GI Tams vißirmomeln. T a g Thiazwearr Ilarmetta 111 Putalaisil raff. , Thnrati Moutillt tor W. Ammo and 11: maws, at TWO Dollen per ammea. la Mmes. , ga-Aitratlaillit In ell sire muitinave adiesetp. . thin to the paper: sPECIAL NOTICES inented et rn maim per H o e or drat Jusentan, and 7trs alarm perlthe tor subsequent insertion& - - LOCAL NOTICES. same style es ratans matter. rwr.arr num:* line. ADVERTIKEIMTS will be Insetted ameratng to the following table of ram , i nc h I $1.50 I 3.00 1 5.00 I" 5.00110.001$ 15 Inches 2.00 I 5.00 18.00 I 10.00 1 15.08 I 110.00 2 inches * I 2.50 I 2.00 110.00 I MOO 190.00190.00 4 inches.' 3.00 8.60 I It-00l 1623 12100133.0 Q column I 1 3.00 (1100116 9100 90.001 tOO colimn I 10,00 30.00 I 30.001 40.00 33.00113.00 I - Column 20.00 fO.OO 160.001 80.001 $lOOl .$l5O Aiimildlnstor's and Diecutor's Notifies, $9 ; Audi. tor's Nhtices. $2 SO Business Cards, dye lines. war year) $5. additional linos $1 each. Yearly advertisers are entitled to querbeity changes. Transient advertisements mast be paid for hindrance. liesehitions of Assedetions ; Cerenurtdosthdis st limited or Individual interest. and notices of lbw. riligel and Deaths, exceeding Aro lined, ere charged rev crams per li ne. The REMP.TE3 having a huller eitiolation than all the papers in the county oombined. wakes it thebest a dvertising medium in Northern Pennsylvania. JOB PRINTING af every kind. to Phdn end Piney. roiors. done with neatness and Eardthillis„ Rlanka. Can% Pan biers, Ststentents, ha: of everyyariety and style. ptinted at the aborted nonce. The litmus= Office is well supplied with Power Presses, a good assortment of new type, and everything in the. Printing line can be executed in the most artistic manner and at the lowest Meat. TERMS TSVARIABLY CASE. o:llmokrizff.ll:) , *l BLACK SPANISH EGGS FOR lIATCHMG. ( Warranted Pure Blood,) Two Dollars per dozen, sent earefultr=d.' - on rim z rreeipt of pace . Address Box 146, - New York. spl6-2ra DRESS - MAKING, PATTERN cUTTING AND FITENG In all fashionable nn vhort notice. ROOMS In ?demur's New Ilain.st., over Porter k larby's Drug Store. MRS. H. E. OAIIVES. Towanda. Pa-. April 13. 1870. E RAYSVILLE AfITTS The, ~ o l,Kolber, having mart-tamed the Lettayerille M,lls. and relined the same in good order, Is now vo.pared to do good work, and to give general flatle t m. M. J. FIMITCHEY. Leltaysville, Sept. 22, 1309.—1 y PRICE LIST-CASCADE MILLS Trs;lty Winter Whest Floar per eack....sl 1..-rll,:th!rj,lpountin ECM I:re Flour pf2r laundrePpounds " " 1 - 0,41. Rye. Ccrn and Oats per hundred lbe eactoin grinding usually clone at once, as the ca. to Ity of the mill is sulnsiret for a large amount of work. 11. A !NORM Camptown. March 23. 1878 PATENT IIETALIC WHITE WIRE CLOTIIES LlNES.—Warranted not to Hirt. wear, tare. oorrode or injure the finest fabrics. Is always up and ready for use. The weather .does not In the beset affect it. It will last for 20 to 50 years. and costs but three cents per foot lam now pr,pared to put the wire and guarantee satisfaction nr no pay. If not called upon at your houses, ad dr..rs or call st. 'Marshall Brothers. 'Hardware store. C. L. DETCILEII. Agent, Towanda. MIMI TO THE LAMPS AND. CHILD REN-1 OF ATHENS. == .1f.4 KING EST.4IMISIIIIE.VT. rATTEENS OP ALL TIIL LATEST STYLES FOR SALE. Rooms over Post 011lee—Hrs. Hoyt's old shad. 3rits. MAUY A. WAGMEB, Atheng. Pet. 20, ISCi9. Agent. DRESS MAKING! The understrned berzs leave to inform the ladies of Towanda and vicinity that she has just received LATI:Sr rasmuNs r,:nom NEW YORK Thankful for past favarii, !he hope* to receive • of pnblie patronage. One Aeon south roc. litereisr k en's, over MIAs E. J. Eni. - :ltley',n wslllacry rtore. MISS M. S. MOSCREP. Towanda, Pa. ISIMEEMI ELECT SCHOOL WM YOUNG LADIES! R..l.4'arnite.hael will open a Select School for Young Lahes, in the Waril School Donee. Second st , et. corner Poplar. on MONDAY. APRIL_ 41h. 370. Tin• cone., of Instruction will embrace all I and higher English branding. Drawing. Freoch and Music. Terms. S 7 00 sail $8 00. t B T4CKSMITHING ! Rating complcted my new brick shop, near my .‘c. , on Main-street. I am sow prepared to do ‘‘e-ti in all its branches. Particular attention paid 7,P.11 Irons and edge tools. Having spent many •••1•A in this community. in this business. I trust Alb.. a Auffirent guarantee of my receiving n Ltber ,',,,,,int of the public patronage. HENRY ESSE!.:NYLNE. .Towaxe.a. No f. 3. ISCD.—tf FERSBURG 3IILLS! The .übeerlbers are now doing Imalneaa In their h.. of the BEST QUALITY at the Mrnagnmto wh,at..l;ye. and BnckwhereFlonr, and Fecd con. .tartly on hand for sale at marked ratee. lArtne rinautity of GROUIiD PLASTER of ,pality front the old YAVGER, EEL.. Ily,,sloirg. Dee. `-'0.'119. ItITEB & FROST. DYEING ESTA_BUSH- N I TA\ -A 't -NT t llies this method of informing the i;t Towanda mil vicinity that he has opened a 'Dyeing Establishment In Col. Ills.utie new buna- 1= (.7.po,it, .en. Patinn'al. and that he is now pre pore.l to .in all Ivorlc in hia Ilue. knelt an CLFANISO and (701.01:11C(i ladle:' and nentlemen's Torment% cloths. ke.. in the nen& c.t Mallller and on the moat reonocable ra rmo. Give me a call and examine my %reit. lIENRY REDDING. Sept. J. lull THE UNDERSIGNED HAVE open.il a tiankini; Ilona, in Towanda, under the E=El TLey are prepared tm draw Bills of Exchange. and . .te collections to New ],wk, philndiaphia. rant all t:d. , ,1 of th; Ilnit , sl States. as also Eaulancl. Ger nen,: and Franco. To loan money. wetted...posit.% a:, I b. do a general Banking business. ;i. F. ]Lunn was ono of the late firm of Laporte. x Co.. of Totranda, Pa., and lilts knowledge of th- men of 111.341°r:1 and adjoining counties and haring been iu the, banking btu:biers for about 47 t..n y,ars. make this hous, a deeirable one through h.eh mater rnllccUnns. G. F. MASON, ' Tow 'nth. Oct. 1. loft. A. 0. MASON. NEW SPRING; GOODS MISS E. J. EINGSLEY, just retorned from New Yor,k with a first-class ,t ,, clt of NtillinerY Goods. consisting of the latest iniportod styles of \ 'TS, BONNETS, RIBBONS, ETC., ETC o mill Pf . gpeetrolly invite the ladles of Towanda ...inity to give her a call before poi , chafing el.ev. - here. Work done to order and on the ahortest notice. mud neat and faebionable style. J. N.' DEXTER, Solicitor of Patentx, 73 BROAD STREET. WAVERLY. K. T. Prepares drawings, specifications and 241 papers required in making and properly conducting Appli• rationslor PATZNTS in the UNIT= STLTES and FOE- Coutantza. No cnazoss De lINECIMCKBI4III. CASES AND NO ATSOILINET'S YEZTO PAT tram PATILNT BRADFORD COVNTY o 111 _ -- SeptMP-if • ' :ante", next door to Fox. Steretot. Merene Torr►nd►. April 14:70. lITAL RSTATE , AGMCY T mcnr..A.A, REAL ESTATE Vabiable Fr.ruir, SIM Propertica, City and Town ‘ ,t, Lots or sate.' Pa. 'ea haring property for rate will find it to their 1 , 1 \ :In Lie by kavine, a draeription of the game. with t .rirei 4 fat, at BAN agency, as partira are conetaxtly eniuiring for farms, &c. It. B. AIeSEAS, Real Estate Agent. Ofili , . oSer 'Maann'a Bank, Towanda. Pa. iau. 'id. 1567.. , YEW FIRMS! .11 `; E I r GI)OIJ.S AND LOW PRICES! AT .74 , )NitOETON, PA. TRACY 6,, HOLLON, - • n. tr. Ji,.!er. in Groceries and Provisions, Drugs and Niedicines. Kerosine Oil, Lamps, Chimneys, Dye Studs, Paints. Oils, Varnish, Yankee No. Chfars and Snuff. Pure Wines and I.tquer... of the best quality, for medicinal purposes t . :4 I Y. Alt tioo..ls sold at the very lowest prices. Pre s •,;.!,ons carefully compounded at all hours of the d-y and nigi•t. (live us a call. TRACT It ROLLOR. Ihnirocton. la.. June 21.. 180-Iy. CHEAP PASSAGE FROM OR TO IRELAND OR ENQLAND. crioN 1 Co.'. LINE OF lITTAX.MPS FROM 021 TO QNTow'.. "BI LivEn/VOL. Gu E ieni's Ohl ack SLIT Line" of I.AT- In• .4 P.vliets. every Week. 5....-a...1‘0r-tall Line or rackets from or to London, a month. I :ealttauees to r. .l.zztand, Ireland and Scotland pay annan..l. particulars, apply to IVlllinnu GniOn, 2') Scw York. or 6. F. MASON CIL, 13ankera, 0 , 1. 1. 1.r4.4. Towanda, Pa. (, 1 PECK, T LIMLAVIIIGHT • AS . .2 . l Aclux:gr, on - 3 ands. Pi. Mills built Enztnn.s and Boilers set in the best 3 a'..1.11 the attention of =ill owners to NEW VORTEX WATER %mum. ••• no , tilig a the elements of a first.elsas matter, 0: , onstrmtion, arecessibility.gmitatrength lepteg tie. greatest amount of poycer for , rurnitn . .7 under backwater d..trannt to power except diminneen of I.tltia! no att2ration in ma frames or addl. t. , a to w:11 ran tradvr low head. and made of capacity. Vies.) wheels will rto furnished tint: onedtalf the co 4 of any other tlrat.eless !a Til:lrk,t. and warranted to perform all taut t. , :ta;al , 4 for them. Those wheels will be made for • r , rittout cases, on short notice, of the L:.: lt-ott 11,34. et. For tyil partlt•otars 1 4 , 1reln or enptlre of the under. G. S. PECK. Towanda. Pa.' —These w1,,e14 call lyr erect In operation at li•trton E Wens' :Hal Towanda twp. The al • .13 are wholly composed of Iron as now resde. Jan. 14. 1867 -If. S FITO N SALT PUT UP IN large or mall quattates at 11", m y 20. _ ;~;~'; 'E i_ ri `y3 j P. ._~ AiLvcortro & voLumg:xxx-,, -..,; ")i' JAMES 1: WOOD, Arrolutri LID comaziwa Tonnatts. ; • • m. r. • • WK. FOYLE, ATIDENEY AT LAW, Towanda. Ps.. Office with Mama' Smith, south side Nareurs Block. Alma U. 70 FORGE D. MONTANIE, AT Toss= =AT Law. Oflice—earser ce. Main ant Ma Street% opportts Porter's Drag atm. UT A. PECK, ATTORNEY AT • Law. Towanda. P. • Me own Ow Da. Come kerf. t Ham. Routh Of th e Want Rome , and opposite th e t • . saw 11. T P. 'WILLISTON. ATTONNEY ATLAW, TOWANDA. South:ofdo of Eleivilr's Now Block, up stair" April2l. WH. CAEN OCHAN;r-ATTOR . • A? unr Otietrkt Atttemery for Dm& bra Comity), Troy, Ps. Made ant 1.) . remitted. ' • • tab IS. JOHN N. CALM, ATTORNEY AT lAw. Towanda. Pa. Particular sliantied adv. kOrphans' Gnat badman. Onnspreachnt and Cnus. gir Ofikie at the Beggar and coca. der's office, south of the.Ceurt ECRISCh Dec. 7,1864. OVERTON •i& ELSBRRE,. ATTOII NEViI AT LAW. Towanda. Pa., hav_ing entered into copartnership, offer their proreadenal sessions to the public. Special attention given . to twines' In the Orphan's and Register's Courts. - 5p114,10 E. OVERTON. .TI. N. C. =RR= B END. M. PECK, ATTORNEY _up AT LAW. Towanda, Pa AU business =butted to hit.care will receive prompt attention. Dace to the °Bice lately by Aleratmk Morrow. month of Ward Bowe, MI. 16. FIZEI MERtIIR & DAVIES, ATTOR- Mg AT LAW, Towanda. PC . The tmderatameg hating sasociated themselves together hi the wadies of Law. Maw their professional services to the Welk. ULMER micacun. W. T. DAN March 9.1870. JOHN N.. MIX, ATTORNEY AT Law. Towanda, Bradford Co.. Pa. • GENERAL INETEANCE AGENT. Pattlenlar attention paid to COM:lons and Orphans • Court business. Oftico—Nerestea New Block, north able Public Square. , apr. 1, VI 11011" B. McKEA N, ATTORNEY -IL • AID 001731810.1.01 AT TAM TORAIIdb, Pa.,Par. titular attention laid to business In the .Orptiane Court. Nk r B. KELLY, DENTIST. OF; • floe over Wickham & Black's, Towanda, Pa. Particular attention Is called to ALuaturox as a base for Artificial Teeth. Raving need this material for the pact four years, I can confidently recommend it as being far superior to Rubber.' Please call and ex. amine specimens. pgr Chloroform administered when desired.' TRAY 20. '6B. DR . a wEs I TON, DENTIST.- Office In Patton's Block. over Gore's Drag and Chemical Store. Jan LI& DR. H. A. BARTLETT, Physician and Sarr.a, Sngnr Run. Bradford Comity. pa. Rce at residence formerly occupied by Dr. Ely. aug.lo.lNs9.tf DR. STEVENS, over BnowNs (lute Gongs) Drug Store. Patton's Block, in offices lately occupied be Dr. Madill and Dr. Weston. 1149. T . U. BEACH, M. D., Phydician • and Surgeon. Towanda. Pa. Particular atten tion paid to ail Cbronlc Disease.. anti Diseases of Females. trMee at his reaidened on State at.. two tit aro east of Dr. Prato. n0r.11.69. DCTOR 0. LEWIS, A GRALOI3- ate of the Collegeof ••Pliyalciarts and litirgeotts." New York city, Clam; 3843-4. gives exclusive attention to the practice of hia proteaslon. Office and residence on t 1 eastern slope _ot Orwell Rill. adjoining Henry Howes. jan '69. Fp B. CAMP, INSURANCE • Aome2.-011ke formerly occupied by Mercer & Morrow, one door south of Ward House.. July 22. 180. T EWIS RHEBEIN, Fashionable _La Tailor. E ooma over Aarinwall'a Store. Towan da. pa. °ctn. 69. p FOWL - RR & CO., REAL Es • TATS Dr-a-era, No. 10 Washington Street, op posite Opera ions°, Chicago. 111. Real Estate pur chased and sold. Investments made and nosey loan ed. IL FOWLER. April 21. 1862. It. Lreiv. la B. HOLLETT;MONROETON; • Pa.. agent for the Hubbard Mower, rinpire Drill, Ithaca Wheel Mae, and Broadcast Sower for sowing Plaster and all kinds of Grain. Scud for cir culars to B. B. H•zecrr, Monroeton, Bradfonl Co., Ps. June lt, A.IR, WORK OF ALL KINDS, anch as SWITCHES, CURLS, BRAIDS, MIR. FITS, he., made in the hest manner and latest style, at the Ward Honet Bather Shop. Tormsretmonabla. Towanda, Dec. 1, 1r49. ijiIiANCIS E. POST, PAiNTER,i Towanda. Pa.. with ten years experience. is con fident Ito can give tho beet satisfaction in Painting, Graining, Staining, Glazing. 'Papering, kc. ts_ Pa:tenter attention paid to jobbing in the country. april TORN DUNFEE, BLACKSMITH, atoNnoEToN, PA..-pays pa/Coals:attention to ironing Buggies, Wagons. Sleighs, /ca. Tire act and rep-nriug done on short notice. Work and charges guaranteed satisfactory. 12,15.69. OH YES ! OH 7.,S !-AUCTION ! A. R. MOE, Licensed Auctimurr. All calls promptly attended to and antisfactfon guaranteed. or address, A. IL Mot, Stoaroeton. Bradford county. P. 0ct.26, GO. aIF.'FORD'S NATIONAL PAIN N.JI Killer nod Life Oil, are the Great Family Specince that tind a welcome In every home ae a Sovereign Remedy for more of the common ills of life than any other medicine in the market. Sold by dealers in medicine- generally. Manufactured by C. T. GIFFORD. Chicago, DI., and .143 Male et., RORNIMLSYLLI,E. N. Y. March 10, PATENTS.! W. STEVENS, COUNTY SUR • VEICOR, Caraptown, Bradbrd Co., , Pa. Thank fill to his many employers for pilst planarians. would inform the enigma of Bradford County that ho Is prepared to do any work In his line of busi ness that may bo entrusted to him. Those having disputed lines would do well to have their property accurately surveyed before allowing themselves to feel aggrieved by their neighbors. All work warrant ed correct, so far as the nature of the ease will per mit. All unpatented lands attended to as soon as 'warrants are obtained. 0. W. STEVENS. reb. 21. 11109-Iy. WARD HOUSE, TOWANDA; PA. On Main Street, near the Dart Dram C. T. SMITH, Proprietor. MEM TEMPERANCE HOTEL I—Sitna ted on the north-westcerner of Main and Vitt beth streets, opposite lityant's Carriage Factory. Jurymen and others attending court will especi ally nod it to their admutage to patronize the Tem perance noteL S. M. BBOWN, Propr. Towanda. Jan. IZ. 1870.-Iy. D INING R 0031.5 . ra . CONNECTION WITH THE BAKERY. • Near the Court Homo. We are prepared to feed the hungry at all times of Dm day and evening. Oysters and Ice Cream in their seasons.' March 30. InO. t D. W. SCOTT k CO. ELWRLT4 HOUSE, TOWANDA, Having leased this Hots*. in now ready to accommc. date . the travelling pulAlc.. No pains nor expense will be spared to give satisfaction to thrive who may give him a calL Sir North iddo of the pubUc equate, Met of Alar m:Ws new block. RTE ptuehaaed' and thoroughly refitted this .old and well-known stand, formerly kept by Sheriff Grit. tie, at the month of. Itummerilel4 Creek. is ready to give good amonunodatlone atursathifsetory treatment to all who may favor him with a call. Dee- 21 liifei—tf: MEANS HOUSE, TOWMIDA, Jororas b Horror: Pronrirtors. This popular Betel having been thoroughly fitted and re paired, and furnished throughout with new and ele gant Furniture. Mil Be open for the reecptton of guests. on ELTVIIMAX. Mar 1.18!7!. .Neither expense nor pains has been spared in rendering this Horne a model hotel in all its arrangements. A superior quality Old Burto nlB69. Ale, for invalids. Brat 'received. April 2S, QEE.DS.--01110, WEST BRANCH LI and Orwell Clover Seed, end Ohio Timothy Soed for sale ai March 4, '7O. W. 3.I4OCIEWELL'S. C. B. PATCH'S. :,•:,......,-,,,,.:,,:;:;,,,,, ,,:---.,, _ . .'. 7- ... : ".,'t ' ':•---::::::.":','.' ,'; .-22:*1..- ..-..:"..-.:,..,;,„..._,:--.--,....::-.-..?„..,-,.-....._,---.. ,:, -,_. - , ; ; • .• , ; .-....; ,- ... , . • . . ....... , ; ..,,- ..;;;..;,.;•-„,,:,.=.;•.; . -;;;,'......,.,.-.., ~.. ....,..---;:..--.- -'7,•-',. - -`::,:':' • •:::i - •'- . 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' • Aad when he hkee the Bible down And wipes the dFistY Hell never dad bin spectacles • Within its inner bid; There Weal be aniZttle girl,, Ho libes as well as tie, • To run and hunt them up for him And put them on Lis knee. • Oh•dear 1 bell newer find the place ' About the "wicked dee," • . And how the bears ate chat" up; (That used to frighten me ;),1 80, Mamma, it you'll dreams up Just like an angel bright, - I ' ill fix our ladder 'gated the sla! And take them up to-night. j —The Bright:BW •feuthmtans. [For the teroirrtn.] WOMAN'S , EIGHT& BY TOO% THE BACHELOR. hopeful , the Bachelor, who is nattually of a disposition (especaidly on the woman's rights question), owns himself vanqobbed t and retiring from the field of carnage, ,only begs that thwahadows of oblivion maybidedahn from . the fate of mortals. Ho, however, thinks him. self entitled to a pension.) When I last wrote you, I was in the midst of our martyrs in New Jer sey. You will recollect (hie me) _ah too well, how the dazzling sun of hope rose in the delectable future of my existence. In that day, Lucy and and Anna and George and Mary and Olive and Elizabeth—yes, we are ell as one man. We talked from the - seine platform, we' ate at the same table, we took shinplasters from the same contribution box. In the socie ty of these I was happy. I looked forward to the day when some one of them would pop the question to me, and my unstable prdpitator would be at rest! In that day I' drank very deep of the pleasures of life. -I fond ly hoped that the bread that. I their cast upon the waters wouldreturn to me, perchance in the shape of an of fice, after many days. I fondly hoped that the iron-hearted man would be led to take a more compassionate view of woman than ever before. And 'what is more bitter than all, lit tle did I dreani that, any of woman kind could be found so base as not to stand by us on the very eve of vie torY. I am a victim of misplaced confidence. The ,starch is entirely taken out of me. Tears gush down the line of my nose like torrents from the mountain bush. Lady and gen tlemen readers, friends df other days, I ain't what I was! As I intimated in my last, I and Lucy, and all that illustrious constel lation of lights, who, taken collective-, ly, might well be designated the "big dipper," proceeded to Boston, which is sometimes called the " Hub." There was to be a great woman's rights boil in that particular spot on the body politic. You know at that time I was mating that ailment si` specialty. I kneW that if there was going to be anything in Boston, it would be a very big thing. Mary Livermore had gone on ahead to en gage the jubilee wigwam,' but I tele graphed to her, that as for myself, I did not intend to talk in a corner, and told her to engage Bunker Hill Monument for the speakers' stand. But on further consultation, the wise counsel of 3lrs. Elizabedi prevailed, who proposed to engage the State Capitol, so that as soon as our pro ceedings were ended, the members of the I.?„oislature, being right on the ground, might pass the "suffrage law" ithile things were hot. And if any other reason were needed, it was quite likely that we could better se cure a full attendance of the mem bers by going where they were— quite likely.(?). I had been studying an old hand-book on parliamentary forms, and probably I was as well posted on the organization of popu lar bodies as any living man or wo- Man. ' submitted the following bill of fare : Mr. Fogg to propose Lucy Stone for presidentess • Lucy Stone to propose Mr. Fogg for secretary ; Mr. Fogg and Lucy to propose George and Mary and Elizabeth and Anna for vice presidentesses ; Lucy to pro pose Mr. Fogg for treasurer; and if there was anybody left, "put him on a committee." Everybody was de-. lighted because there was bread enough and to spare. The ticket was adopted by accla mation. Enthusiasm was at its highest flood. The vast hall was a sea of human be ings. Banners floated from house tops and balconies, and the Amen can eagle literally took up his abode with us and roosted among us. Being as usual the lion of the oc casion, I was first called to the front of theplatform, and after the thno i ders of applause-had died away and a motion had been carried appoint ing George Franeis_to read the cheer ing telegrams which„ were expected from all parts of the world, I stepped forward and said : " Ladies and gentlemen, the time has just arrived, when it behooves every son of Adam to give back to that expiring and downtrodden por tion of humanity; called -the fair sex, those rights, the enjoyment of• which seems to be buried iii the night of time (?). (Cheers.) That this will be done—and that speedily—is as true as Gullivees travels or any math ematical certainty. From . the Atlan tic to the Pacific the voice of deliver ance rings in our bars ; from Wyomz ing to Massachusetts, from• Utah. to the everglades of Florida, the clank ing chains of despotism are being loosed. In Wyoming the female jury haVe heard their case and gone out to -deliberate, and though 'tis said their husbands for forty days and forty nights have' mournedtheir loss, and refused to be comforted because they were not (for they havn't yet agreed), yet heaven preserve their indepen- - dence of mindr=yea, their ancient characteristics! Let each maintain MEE her separates:pinkest (Tremandouti` applause.) Yrom th:llbiniViik irriff-; ham, listen, ohrmy apistr i men,Jo , the gentle tones of dm *an. yak, the twentieth wife, crying Outito left alone in her •Frinal wlt expect to hear even befQie we close, that woman is lames equal. (George right - heti . . rushed forward and read the , following dis- patch : 'The Ohioftegialatire has indefinitely postponed the side frage question.' .Ifelf seri Ittfiit, hitt. resumed, determined to box Such little trilulations with-4ortitude.) Minnesota,- with her golden rain, her. vast and t flowery-P!eins; is about to respond; ;Lot mixttum ant dare to doubt tuAiv . she. will mike answer. (Here I gOt : liglinipse. of 'Geo . rge'ii new suit coming to the front again, and he read : ,s The 4h:wenn:or of Minnesota has vetoed' the Woman: suffrage bill on the . ground that pal:" I lie sentiment does not seem to de' mend it' I heard heavy and , heart-: rending sobs in thedirectiona Mary and Elizabeth—poor t thing*: 1.--.-bnt I proceeded, almost choking.) I. My dear—ladies and—Friends, countrymen lend me (there !Was a long panse here, in which" I !saki several benevolentindividnala count bag out money evidently. for 'are,' hut in my indiscreet confusion I pissed on —your ears. Even the sun - , as he rolls forth in all the dueling brilliancy of his.noonday splendor, has now and :thew his dark spots floating. upon his disk, so it must be with this question of Woman's rights. So it must ever be with all great -ze formations. "Let the West return if she vvill to her ' Wallowing in the mire,' we )may still turn to the glorious hub,' the land of the Porkers, sometimes call ed the hot-bed of heresies.' I say we may still turn to this.city, and to this State, for comfort and consola tion, with as dead a certainty of find ing thera as you would to Webster's :Unabridged. My dear Mends; I cried; my knees rattling together like a couple of shingles, conscience does make cowards of us all.' Let us act! Yes, gentlemen of the Legisla t ure, have you not heard enough to Con vince you, so that we may all be , of one mind, before the native hue of resolution is sicklied o'er with the pale cast of thought'? Three' gene rations of puritans are looking down the aisles of time gone by, breathless ly watching your every motion ! Your posterity, unknown and unnumbered, cry out to you as it were,. even from the tenth generation, to put the bal lot in their hands! Act for them! And oh! the present—the living,• burning present—who can be deaf to its appeal? Behold the unnumbered witnesses hovering around_you like a cloud—the noble and worthy' ones who (daughters of incessant_ • toil) earn their bread by the sweat of their brow ; if they could but speak at this moment, you should hear such a sound as would startle the realmsof chaos and old night."' Oh! dear , W. saw George Francis coming agaii, - with his face whiter than the papelr. that trembled and fluttered' in his hand. • "A dispatch from the Work ingwomen's Astmitiation of Massachu setts," said he ; "shall I, oh ! shall I read it ?" Supposing him to be over- Come -with a paroxysm of joy, "Yes," said I, " yes ; a god-send at this par ticular time ;" and he read : "The Workingwomen's Association of Mas sachusetts most earnestly limiest against the passage of any law confer ing suffrage on woman, believing that its tendency would be eel, !" There was a pause—an awful pause—follow ing this, a slight rustle in that despi cable audience, then a clapping of hands, a stamping of feet, a univer sal. wild, uncontrollable -shout, min gled with cries of "Good!" " Iluzza!" tossing of hats, flutteringof handker chiefs, as if the very fiends had come to dwell with men. But oh ! my Mends, far other scenes than these were Witnessed on that speakers' stand. My heart sickens at the re collection ! Olive Logan, assuming a familiar attitude on tip-toe at the end of a genuine ballet whirl, cried out in seeming -aberration, " Give me another horse! bind up my wounds!" and fell to the floor like a log. I glanced behind me. I saw Anna feel ing the edge of a pen-knife, and heard her tragic tones soliloquising wheth er' 'twere better "to be or not to be" (I have since learned that she de cided affirmatively), and over fallen bodies; amid the groans.of the faint and dyipg, I bolted from that hateful hall. As I flew by, I saw George, like the. rue martyr that he ever is,' doing all' he could to alleviate the sufferings of the afilicted— T heard him muttering something about Fenians and English prisons, and I have since learned that 'on that very day he had his boots blacked, his hair frizzed, and was organizing a stock company to bring cheese from the moon. Bat as for me, it is all over. Business has no`eharme. Reformation has no hope. If I can get a pehaion for my past services, that will make a little smoother the rugged paths of my de clining years ; brit as for the rest, let it all be buried with the "lost cause." TANCW Spaaata—How easily spi ders are made to know the voice of their masters is familiar to all, from many a sad prisoner's tale. 'When the great and brilliant Lamm was held in captivity, his only joy and comfort was a friendly spider. She came at his call ;she tool food from his fingers, and well understood his word of command.. In vain did gao lers and soldiers try to deceive his tiny companion. She world not obey their voices, and rejected the tempted bait from their hand. So it was with the friend of the patriot, Quatremere d'l Jonville, who paid with captivity for too ardent love of his country. He also tamed spiders, and taught them to come at his call. But the little creaturcs were not only useful to him, but , to the nation. to which he belonged. For, when the French in- Vaded Holland, the prisoner iruuzaged to send a message that the inundated and now impassable country would soon be frozen over, so that , they would be able to march over tliS =ice bridged swamp and lakes ; )30.i ders, true, barometers ea tlie3yare; bad taught him to read, in their queer habits, the sign' itappreachhili ter. The itO t came, and with It the =ENE • -} "EISAIDLIM _or Dimwit:urn:or Imo* §ird - •• • ~. • - MEE ,' if TOWANDA BRAISMIDTOVNT fi I: - PA AvaL".2l:'4B7o-' c7' 4 , 9 • Fronc4 Offilhilf4 ehuobiTuni, and the'i lady _prophet ,set free; The vide*, were forgetten; but the lesson is. an ; interesting one : , . . tit the ninvennuj • i ninatiOSlE c an UMW. ;,. 141 to a very 'recent date, it has , been one of the most generally xe-i ceived theories acted on by medical men, .thitailieltetitViiiibitnnce car' pable Of supplying feel to the living' system_ by 'combining with the ov-7 anhaltidin,the .hrfath 014 80 gw-i • ha'thfit' ho Ike is carried . through the system, and. evelled from the-system un• chang4 proof .4iat it floss. not liqmptik'' heat 'I 'impartsloaung. If it did it would be changed, and not be passed off alcohol, as all chem.' We are not, however, compelled to . rely upon - this. "'simple fact" alone.. Other well conducted experiment completelyi theory that ulcohol "imparts heat" to the body. and "supports" life. • We are assured_itnny one fetie from alcohol will note the' degree (Wheat in his breath, or blood, by placing the hulto of the thermoineter in his breath 6iinder his leiguerand then; Oa taking a small quantity of any deo: holle liquor,? aseertaiii foe tome i hourii the temperature of breath ned - blood by applications of the instrument, he will 4* thateie lust. la *Polled as long as the "spirits" continue to in- Mune° the vital, stream. We do not dispute the "feeling =if warmth " re suiting from the administration of al-. cohol, by.theantri whom it ; is. given, but the therinonieter nothing of "feelings." We should like to Bee the chexhist who would prefer the thermometer of - fading to the ther mometer of mercury. In this age of science we have surer tests than mere feeling. - The truth that feeling de‘ , net: be• ate& 14 any one who knowl anything of 'hu man experience. - Multitudes think they feel better by the use of "stimulants." The to per thinks he "feels the better". for his drinks—the alcohol tingles in• his throat and stomach—ii is absorbed and carried through the 'system 'un changedL-it occasions afecling which has been`called - heat, though the in fallibly indicates the contrary. To.assail this matter, of feeling, is the most difficult duty Of the temper ' mace reformer. Many temperance men and women Use alcoholic stimu , lents, and defend their use with the origin:Rent,feel the belter for. itv" when if they' iiere s eonviriced that this , feeling of betterness was. a delusion, a life-shortening prikess,"'Oey would not:defend its use for a moment.., We 'have ~now brieityltaitaideied throe important points of truth as to . the effects of alcohol on the process. of life in the body of man.- We have seen (.1) it preserves the food from the action of the gastric juice in the %touts& ; (2) lessens the amount of worn-out matter passing off in the breath ; (3) anal lowers the vital heat of the living system. Ascertained facts are now sufficient to prove that the whole' system of al coholic medication is founded in er ror, and had true science alone guided the profesthon, .the system of alco holic (or other) poisoning' would have been abandoned long ago. The fact that health,: strength, warmth, endurance, and the vital power are best upheld by abstinence from all alcoholic drinks, is proof that alcohol in no sense supplies the part of food. The lair of organic life that - applies to a isolutioil Of this question, will be the subject of our next article. Ever for truth, I remain . " thuchildreii of 11.1rs.r—tue a groat trial to her ; she can do nothing with them ; they will not mind her, and they will soon be beyond her controL", Upon hearing this, I asked myself, why is it that some parents hale so much trouble with their children, while others, in the same circum stances oflife seem to be almost ex empt from these peculiar trials? I .cannot satisfy myself but that a great share of the blame ponies . : upon the parents. God ,has not given children to Par ents to be a curse to them. It was not his design that they should be a . curse to them through life. They were intended to be a comfort, sup port and blessing, and such they will be, if trained up in the way of truth. They Were 'bound together by ties, which' nothing but death is to sever. Wholi. we do' not see such , results, maytwe not infer thitt the 'first wrong Fos on the part of the parent? I happened to be present one day, when I thought I had ample prodf that her chil. • were a trial to her. She attemp to quiet them and se cure order. I s eseemed to he beyond all control ho youngest 'gowned to yield for a • • her method. When in one of his frolics, and at last fits of -passion and - cr*go - and nothing seemed to.check him, she said, "come . here dear, and see them before they I are gone." The ehild-was quiet in•a =monk and hurried to the window. " Where, where are they? I don't see Tem," said the child, looking in every direction. "Don't you, dear? nor d 0.1," said the mother at the same time giving the child hearty kiss.- Now,, there was nothii4 to be =seen at the whido**; the mother knew it ; and heir longdid it tako the child to find it out? flow long before the child will knoW that, there was down, right `dcaptiOn ? • .What - there i:eifec tinil way* tci learn tho.child to delieive :and to tia? the next fit of crying andiiideein eerie here' and: see trainers" Will net bring that child to his mother. - &one new plan must be devised; and perbliOs more What can a mother except but trials, by.tinting her &Linn in this *ay? She may send them teflabbath school; andpray with Ahem anti -for them, but h.& bad - nianage4ent counteracts all such - influence - Parenhi woul' probe* be suiins« ed, if theiheiiirhew,muclrefilliintd conduct of'their' children' minht . be loceiLdhictly ' to` their `" iiij ciona. tuaruir,ement - of tbeni. °BILDERN A TRIAL TO THEIR Said a friend to me not lent , since e;i<~: :; { .;, :f!•::'friltillEliiirliiii•Hfinstai It i.' , • - • 11 - iiT: 4 -.."...y , tT.1:." 3 T.• f t - nt 3 ; ,L,fx41,1 fo./Pwing,.mAsiimir ten) Ints inuts Si A 111115 ,R1 1144;1°1 ,i,,,. ~ ...c 3:1 17 ;......1" - l rie ;u4; , r.: "- A ': ' l: :.' r ; ' tf‘lia a q ,cr e-‘ ll 7 lr t a r i -Cof -- - 24^ , V- - , Ain4 ki4 - 1141 11 ni) think affr . -'). '', '. ••• - finite. iskiimeitte o littiiiitigiOL '''--i'',... dt/ ''tfia t io n iiki r-,:...... , 7i•i ~ - Yi . „, 41.a 1. 1 1 ° - 1 5 14 1'.41. f ,. .-!•: ~: 2 , ith,...i...6.,-,."--, a y or -"..., ix,bi-bnonfy, - ' - • - - ..-.,......-:<44 , r., , - .14.± ) - Tr: t' , .f , .,Trii :,-..‘; 4:!...-i, i -- ' .. z74l 3 Y+Aner.fhi if ttice. L .'. , --i.., -3.‘ Prii 1 4 1/°! o ?.a E4 41641 ° i r, c - 1 49Pit7. jigi fa - h i: . .-',- ",.. . ' ' Al* aiski hikiitii-tie•hil.'' ''.. x" 2 ' TIMILIMI STORY: A• ";," ' • - .ff Oka :Taltar:VPgi , ,Nbril", , 'Y94thOt tWer4laper tO4POCUS ' :,IIt, thwt?ar• AVMS; PoOriblA well , ' 0 404 and Poasossed- .aStraotAtitag• .gCniaa. rHe 4wried 4 ; 1)4543:0A; who afterwards d eserted him for. another. --.PO tboAtb.P.f APIA.#4 O / tits:watt .hotals LW ,Tesaa, *al *0W444t 0 9VOIPWing, AxteXciting wan was to be - Wel' George a weldtbY-14astar bad offere4 stow taaalk.to 'Ellison , Abe . Soong A*4,l)4=ll= woa:of his, overseer. .The husband -threatened to, chastise hitorfor..the. outrage, when Hopkins went to Pi!i==i , P*; nonce and abet bbo itt his own door. ' ;,The P /1 . 1 " 44 rer. - waa arrested, and haikal to answer :the plurrge. ,Thia produced wreat. excite.; mentvand Jilizi Aki ns,: n order to . turn the tide of popular indignation, 'had circulated. reports against her,chatac. ter, and she had 'sued him for slan der Both stilts were pending—for 'murder and slander. , • • • The interest became deeper, .when it was, known that Ashley and Pike, of Arkansas, and 8.,,5., Prentiss, of Rea* Orleans, by enormous fees,. had been ietsined'to defend Hoptins: Hopkins was acquittid, 'The TeX as lawyers itere overwhelmed by their opponents. It was a fight of a dwarf agag 2 fit 0 1 4 3 . The slander suit vas for the 9th, and the throng of Spectators grew- in numbers as- in excitement. • Public opinion was setting for Hopkins; his money had procured -witnesses who served his powerful advocates. . When the slander case was called, lariEl lieen was left without an - attorney— all had withdrawn. "Have you no .counsel?" inquired Judge Mills, looking kindly on the plaintiff: "No, sir; they have all deserted me, . and I' am too poor to employ any more," replied the beautiful Mary, bursting into tears. "In such a' case will not some chiv alrous member of the profession vol unteer?" said - the' judge, glancing around the bar. The thirty lawyers were silent. "I will, your honor," said a. yoke from the thickest part of the crowd behind the bar.. At the sound of the voice many started—it was so unearthly sweet, and mournful. The first sensation was changed into laughter, when tall, gnant, spectral figure elbowed his way thro' the crowd, and placed himself within the bar. His clothes looked so shab by that the court hesitated to let the case proceed under his management. "Has your name been entered on the rolls of the State ?" demanded the judge. "it •is immaterial;" answered the Stranger, his thin, bloodless lips curl ing up with a sneer. "Here is my license from the highest tribunal in . America!" and he handed the judge a broad parchment The trial went on. He suffered the witnesses to tell their own story, and he allowed the defense to lead off. Ashley spoke first, followed by Pike and Prentiss. The latter brought down the house in cheers, in which the jury joined. It was the. _stranger's turn. Ho rose before the bar, not behind it, and so near the wondering jury that he might touch the foreman with his long, bony finger. He proceeded to tear to pieces the arguments of Ash ley, which melted away at his touch like frost before a sunbeam. . Every one looked surprised. Anon he came to thedazzling wit of the poet:lawyer Pike. Then the earl on his lip grew sharper, his eyes to open, dim and dreary no longer, but vivid as light ning, red as fire" globes, and 'glaring as twin meteors. The Whole soul was in his eye: the fall heart stream ed oat of the face. Then without be. , stowing an allusion to Prentiss, he turned short around on the perjured. witneses of Hopkins, tore their testi mony into threads and hurled in their faces such terrible invectiveslhat all trembled like aspens,' and twd of them fled froth the court house. The excitement of the crowd was becom ing tremenduons. Their united life and soul seemed 'to hang upon the burning tongue of a stranger, and he - inspired theme with the power of pas sions. He seemed to have stolen na ture's long hidderi secret of attrac tion. But his greatest triumph was to come. His eye began to glance at the .assasin Hopkins, as his lean, ta per fingers assumed the same direct lion. He . hemined the wretch within a wall of strog. evidence and impreg nable argument, gutting off all - hope of escape. He dug beneath the mur derer's feet ditches , of dileuunas, and held up the slanderer to th' scorn and contempt of the populace. Hav ing thus girt him about with a circle of fire, he stripped iiiniself to the 'work of the massacre. - • Quiz. Oh! thenit was a vision both glo rious and dreadful to behold 4 the ont tor. •. His voice bealine a trumpet fill ed with wild whirlpools, deafening the ears with craahetud,powder, And yet intermingled with a sweet under song of the softest cadence. His fore ,head glowed like a heated furnace,his counterumewas haggard, like that of a maniac,, and ever said anon he flung his-long bony arm on .high, as if grasping after thunderbolts. He drew s picfurn of murder in such appalling colors ; that, in com paiistin, hell itself might seem teen ' tifnl; he painted the slanderer so black that the sun 'seemed dark at noonday when shining . on such a inonster. Andthen, flanig both-por ignite on the slubliing Hopkins, fai ref* 8110 k UL re lorsTer• The 'tlon of - the audience amounted to almost madness. MffMNBIEI=II EMS ' Alt et - Oneiketitter:lieseeeded :Irons thtiblighk. - IBS 'woke' 'wailed" out' the - - mtirdered dead , . and Eying-40,14;44ff* Nei, mere owi besn ik ni4oyery„ e FLom ore eut : 73 :. _ ,,..... 77 flowed I%;tirtia fiat* till men wept 419 oloped-ty aAarpng vshortatiim 10* Joryow4.4 'Omni ta the bysbuiders;,,,ths: pan* t.aftear„ Aurjr should ,bring a. verdict - foi. the ;dplaintiff, not to offer : violence to the efendant, however, richly be. Welt &Sens other - Words, - "riot lynch the villain but leaite_his pnn lambent to God."' ;.This was &most artful trick of solt and calculated to , insure vengeance.• The jury rettnned a' verdict of fifty. 'thowind dollars; and the night after witidihircjitsies was taken= out of his bed' !vibe lynchers, and beaten' alm&it tiOleith.';As the court ig jcorned, 'do; atm** said: "John i TsylOr inlipretich here this eiening at 'only ciindle-light;'' He did, *each, „and the hoiise crowded. I have listened to Clay, Webstei- and , calboun—to Dwight, Bascom' aid Beecher--but - never heard 'anything in the 'form Of &dr lime words even approximating to the eloquence of John- Taylor, massive as mountain. Mid wildly rushing as. a cataract of fun; , j. PRILADELFICIA' °TIN' Ot look a Theso are paradoxes. They are places where; with few exceptions, all: -would like to visit, and yet nine' in ten are too nerions to approach. And in truth there is- -something• horrible attending the 'cutting up, coolly, of the, human form divine,' even if-me = diately, human life be prolonged •by it. 'Nor is it a nice oir pleasant thing, either to be-a -witness or a party to the cutting up ; but, for the patent of those who lack the courage to . ap mach these," schools of the dismem bered dead," we serve up a delecta ble dish,in the sure knowledge that it will be swallowed with avidity. • There are some. dozen 'dissecting rooms in Philadellihia, attached to college buildings• and in other places. . To describe one is to describe all: They are, as every onaknows,, place s where the study of. the human being, who may have died from disease, 'or in health, both internally and exter nally, his bony and fleshy structure, is p*red. There-has been always something devilish connected with these apartments—a kind of repel ling, of shrinking horror surround ing them. Is far back-as the pahn3r. days of the .Egyptian kingdom, the embalmers of the dead, though onee , essary class of men at that time, had • to flee for their hies at the end of each embalmieg..- Although a na tional practiCe, the fact that they.had taken a man's stomach out, and stuff ed him full et spices, and had pulled his brains through his • nostrils and crammed his head- with aromatic drugs, filled the 'Egyptians with a holy horror. Bnt use makes horri ble things even pleasant in time; and the young gentlemen of the present day have no such fear Going up stairs in one of these places (for these rooms are always up stairs, on the top stony of a building), and entering the room, the fi rst thing a man experiences •is a peculiarly tin, pleasant smell, sickly, indescriba ble. On looking about he sees twen ty tables that look like ice cream ta bles ranged round the room, and a dead body, of a man, woman or child, black or white, male' or female,' in whole or part, lying upon 'each. These lay with their heads upon wooden blocks for pillows, and ex cept where the students were engag ed in dissecting, were covered with coarse cloths for dicency's sake. A woman-.-a flee fresh subject—lay on One: " Doctor," said one student, " isn't she a beautiful subject?" "Was she ever buried?" said another. "How old is she ?" "Hop long has she been dead ?" "Plump." , " That's, "Was she ever good looking?" " Isn't she English?" etc., etc.; etc. On the walls of the room hung pictures of parts of bodies, which seemed to be suffering from incura ble diseases, and some of these were, undergoing terrible surgical opera tions. From a gibbet, suspended in the middle of the room, hung low the skeleton of a youth. Its means of suspension was a screw, which was worked into the skull. •As the stu dents-walked abont, their shoulders would strike the -dry bones, and they would swing backwards and forwards and rattle again. Past doctore, ed " demonstrators," dressed in long, red aprons, fastened round,: their necks, walked up and down the room, to reply to questions propounded by the students who were engaged in the art of dissecting, when " Gray's Anatomy " did not make matters `clear enough: These "Anatomies " lay . open upon the dead bodies. at - the page referring to the particular spot on which- they were -at ,work. As tl e re e r m cut, layer after layer of skin was • g off, and nerve and sinew and fibre and ligament and muscle and bode and Membrane were here and there exhibited at one view. Here lay a black man, his thigh laid open and the white flesh beneath looking whiter, and the black looking black er, because of the contrast There lay a little girl, the leg open to the knee, and here a woman with her arm in shreds. -ori some flat part of the.bodiee lay the little boxes of in struments, and, ever and anon, mfthe student Wanted,th turn over a new leaf of " Gray," or scratch his head; or do anything' which required nsore than one hand,- he would' put his knife between his lips till the hand Was again disengaged. I . ' _lt is customary, before body -is dissected, to draw lots among five, that-being the number'., of' parts into which a body is. divided. This ac counted for the pectiba' r question, put in a "loud tone, from the other 'end of the room : " Who Rants- a leg?" .soMe subject having one leg yet nndrawn, -and the poor " fellow could not be cat up till be was , entire ly monopolized. Round one table at the end of the 'nom a crowd of students was col lected; quietly looking on the lead body Of a beautiful girl, about sigh teen ;years of age.. Approaching' the table from thalami.' end, we noticed the high Arabian instep—curved high •2'...40.1:10eiir,`,/uniiim i :.A4lN,iiitcmie ME enough-for astral:in diluter to4rm h; with out Wetting th e riinng gently to,' the.woll4evelOped 'calf aird" thrgh; &O wing, in 'life; a Itrm' remade ; then- the fall chief above -that -again the lock hleAtxdrunn orb upon a mom; tairi, straigl.t surd .beautifo4,.l,4l, tho'head,,ind pallid face, lyrng ataid a 'Miss of - dark brown Mk whieg hung knotted and- tangled all around. - -amigos *as fin* shaped, straight. and &pariah at the end, ,pnrely Ourcludan. Ilwthig line of or grace d beantY was m 'the month, and the whole face ilhuctiated-thitily the Greciar' rule of th,e exact triple divisiOn-from - the forehead to the In Oa blyntiaga room, there were 'tilionla dozen stuffed &amides, all brother* from libmess to one anotli cerovith that leathery, can't-help-my-' self kind of a look, and .stuck upon iron rods run up in the region of each, dummy's Q 8 coexygii Students were here engaged, in applying 'straps to the toes, fingers, legs, necks, lime* etc., of these gentlemen. It looked .as if there" had been a terrible rail road smash up in the neighborhood and these unfortuitates had been pull ed from_among the debris. . Dress,- dresi, alWays dress!! Where is the prophet 'among women who will emancipate us from. the tyranny of clothes? - Is she yet born. If so, would . that, we knew the Bethlehem of her nativity, that our wise -women might hasten to bow down before her coming. Not till car dress. is more simple, healthful,. and comfortable, will it be possible' for iwomen to com pete with men. in the world of work, and'yet we cannot afford to sacrifice the element of beauty. Where is the genius who will combine what it needed, and - give us a dress that will express and-not imprison us; of which we 'shall be as unconscious as our . souls are of our bodies. A - dress free from impertinence, ,that will not thrust itself between us and tho wo man we seek, but take its proper place as 'a- secondary and subordinate fact. I know.of nothing more truly representative of the worst aspects of woman's character and condition at the present day than her dress. It is "a thing of shreds and patches," Still of pretence and unreality; It is often composed of the flimsiest matZ riabi; it consists of bits, it is fastened with pins; and a woman once taken to pieces; the work of recozistruction is truly formidable; from first to last her dress is without unity, harmony, .or. completeness.—Celia Burleigh, in Woman's journal. olet.Jrtlf 4. Xft T ' .• = . 1 El ME MEIN =EI ER 48. _ TIM IMMO or THE CAPTIVE. .UNrviateu. Arran:sum; or. Wolisis. —I have observed among all nations, that - the women ornament themselves ,. ore than the men ; that, wherever found, they are the same kind, civil, obliging, humane, tender beings ; that they are ever inclined to be gay and_ cheerful, timorous' and modest. They do not hesitate, like men, to perform a, hospitable or generous ac tion ; not haughty nor arrogant, nor supercilious, but full of courtesy, and fond of society, industrious, economi cal, ingenious-; more liable in gene ral to err than m4n, but in general, also, more virtuous, and performing more'good actions than he.- I never addressed myself in the langpage of decency and friendship to a - Wonan,- whether civilized or savage, without receiving a dccent and friendly an swer; With man it has often been otherwise - In wandering over the barren plains of inhospitable Denmark, through honest Sweden, frozen Lapland, rude and churlish Finland, unprincipled Russia, and the wide-spread. regions id the ivandering. Tartar, if hungry, 'dry, cold, wet, sick, woman ha's ever been friendly to me, and uniformly so; and to add to this virtue, so wor thy the appellation of benevolence, these actions have been performed in so free and kind a manner ,that if I was dry, drank the sweet draught, and, if hungry, ate the coarse morsel with a double relish.—Ledyard's . Si berian Journals 'EVE'S APPLE TIME.—/E an interest ing Diglish wo*, entitled "Rawl-. lections of Ceylon," it is asserted that Eve's apple tree (Kaduraghe) is there a common tree. It is of medium size; it, leaves nine inches in length by three in width, with twenty or more strong fibre ,branching off from each side of the central one. Its fruits are attached to a stalk of considerable length, and are produced in pairs. The appearance presented by the fruit is said to be very peculiar, hav ing the form of an apple of the com mon kind, with about one-third bit ten out. It is not edible, and is re garded as a most deadly poison. When punctured it exudes a juice or milk so arid that a single drop falling on the skin immediately raises a blis ter. "The outside," says the author, "is of bright yellow color; and the inside a - deep crimson. It contains a largio quantity 'of black seeds, hle the pips of an apple, embedded, in a quantity of scarlet colored pulp. j I have count, ed fifty-eight of these seeds in a single fruit. - Wfien ripe, the fruit bursts, and the seeds fall out ; the outside shrivels up, but still adheres to the stalk for a considerable time. AS TIM SUll in all its'splendor was pcepineover the eastern lulls a newly married man exclaimed: "Thei glory of the world is stung!" His wife, who happened tube getting up at he moment, - taking the compliment to herself simpered, "What do you think, my dear, if I had my yak gown on ?" SOME Timm since a gentleman died who during life, refused to Wove in any fttbire punishment: Two or throe weeks after his de. mlse his witerreceived,tkrough a medium,s cum mrmicatiort,which'read as follows: "Deartrife,l now believe. Please send me my thin clothes and a barrel of ice-water." "Tsar's A good gun of yours, stranger; but uncle Day here has one that beatelt." " • • "AM How far will it ,k eh"a hawk with No. 6 t'!" " - • "I don't nee shot. or ball either," answered Uncle Davo for hintself. " Then what do you use. Uncle navel" " ihoot salt altogether. I lamy game go far off with my gun that, withoukult the game would spile before I could git it .% "A FOP iS. compr z i 4inting his Ber lev mine?"ant, " mod out. ere's' that blockhead of A hdy parent answered. "On your shhoulers, - IMMII=2I rt!.'t 11 ,4 1 4 viaIeSINIPIPIP,7O 4II O I uId oiliviu as peen* Il i euthe _ ' red} indite,' Ili itzrusir •1 C ' wants of Pi, • • , orthe . • tea- Stbee • prive itl"Bl**44tainseity, fF al- U lu i n wui De r #l72ltet vs*: the: "iikest it - Wain buy miinini:llaU a 1 th e necessaries collife.. / Noildnunizi take the plsee of mangy is thfi *Eject. It is alwaYs convertiblifiritii'meat Ind drink andekitheiiii iii4 - )lliit is what can be said of no Other Porturpoimaidepeciditkinkeiving an auncertain" ,, value, los pae,iuil use itris shwa certain.' The aim of every prudent man then' should be alwayeto have nia hand a reserve of this "univenagicinint,!... If money finetuatee itit orpor &ailing 'paw*, are:o4w sho__Pc tastes too; Ind- probably , th e 'thing nianeriki . iii*iii*Wa in its value than, anything ;elm Einploy inentnuiY belt :tariplisOlbyllhiso or by ebiu . iges; 'Geode bought and paid for may lideinnetable. Bnt money rs always in Oiliest, is neverout of season. Tliarefame, as we have said, ifalioedd be the effort Of every_ min, whatever be his income to live within.it, and than to guild against the sontingencyOrhick may come to anybody, af being for awhile without an income. It hilarious hoW ihnost niiiversal is :indifferenge to .this precautiOn. Even stmeastal billies!, men are prone to lock up their acconinla tions in extended Wawa projects and various other ways, acme of them quite unproductive, leaving them selves actually without immediate re solve* if by any means their income is interrupted. Mary a' badbargain is foreednion those who an compell- . ed to:realize, when if they had the power they would wait. The corners into which "poor rich men , are thus - driven show that the comae oft bide as_ Weil as the march of time brings , its reverses. Bich mai la welt as poor are 4 iiiiiihed for money." ' Yet, while with the rich this is lin convenience, with the pair, or with' those who live from day , to dayto be straitened for money is a didotil ty, and - may _amount to. to:. misery. l'here are some people who hive the - .Biii/tieity . to foresee, and . faineeeing., to alleviate the trouble. And this they do in the way we have indicat ed, by keeping always within 'the limits of their receipts while they are receiving anything, and putting aide • the surplus where it "can be reached in the time of necessity. U to .do this could become cone on, the bur den of poverty upon the poor and the - burden of the support of those too poor to help themselves would be very much ffiminished.:—Phiatfel phis Ledger. El THE BEilrriruL Sumer —Persona ,who have been at Rome will remem ber that the charge for a scrathsido room is nearly double that for one of northern exposure. This is the re sult of a Friuctical fact impressed - ou the minds of the people from -the -observation of centuries, that sun shine is healthful ; and yet very few New Yorkers seem to have arrived to that height of intelligence. Read, over the advertisements any day for " furnished rooms," and the indispen 'sable requisite, next to " a high stoop, brown stone, west side," is that it shall be a front room • it may. front a vig-pen or a plank yard, a stable or Isteamery ;• all the alone, only if it is a front room," to overlook the street, as if we would die if we couldn't see something ; as if there was nothing to do but sit , at the window and gaze at the passer-by by the hour. . - A New York merchant noticed that all his book-keepers became Consump; tive in a few years, and died. One day it occurred. to him it might be the result of their occupying a room where the sunshine never entered, in consaence of high walls ; next day heave We -lark a sunshiny room, anti never bad a consumptive book keeper afterward. - Another New York taerciuuttplaced his son on a beautiful improved farm in Illinois. The best uppeerroom of the 'house overlooked the prairie. Three years later that son returned to New York an invalid—the cough, the hectic, the death! On dose uf quiry, he dated to his physician that 'he always found his clo ht g damp and mouldy. " Did the sun ever shine in - your room?' 1p No, air ; it was on the north side of the house." - - Hall's Journal of Health. TRAJIEDT or Lars . —Li fe is monstrous disappoirdigent and death the only portal. to- peace.. There is not a day passes in which virtue does not sell itself for bleed; in which some poor, harrassed, or frenzied creature does not rush madly upon death; in which the good ate not pez secuted and 'the Weal; trampled uptin. Tragedies as real as any histo y or or fiction ever painted, are being played, and faces - ibu admire mask with smiles an inward torture worse than the welly ,of the rack. Whro has realized the fulfillment of his early hope ? Where is the life that has not its mortification, its bitter concealments, its studied . aversions, poignant hutailiaticms, its wild tine:u nless, its w and defeats? Bat we represent the fairW, portions' and the highest level of it. :Bewailing is the grat mass of humanity, and they writhe . and moan, and weep; they toil and starve, and curse, and die. The world goes rolling on, as heedless of those who fall as the gale in autumn is heedless of the stripes from the trees, or branches it wrenched away: —M.II. Murray. Alan* writer in the Galaxy, Neb ulae, defends Ameaciin ladies, against an English ()barge that they are "craggy" and that a handsome leg is a rarity. This the Galaxy writer eats is at *Wen as it is aarable. And she goes on to iay that though she is ignorant of the bafet.and pro-, fessional dancers, she has a passion: ate sense of beauty of form, and has advantage of abundant opporl tunities afforded byclass es and singing schools to stugymnastic dy tho development of the lower limbs Of her sex.. She hat seen at least thousand ladies in' the pretty dress worn for Dr. Lewis' physical exercis es; which leaves the lower leg more than half undraped. Now -of these thousand pairs of natural legs she solemnly declares that not more, than twenty were so meager - that it would have been kinds&ta hide them and not mare than. twenty were so destitute of good 'points • that . (aes thetical) they ought to have been an nihilated. On th i s the Mime says: "These statistics are highly interest ing, and the public, we are sirs; will read them with a sense of national pride." 131 QIRM