I Could .by vague questioning,: extra° ted fame the medical profession.— With ii mind' 'gored , with- USeful Mll=l isOWledge stud a: heart overflowing with affection, I called te.see; the lit. tle'aufferer With the :intention of im: parting_to . ltet a goodly, dnentity ,of She time 14 fie pirior )oolong as though she had - been .crimped with curling tongs. ..Ifow,X pitied- her...A. few weeks beforeehe was as,ptraight as an "arrow, and ii:natutal smile pliiyrcd fitsouther.:iose%bud*lfionth,'ln: stead of that he coliffitalhed pude? . pain (as I tn,snpmed, ) .- : • • !'How do - you feernow, 'Jennie dear 1" I said in my most soothing tones. • - "Why, I feel goi*lA of course. One eoflld ttaWt fent I:lthdriviie efts* hey. ing en wed the watoit and'aiwcie. taw of Satatagaw." . "I admire 'your feirtitude, Jennie, almost • as ' much' as I deplore your misfortune, but you might as well look the disagreeable fact in the face at once. This is the only'way to ob• viate it I atinre you it is not. so very bad after all. The:dociors sajr it can.he cured,"or so nearly so that with judichms dressing it will never be noticed. You know, Jennieohat it will make no difference with me. An long as your heart remains the sam ,e no:other changesnen affect me." "What are you ta ping ..fibout ? Montt tindbritablyoti. pawaitively.lf• "Von% be a ' goose,, Mary_ Jane," [angrily] "1 know that women al ways deny that anything ails them. They think it is smart But you can't conceal your complaint, and consider. ing out. present relations I don't . think yqp ought to conceal anything groin nib." Mary Jane w. 6 getting mad. She, has a vein in her forehead which is au unerring tempei barometer. It began to swell. That and an ominous_ glittering of the eyes said as plainly as an almanac, "look out for squalls about this time." She said energeti cally 1 '34 complaihf I Our present rela tions ! Conceal nothing from you I Perhaps you will be good enough to explain yourself ; that is if you can. My temper is not angelic. I never set up for a. saint, :sad Mary Jane's perversity or obstirrtcy, added in her manner, did not servo to mo in a heavenly frame of mind, so I blurted out my sentiments as follows : "Yon have a curvature of the spine; se every due that sees yott musj know. You have it very badly, an you ought to do something for it. Do, , for heaven's Irate send for a doctor and get straight." ' 1. Yon !should lave seen this little hemp-back cuss then., She walked the floor as erect as a liberty pole.-- She smiled sardonically. She laugh ed hysterically. Finally she cried womanly, and then she found her tongue--her native, tongue. No New York drawl now, but each word as sharp and incisive as a cambric nee dle. "Curvbture of the spine. Ha. Iha spine, ba,spine," (in a perfent alb iek.) "0, you horrid, hateful brute 1 0, you provoking fool—there I I just wish I was a man for a few minutes I" "I wish you was a sensible wom an." "Sense 1 'Well I admire to hear a booby—that can't tell the ,Grecian Berri from the spinal complaint—talk about sense." " "Grecian fiddle sticks. You don't say that the awful crook __which you had in your back was the Grecian Bend." - "Don't say anything to you. A ny body but a fool knows it it the Gre cian Bend (assuming the form of a rainbow again.) No lady desires to look like a ramrod. All the belles of New York stoop gracefully, and leave stiffness and straight lines to cham ber maids and country folks." '•I suppose it was also from New York fops and belles that you learned the art of talking as though your mouth was WI of hot mush." "Don't you talk about talking.—J You, who never leave Louisville, think that provincalisms comprise the- proper language, but it is the lingo of your negro nurses. -I-can not stand it. I never_ want to-hear any more of it. It is my desire that our acquaintance even should termi nate with this interview." And she flailed out of the room. I don't suppose it is of any use to speculate upon the humiliating spec tacle to which lovely woman may yet be reduced by fashion. lam con vinced that their fate depends entire. ly upon upon the whims and caprices of the fashion mongers of Paris.' The ladies have never given neany evi dence of their desire to void the ridic ulous abeiurd dictates of a ridiculous fashion is, the more eagerly and im plicity hdr devotees follow , her. No consideration of heat or cold, of pro priety of erection of comfort; or of anything else, can divert - them from the prevailing style. If the Grecian Bend follows the natural law of fash ion, it will get worse and'worse, and it will not be long hntil we see our sweethearts with their heads hanging down like howling devises. I have taken the procelain picture of Mary Jane out of its velvet case, and that pretty casket is now vacant. Her image, which is supposed to be engraved upon this beating heart, has faded out, or is grown over with fat. have determined never to marry a woman with her back op.— Others may do as they please, but if ever I do take a wife,[ shall take.her as I do my Bourbon—straight. YUBA. ExcnANGING SALUTEB.-A most amu sing story is told of Judge B---, now Occupying a high post in our State Government. Traveling, some years since, by rail .to Hatrisburg,on a blazing-hot day; with some friends, the iron horse had stopped to water, when suddenly he drew his white handkerishief from his. pocket, and began waving it vigorously; In the air, at the same time bobbing his head oat of the window ilia very en. argotic manner. "What are 3ici 'about Judge ?" &eked Mr. Q without rising from hie seat. • , "Why, don't • you see yonder ? Ihere's a lady waving a white hand kerchief, and Pm , returning the sa lute." "Who-is she, Judge ?" asked Mr. Q., as he lounged in one corner. "Well, ,thos feet is, I don't exactly IMMIJ knew.; near 'lighted, and I can't recognize her ; but she d's dres sed in gray silk, and, stands yonder 4nder a.bfg maple tree,near my friend 41111 Bid honebP- bobbled . direr to theindsq's side and paid in the direction Judi• clited; but saw only "that the Judge had been exchanging .salutes for ten minutes with •an iron gray mare, whose long white tail,. as it flapped awdy the ilies,liad been taken by him fors white handkerchiek itiuded by , a lady in a gray silk dress. The but- tons that were subsequently picked up in that car are; said to have been exceedingly numerous. The Judge ida't, swear , but l he changed , the sub ject to et* thilliithe unit intelligible portion of which being the freqtient repetition of the 'word "data." What Wellington aid to Bogen. The followiug are some notes of remarks made by the Duke of Wel. Boston ' in eonvenation with the poet Rogers Trta BATTLE or WATERLOO.-1 never saw Bonaparte, though he .was once during the battle within a quarter of a mile of me. - I heard thatjte asked Souft whom he had sent to Grouchy, &tilt replied ; "An officer." "One said Bonaparte, "aht mon pau*ire Berthier, 11 aurait eit*pye quartre.", Two such armies, so well trained, so well officered, have rarely encoun• tared: It. was a battle of giant/I. D°Laney was killed at my side ; a ball broke his horse's back, knocked him over, and he rebounded after he fell. I was der dutch grieved, but there is not much time for sorfow in in the middle of a battle He was taken to a barn. I saw him neat dab', and he seemed so much better that I said, I :Why, DeLancy, you'll be like the man in Castle Rackrent t you will know what people say of you after your death." I nevpr saw him more. -I have Binds fead Lady Drfiancey's took, which is good. Bonaparte was as clever a man aki ever lived, but he wanted sense on many Occasions. His best plan of action, I think, would have been to have waited for the allied iirmies•to have collected. He could then haVe singled out and defeated. such a stupendous body could never have remained assembled without confu sion. • - • BLucnaa.—When nlucher joined,af ter the battle of Waterloo, he came up and kissed me. Pausstax Ommts.--The Prussian general officers never exposed them selves as ours and thn French did ; no wonder the men didn't fight- as well. The way in which some of our ensigns and lieutenants, boys just from school, braved danger, elceeds belief. SHE PEN . INERILA CAMPAIGN .—Gordon, who was afterwards killed at Water loo, passed the night with some, Frenchmen in a Spanish village. A Spanish child was in the room, and ..when they were asleep he made ges tures to Gordon, drawing the edge of his hand across his throat. "Why do you make these motions to me ?" "I know," the child replied, 'yon are Eng Hellman, by : your sword and spurs" • ' - • Iliasuet. SOULT.--He much af fected by appclilnce. One time, at the-battle of the Pyreueea, when pre paring for action,' an owl happened to, boot, and I remarked, " Soult will not come out to-day." Nor did he ; , he thought we had received reinforce ments.• • Emmert —Marmont spread his army.toO much at Salamanca, think ing we should go off. I made u sad der. attack upon his centre with-my whole force in front and rear, and de feated 40,000 men in . forty minutes. But he was an excellent' general offi; cer. MASK ___.....JENA.—When Maseena was in the field and opposed to me, I never slept comfortably. - - Ctottuz.--Clozelle was the 'best general employed against ine., He gave me a great deal of trouble., I thought once I bad him, but it pleas ed the young gentleman to go and dine in the valley a mile ,or e two dis tant, and Clozelle's reconnoitering party fell in with him, whereupon the general took the alarm and was off. At Vittoria the French were expect ing Olozelle; Just at the time a Span ish inn keeper was brought to me by Alava. The man said, "Make your :self easy about Clotelle, I have him snug at my house, six leagues off.-- Hels quietly lodged there for the night." So saying he left me to wait on him. I lost no time. I had intelligence both from priests and peasants, while the French`could get none. MARCHING THE TROOPL—In Spain I never marched the soldiers more than twenty five -miles a day. They set off at five and six, and I waa anxious they should take the ground - by one. In India I once marched the troops seventy-two miles in a day, but in Europe our men cannott do so much. We accustom them to travel by Ca nals or in smacks ; in India a soldier must walk. soldier requires two pounds of food a day, animal or veg etable ; the first is most convenient, as they move themselves.. THE DMZ Ifenrrs.—ln 'the - Penin sula I - undressed but seldeon•; in the first four years not once. - I slept five or six hours usually, but • some times only two or three. In India it is not the ctotom to undress I never ; did. Kismet. NET.—I do not: believe that when Ney left . Paris ho was re solved to go over to Napoleon, but it is impossible to answer for men in certain circumstances, or to say what they will or will not do: The Bonr •boas had made some alterations in the decoration of the Legion' of Hon or; and I was told, when -Ney left Paris, he took the ad decoration with ' him as well as the new. - BirmariarE.—At Waterloo he had the finest army he ever - possessed ; fall of enthusiasm. Everything up to the battle had tarried out favors able to his wishes. , He was at- his acme at the Peace of Tilsit, all de. alined gradually afterwards. I al , ways said Spain , would be his rain. A conqueror must go on like a can ner' ball ; if it rebounds its course is soon over. After his marriagedietternich was rIrM,WPPW!,W.„ sent' to Paris to sound hinx and learn if he, meant to be quiet and to repose on'his character. His answer was, as helui'd told me, in three words, "EN is iinaltered."—Once a Week. IthittrierttßE or PRO. The pin machine is one of the clo sest approaches that - mechanics have made: to the dexterity of the human hand. : A small machine,. about the sine era ladies sewing machine, only strongetstands before you. On•the back side &light belt descend?' froth tht long shaft at. the 'ceiling- that drives all the machine ranged La rows otithe floor.- On the left side of our machine hangs on a peg a reel of Wire/ whiph has been straightened by running thtottgh s complicated. system of small rollers. This wire descends and the end of it, enters the machine. This is the food consumed by . this snappish ! , io racions, little dwarf. Ile pulls it in and bites it.off by inched incessantly, one hundred and forty bites - to the minute. Jest as he seizes each bite, a-tancy little hammer *ith neoneave face, hits the end of the wire three taps and "upsets" it to a head while he gripes it ins counter-sunk bole in his teeth. With an outward thrust of his tongue he then lays the p n sidewise in a little groove across the rim of a small wheel which 'slowly revolves under his nose— By the ex ternal pressure of a stationary hoop these pins roll in their places, as they are carried under .two series of small filed: three in each. These files grow finer towards the end of the series. They lie at a slight incline thin on'the frbinte of the pins, and by a series of cams, levers and springs are made to 'play "like lightning." Thus the pins are pointed and drop ped in a little shower into a Twenty eight pounds of Rine is a days work for onkof these jerking little %automatons. These are then - polish(dt Two very intelligent ma chieety then reject every crooked pin, even the slightest irregularity of form being. detected. Another auto maton assorts half a dozen lengths in as many different boxes,, all at, once' and unerringly, when a careless operator has mixed the contents of boxes from various machines. Lastly a perfect genius of a machine hangs the pins by the head in an inclined platform through as many "slots" as there are pins in a row on the , papers. These sloth' converge Into the_ exact space spadutc z the length row, un-• der them runs the strip , cf pin paper. A hand-like part of the machine catches . one pin from each of the slots as it falls,and t by one mevement sticks them all through two rruga ted - riages in the paper, 'from which they are to be picked by-taper fingers in boudoitsiand by all sorts of human fingers in all sorts of human circum stances. Then you have its genesis "Tali and slender, straight and thin, Pretty, 'useful, little pin." u TNNBOTTOM OF THE 00EAN. In 1853 Lieutenant Brooke obtain ed mud from the bottom of the North - Atlantic, between Newfoundland and the Azores, at a depth of more than 10,000 feet, or two miles, by the help of his sounding apparatus. The spa iniens were sent for examination to Ehrenberk, of Berlin, and to Bailey, of West Point, and those able micro scopists found that this deep sea mud was almost entirely composed of the skeletons of living organism—the greater proportions of these being just like, the Globigerinte already known to occur id the chalk. Thus far, the work hod been car ried on simply in the interests of sci 'ence, but Lieut. Brooke's method of sounding acquired a high commercial value when the enterprise of laying clown the telegraphic cable between: this denary and the 'United States was nude' taken. , For it became a matter of, immense. importance to know,not only the depth of the ocean over the Whole line along which the cable was to. be laid, but the exact nature of the bottom, so as to guard, against chances of cutting or fraying the strands of that costly rope. The Adrnirarity consequently ordered CaPt:DaymonAn old friend and ship- Mate of mine, tl ascertain the depth of thewhole line of the cable, and to bring back specimens of the bottom. In former days such a command as this might have sounded very much like one of the impossible things which the young prince in the Fairy Tales is ordered to do before' he can obtain the hand of the princess.— Hoviever, in the-months of June and July, 186'7, my friend perfermed the task assigned to him with great pre cision, without, so far as I know, having' met with any reward of that kind. ; The specimens of Atlantic mud which he procured were sent to me to be, examined and reported up on-. The result of all those operations is that we know the contours and nature'of the surface-soil covered by the North' Atlantic-for a distance of 4700 miles from east to weiit,aii well - as we know that of any part of the dry land. ..,g It is a prodigious plain, one of the Oddest and most even plains iii the world. If the sea were diained off, . you might drive a wagon all the way. from Valentia, on the west coast. of Ireland, lo Trinity Bay, in Newfound. bind. ' And,.except upon one sharp incline, about two hundred miles from. Valentia, I am not quite sure that it Would even be necessary to pia the skid on, so gentle are the.as cente and descents upon that-long rUnte. From Valentia the road would lie down hill for about 500 miles to the point at which the bcittom is now covered by 1,700 fathoms of tea wa4. ter. , Then would come the 'central p i lain, more than 1,000 . miles -wide, t e inequalities of the surface of which, would be hardly perceptible, oough the depth of the water: upon it varies from 10,000 , to. 15,000 feet ; snd there are places in which Mont_ Blanc might be sunk without show ing its peak above water. Be3iond this, the ascent nn the .American side commences, and gradually. leads, for bout .300 miles, to the ‘ 'NeWfound-- rshore. . - - Almost the Whole of the bottom of' ' central plain (which extends for NUMBER 27. AY PAOTESSOZ WM= many hundred Wks in a north and south direction) is coveted -by & nee mud, which, when brought to the surface, drive into a grayish-white friable substance. You can write with this on a blackboard, if.yon are so inclined, and to the eye it , is quite like very suit ; grayilh chalk. 'Elm % ined chemically, it-provedto be corn posed ahnoOt wholly of t "parbonate of lime, and if you make a section of it in the sem° way as that of a piece of, chalk - was. made, and 'view it' with' the microssope; it presents:hummer ablif-70k4agerinas embedded in the granularmatrix. Thus this deep sea mud isitobstan- • tially chalk; I say substaitially,be cause 'Uter, are a good many minor differences;, bat as' these have no bearing upon Oa q neistion- iannediate ly before us—which is the nature of the Globigerina3 of - the chalk—it in unnecessary to speak of them. - *armies The most wonderful production of this and all tropical countries, hit my estimation, La the banana and its sy nonym, the plantain . We have half a dozen var ieties—each with peculiar flavor and qualities. Some grow snly eight or ten feet high—other twentz, The stalks are from six to twelve inches thick, bat almost as soft - and succulent as celery. gl cb of them bears one bunch of bananas, and one only, whin ft is cut down with a stroke of the:espada to secure the fruit and give - ; place--to other stalks ; and thus they grow and ri pen perpetually all the year round. A great traveler his calculated that the plantain, on one iacre of ground, will produce as mail fotzi as one hundred and thirty-three acres of wbeat,or forty-four acres of potatoes. Their fruit constitutes the principal reliance of the poor, and.is a luxury for all It is good raw, roasted, baked,and indeed worm form ; and equally relished by all domestic fowls and animals who devour fruit,leaves,. stalks and all,witk the grey t avid ity. The banana rsquires but a sin gle planting for a lifhtime—patting in the grounila single sprout or shoot from the baffana Weber, at a dig• tance of twenty or thirty feet from each other, and on ground that is always calculated to spare_for the purpose, because it is impossible to extirpate the root. The one stock gives more—springing out from the sides in the ground perpetually—and in a - few years covering thi interven ing spaces, till the whole surface be comes a forest of fruit and foliage ; with scarcely room to pass through the cool overhanging arches. . A ba flaws patch is a beanti ul sight, with the stalks and their produce in all stages of perfection,_ broad leaves waving in the breeze and fanning in latiy-repose, while the bodies of the trees bend under their lucions bur dens, and would often break down with the wcight,eacept for the neigh boring support. These are a hundred or two bananas on a 'bunch,- like grapes, and the bunches are gene rally as much ;Lis a stoat man can carry. They should always be cut as soon as the trait is matured—but while the skin is yet green—and hung up in the shade to turn yellow. which improves the flavor It take.. about a year for stalks and fruit to mature from the first `planting, but then there is never any more trouble with the crop--scarcely• any hoeing or weeding •, no chlture—only "slay and eat.".- Certainly it is the greatest boon ever bestowed on the-idoient tropic 4: A native, swinging in his hammock, with a bunch of ripe ba nanas banging iu reach on the one side and a smouldering fire on the other, by which he may light his lit tle cigar without getting np, -is a most perfect picture of contentment. —Lcller from Brazil -Sofl SHELL Dotmaxers.—A few days ago, George 1 3, a salesman of "renown," having a. Western cesto rner in tow, dropped into the Cafe Haveo'for lunch. Boston cream cakes and coffee were ordered and discuss ed, to the delight of the - Western man, to hom _ the cakes were a novelty and the quality of the-beye rage a sprprise. The next day he was eager to repeat:his pleasant experiment, and wanted George to lunch at the 'same place. Arrived at the saloon and seated, at the table, the lloosir 'summoned one of the attendant nymphs and said. "We want strong coffee for two, and—and"—but the -word cream cakes had esca=m kis memory, so turning to he asked in a "heavy," which attracted the atten tion of the room "What% the name of those soft cakes we had yesterday, Georgie P 1 George whispered a word in his ear, and he" turned to the expectant damsel with : "Strong coffee fovtwo, and a plate of them soft shell doughnuts 1 7 :— Commercial " NOTIMG 18 LOST IN Pasts.—So says the Revue des Dues Monde. In the large lyceums and ,iietxils -boys aro very wasteful ; they thaw away : ball the bread they get for lunch, tread upon it, kick it into the gutter, ink It, - None of these fragments are lost ; the servants sell thein4o dealers who are called boultsrujers en vieuz, and turn their acquisition to good account. They first pick out all the tolerable pieces, - which they heat in air oven wad then rasp cleanti_ thus, piepared, these. bits reappear in the market iu the shape of toast for soup. Most of -the croutons, cut into lozenges and serve on the tables of the rich with spinach,. have no other origin. As fur the dirty crumbs and refuse left after the Ocking,they are pounded in a mortar and sold to butcbet4 as chapelure, with which" they *Gayer their cutlets and ktiuCk les of ham. The really filthy-remain der, what is too" bad even for cap elu-e, is blackened over a fire;pound el, and then mixed up with honey aromatized - with a few drops of es-. sence of peperment ; this 'is S old as an opiate for the toothache. - • A BeLtrrtrot. , said ottbe Ic?elan4ers that - theylic - rn , tiulonaly _obserie the usage of read ing the sacred Scriptures every morn ing, the whole familyjoining in the singing and prayers When the larder awakes, he salutes no petson until he salutes his God. He usually hastens to the door, adares-there the anther of nature and providence, and then steps back gyro to his family,. "God grant you a good day" West a beautiful illustration in this of the Christin. obligations on the part of households to recognize and worship . , God. ifirA small child being sake(' by , her Sunday School teacher. " What did the' Israelites do *Eta they haSIT crossed the Red Sea ?" answered :" r - don't know, ma'ant4. but I guess - they, dried thenuielves.'t