TERM sPF PV.BLICATION. Tat ElaaprOltD UPON= ill published scary Theradalb3' B . W. ALVOED at Two poilars per-annum. to advance. - sg,adrertising In all cases szeinaire of =bag* • nn to the paper. - ..4ECIaI. NOT/CM inserted at Tams =raw re or first Insertion. and Iles cwswa per line foe. ~esequent Ineorttorta. ,LOCALOTICES, same style as reading Waal: T WV:TT CENTS • line. - ,pvERTIS ble a r VTEI aill be inserted ea:ceding to he following ta oans I Ito Pr I- 2m I Itm dm 11)?. i $1.50 1 3.00 1 6.00 1 . ir , c he,l7l - 2.00 1. 5.001 6.00 1 10.00 1 15.00 1 20.110 3 :schai I 2760 1 7.00 110.00 1 13.00 120.00 30.00 4 inches - 3.00 awl 14.00 13.33 00 T 33) c olumn 15.00 112.00 1 moo raw som I moo column I WA 1 %°131&00 1 ~-,lu-ru-n I 20• OD I 40 0 ° I . 80. Administrator's and Executor's, Notion.' SI; /Mi.' toes Noticca. $2 30 ; ansilleell Carla , eve WS, tper ~,,,r fS, additional lipea $1 each; . rearie advertisers are eniitledto quartedyeblings. Troieentadvertisementemaxtbe Paid for inadreince. Mwhii gions nnicatints fi i,,dortioneof Aiacsa: Comm .i ei.ke ndllldald interest. and nottom of War riaiee and Deaths, exceeding five lines. are charged •im csa - ra per Ulm , The Worms having a larger circulation than kr :1,.3,4,e in the county combined. mates It thebest l,fitiehme Medium in Northern Pennsylvania. JOH PiII'SIDIG of 'Tory kind, In 'Plain and Fancy relor., done with neatness And dispatch. Handball. B .nlie, Carle, Pamphlets. Billheads, Statements. Ike. 0 , every variety and style. printed at the shortest n die,,,The RZPOICTES Mee 111 well supplied with Power Pres•eft. • 050 d assortment of new type. end • evm-thing in the Printing line ran be executed In h, meet artistic manner and at the lowest ;rates. TERIfS INVARIABLY CASH. BTISI=SS CARDS. CI Ni. TINGLEY, Licensed Ave C + • Harlem Dome, Ps. All cath RraTptly attelB7ond C P 179 . BLACK, General Fire, Life )1 • and Accidental Insurance Agent. Office et J Hotel, STsalusing. Ps. 7un2:70-Gm 'A.LLACE REELER 11,11-SE, SIGN ,IND FRESCO PAINTER T A :11.13. Sept. 13, 1870—yr riDip VINCENT, INSURANCE —Offwe formerly ocenpled by Ifercur M• ov. one door south of Ward donee. • slte. ~rnayl()."7o Nr. a. wreceirr. p FOWLER, RE. ESTATE • 1) 1. XT.E.I I . No. 1611 Washington Street. be- Lasalle and Wells Streets. Chicago. Illinois. n F.,tate pnrcbaFed and sold. Investments made )1 • Loaned ' May 10:70. TAIIESS 111kEING. PATTERN ci-TTINO AND FMKG in ill fashionible ittort notice. ROOMS In' Mercur's N. '•.. over Porter IF Kirby's Oritt. Store. MRS. 11. E. GARvis-. Pa.. April 13. 1870. Ir.ITR WORK OF ALL -KINDS. I old, Iva SWITCHES. CDRI.S. BRAIDS. ke.. made In the best rtuukner andlateststyle, '-e Ward Rouse Barber Shop: - Termaraasonable. T.4samia, Dec. I. ME r,. POST, PAINTER, T , ...tnn , ls. Pa.. trial ten yearn experienee. la coa t, i b...-nn give Ow bent nattsfaction In Painting. StthatUg. Glazing. Papering, kc. r Parnentaz attention paid 'to jobbhag ha the april 9. '66. ToFIN DT FEE, BLACKSMITH. P `ii , .CROETON. PA., pays particular attention to poi:zits. Wagons, Sleighs, ke. Tire set and pa:nu,± done on short notice. Work and charges c-iarinteed satisfactory. 12,15.69. M I OS PEI‘INITACKER, HAS :& acute, estahlished himself to the TAILORING . •INF_SS. Shop over Rockwell's Store. Work of description done in the latoft styles. Towanda, April 21. 11170.—tf ERAYSVILLE WOOLEN 3IILL '"."!.,• under* , rued would respectfully annonnoe to 1 . • pubbc tb he beeps constantly on burnt Woolen eassime • flannels. Tuna. and all kinds at fl , .Y.e and ret . HAIGErk FiROADLET. 10.'70. • Proprietor. OA YES 1 OH ' IkN !-AUCTION! A. E. MOE, Licensed Auctioneer ill eallg promptly attended to and satisfaction oanntNNi. Call or address, A. 11,...M0t. Moaroeton, , Pa. 0ct.26, 69. IFFORD'S NATIONAL PAIN lir Kill, :add Life Oil, are the Great Family that find n welcome In every home as a • .-.: ; zu Remedy for more of the common ills of 1,t. , than any other medicine In the market. Sold ,ierA in medicine generally: Manufactured T . ,lIFFORD, Chicago, 11V, .arld:l43 Mani at., N. V. March 111,'70-3 C S. RUSSELL'S • GM4rItAL lA'SURANCE AGENCY EMU CI cu )D. TEINIPLARS MUTUAL IC Scia-fit Association. M ~I.,ship fes to secure at death $2.000 $lO 00 A•,. 112.1 AA- ^+RIIICUt .. . ........... ....... 2 00 m , per-y .6mt,Snierit, 'age from 15 to 515 110 " - 26 to 45 100 _ ••" - 46 to 00 210 Ct. F. SO Fsl, Wyalusing. Pa, 1. -.11 A2. , iit I , :rl:rielfstr3 county. .I.neat.Xuenta . . : i Sept. 24.'70. THE CONTINENTAL LIFE IN- I Company of Hartford, Conn Pay , , tiet aipheaton for insurance to be made at 1 offic.•, Main at , 'Towanda. , WILLIAM BRACKEN, General Agent. MEMO B ft'ieRS.ITETHTNg! rompnte.l my new brick shop. near my len.•e on M..an..treet. I am now prepared to do - F. in all its branclo.s. Particular attsution paid `l.ll Irons and ett.!e* Vols. 'laving spent many krt in Ito., community, in• this ImAiness, I trust of. me receiving it liber .,...euut of the polio pate..l,nxe. , • G,c. 3. 1 , 1 - 41 --ti pATENTS! i. N. DrATEr.„ , , Vioifor or Paten/.. , STREET, WAVERLY. N. Y. ,irawlngs. elweincationm and all papers 11/MLIII:Z and properly conducting Appli t.o P iu thn rNITED STATEN and FOn- CR...Pa:F-1 IN UNSUCCE.FVL , . ATToUNEY'h lIIE TO PAT UNTIL PATENT I I ':'• 14.. IYTON' & BROTHER Denlcre "'"- )L, 11 IDES, PELTS, CALF 11.1194, &C. • tu • Incbeat cash price is paid at all timcs. k 7. • NI L lie•tittseld'astore, Main-st., :•.o - re''. ( 114 , ...1.1L'71) TOWANDA . PA. W. STEVENS, C()IINTY SUR— , •• 'coon. eareptown. Brad/ Jed Co.. Pa. Thank ' t •• • ncioy ••moloyers for port patronage, would ttsny lir:erne the citizens of Bradford County h. I.D•par,4l to do any work in Ida line of bud , •••,•,..t may be entrusted' to him. Those haring li•put.d lime would de ... well to hare their property 1-M,•:y gilt% ry..l ts•Nre allowing themoolsga to I. airy their neighbors. All work warrant. •••, • so far as the tishr et the Mite will per. stot ill unt,atcutd Islas a 2 ended to as soon as :: ; ti• are obtained. W. ST S. i-1• =I THE UNDERSIGNED HAVE & °Penedo a Ranking Ifouae in Towandi, !wader the of O. F. MASON k CO. Col- are prepared to draw Bille of Exchange,and collections in New Tort, Philadelphia, and an r - .rfionA of the United States. SIB also England, Ger i“..ny, and France. To loan money; rewire deposita, s'l ,- 1 to do a general Banking bnainese. F. Mason was one sf the late firm of I...aTOrte. of A: Co., of Towanda Pa.. and hie knowledge of t iot,!ness men of Bradford and atijorping counties !.a.*;ng been in the banking busineas for about years. make BUR hou se a drairable one through to make collections. O. F. MASON, T Oct. 1. 1866. A. O. MASON. B R ADF ORD COtNTY RIkL ESTATE AGENCY H. McKESN; REAL ESTATE AGENT VOlat , l o Farms, Mill Properties, City and Town L 1 . 4';0, Laving property for sale will find it to their ~ .h- E ntaze by leaving a description of thl wane. with' at this agency, as parties are constantly , c1i7114144 - 4 farms, &c. 11. B. IdcIC.F.AN, . Real Eatala Agent. 4,1-pr Mason's Bank, Towanda. P. 1667. \TRW FIRM! .VEli - GOODSA.NDLOW PRICES AT 1110!iff.OETO:i, PA TRACY S. HOL.LON, Dealers in Groceries and Provisions, Drags liralrincs, lierommue Oil, lamps, Chimneys. hve stun, Paints. Oils. Varldsh. Yankee Nn' Cigars and Snuff. Pare Wines mid, quality. for medicinal purposes 111 t.o.d, sold at the very lowest prices. Pre. earvially compounded at all hours of the Give us s call. TRACY & ROLLO'S Pa.. .Tstile 24. 1.5t7.1.—.1y. CHEAP PASSAGE FROM OR TO IRELAND QP. ENGLAND a CO:t. LISE OF gTE.I.III/11111 *MOM On TO y l -r.T.N4TONvIc On LIVEWOOL. (imstes old Blaek Sfax Line — of er4try week. ' Um. of Packets from or to London, tvo a month. Ell:land, Ireland and Scotland q, L 7 31...r partteMara, apply to Williams & New VOTIL, nr n.tBt.):N k Bankers, —VOwanda, Pa. t % l. 14r.. 001) MOLASSES FOR 50 . C.. 4, per galion at FOS IIEACIIIM 4,t s. VOLUME XXXI: PROFESSIONAL can. . TAMES . WOOD, kirmern Cousgsmoa AT LAW.TowiMds,Ps. • 11ENR , Y PEET, ATTORNEY AT Law:Towanda, Pa. June 97. 'ft I;VM. FOYLE, ATTORNEY AT LW, Tomcods. Ps.. Office with Elbaoso ' Smith. south side Mayor's Block. 'April 14. 70 GEORGE D. MONTAN= AT TOESLT AT LAW.Offlee—anner of ]Gin and Pine Streets. opposite Porter's Drag Manz rEAT B. R7:1:17g, DENTIST. OF v Y . flee over •Wickbim &Macro, Towanda, Pa. Nay 2d. 10. D a IL WESTON, DENTIST.- 1-1 001ce In Patton's Block, orer Gore's Drug and Chrrrdcal Stare. • • Pint 418. L. P. NVILLISTON. ..1-4 ATTORNEY AT LAW. TOWANDA. South elle of Meretir's New Diock. lap stairs. April 21,10—tt, A _B. MoKEAN, ATTORNEY I. • AND COtTSMIOII Laer„ Towanda. P. par bold ar Corot. attention paid to businesag the Orphan 'tia.s' July 20, VVH. CARNOCHAN, ATTOR . tom AT LAW (District' Attorney for Reid ford Comity), Troy, Pa. Col:bottom made and prompt- , ly remitted. WAS. 14—tf. TOHN N. CALIFF. ATTORNEY P 1 AT Law. Towanda. PL Wittman attention Rtv en to Orphan a' Cnnrt bustneaa'sConeeyancing and Collections. ifir Mice at the Register and Recor der'■ office, mouth of the Ceurt Rome. Ilea 1. Mt. H. WARNER, Phinician and c• Surgeon. Leßayevllle, BradtOrd Co.. As. All cans prorpptly attended to. ,Office first door south of Leltaysville House. Sept. 15, 1810.-yr L. U. BEACH, M. D., Physician e and Sew,. Towanda. Ps- Particular attea- Una paid to all Chronic Diseases. and Diseases of -Females. Oft-a at Ids residence'on Weston street, east of D'A. Overton's. nerv.11,09.- nVERTON ELSBREE, ArrOn- K, srv's Law, Towanda, Pa., having entered into copartnership, offer their professietud services to the public. Special attention given to tipsiness in the Orphan's and Register's courts. spll4'7o OVEIISON, JII. N. C. =BR= ITERCUR & DAVIES, ATTOR -2.. Plill3 AT LAW, Towanda. Da. The undersigned having associated themselves together in the practice of Law, offer their professional services to the public. ULYSSES MERCUE. W. T. DAVIES. March 9. 11370-:v IA. & B. M. PECK'S LAW • OFFICE. gain street, opposite the Court House, Towanda, Pi. MEE! BE.N. MOODY, , M.D. - PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Offers his professional serviees to the people of Wy Musing and vicinity.. office and residence at A. J Lloyd's. Church street. Ang.lo.lo JOHN W. MIX, ATTORNEY AT Law. Towanda, Ihndford Ca., Ps. GENERAL TIBITGANCE AGENT. Particular attention paid to Collections and Orphans' Court business. Offlce—Mercur's New Block, north side Public Bquara spr. 1. '59. PIISENBEERY, would an nounce that in compliance with the request of ; hie numerous Mende, be is now prepared to admin . - later Nitrens Oxide, or Laughing Gal, for the patm leen extragtion of teeth. Leltayaville, May 3, 1870,-11 DOCTOR 0. LEWIS, A GRAM:I ate of the College of -Physicians and E:neaps," New York city, Claim 1843-4, gives exclusive attention to the practice of-hla profeasion, Offlise and realdenos en the eastern allipe of Orwell MIL adjoining Henry Howe's. Jan 14, 'Ca DR. D. D. SMITH, Dentist, has purchased G. E. Wood's property, between Mercer's Block and the Elwell House, where he has located his offloe. Teeth extracted without paltary nee of pas. Towanda. Oct. 20. IB7o.—yr. TOWANDA. PA GREENWOOD COTTAGE.—T is well-known house. haring recently been refit ted and supplied with new furniture, will be found s pleasant retreat for pleasure seekers. Board by the week or month on reasonable terms. E. W. NEAL, Prop'r. Greenwood, April 20, WARD: HOUSE, TOWANDA, PA Oct- B. MG.. . TEMPERANCE HOTEL!—Situa ted on the north-weed corner of Main and Did both streets, opposite Bryant's Carriage Factory. • Jurymen and others attending court, will e...teci ally Coedit to their advantage to patronize theMft v•rance Hotel. . S. M. BROWN, I),FOSpr. Towanda. Jan. 12. 18743.1 y, DINING IiGOMS Iti CON,NECTION WITH THE BAUM, Near the Court House. We areeprepared to feed the hungry at all times of the day and evening. Oysters and Ice Cream in their Reasons. March 30, 1870, D. W. SCOTT k CO. I= VLWELL HOUSE, TOWANDA, Ps. JOHN C. WILSON Raving leased this House. le nosvesdp to aocotnmo• date the travelling public. Nopaius noresrmse will be spared to give satisfaction to those who may give him a - call. ins-North side of the e public square, east of Mer v:Les new block. . D IMLERFTFILT) CREEK HO- PETER LANDITESSER, Raving purchased and thoroughly refitted this old and well-known stand, formerly kept by Sheriff Grif fis, at the month of Rurrimerfield Creek. is ready'to give ;mid aocommodatimui and sattsfactory treatment to all who may favor him with a calL Dec. 23, St.—ti-,, MEANS HOUSE,TOWANDA .111 Pe.. Thomas R. JonxsB Proprietor. This popular Hotel basing been thoroughly Stied and re paired. and furnfehed throughout with new and ele gant Furniture, will be open for the reception of guests, on fIATISILDAT; MAY 1, 1869. Neither expense nor pains has been spared in rendering this House a model hotel in all its arrangements. superior quality Old Burton Ale, for invalids, just received/ • April 28, 1869. M ERIC AN HOTE L, BRIDGE STREET, TOWANDA, PA. . . C. GQFF, Proprietor. This Hotd having been leased by tlei subscriber, has been repainted, papered, and refurnished throughout. with new Furniture, Bedding. ke. His Table will be supplied with the best the market af fords, and the Bar with choicest brands of Liguori. This house now offers the comforts off* home at NIODZIIIA.TIC rites. Jurymen and others attending Court. will And this house a cheap and comfortable place to atop. Good stabling attached. aug,lo,'7o NEW 'PLANING MILL; . MATCITLNO, REA/MI:SG, MOSSISANGS, &c., At the bid stand of 8. II• ingt=o.s Woolen Factory and e.arnal, to A 117-157 SIX ROLL PL&ILNG AIM MATCH:LNG MACIIINK In charge of an experienced *ccluinic and builder the public may aspect a From the recent enlargement of tidewater power. work can be done at all seasons of tbdsear and on as sent in. In connection- with the sawmill we are able to furnish bills 01 sawed lumber to order. STEWART BOSWORTH. Cal:uptown. May 23. 1870.-1 y Metv,AN & HOOPER, SEIUENIA ALICifINE, Price,l33 00. ml. Machine Will Mitch, hem, fell, tuck, quilt, cord, bind, enikmoider and gather In the moat perfect manner, and will new from the lightest to the, heavi est goods • ft la not a Cheap Machine," but in all respects equals the higher priced ones, while to slmpriclty, now.liabilitp to get out of order, and ease of manage ment rr FICHPAJOIES ALL. Aa exaninuaton is desired from all to Leatthe truth of our uaertions. ALL &tempi's VirWIANIXD Pr:A LEC/. I MARY E. WATTS, Agent. Towanda, Sept, I, 1810. pItICELLST--CASCADE MILLS: Floor, beet quality, per sack ' $2 Oi " hundred 1b5.... ...... 00 800 Callum grinding visually done it once. as ite ea. parity albs mill is unincle.at for • large.amount work. ' $l. 13, /12071.131. Campton, Jilt 23, 1970. I Rotels. On 3lairi Street, near the Court House, C. T. METH. Proprietor PENN'A. GOOD JOB EVERY TLUE. =URIC LOCH STITCH WITHOUT CHANGE OF TENSION. ..:,:..li:-::;, -, _::‘,.!: *WO jothi. FAlit WE TREB Alm'Ootm. By ars:-)toalue. Speidcninght,Maie trot;btit fistna,- -" :The iaNt.or gold; ,„ No ripples on the river, no stir in field or fold; All gleams bnt narght_doth •-' • Save the far-et/unseen sea. Forget days put, heartbroken, Pat all thy memory by ! No grief on the green ; hillddo, na pity in Mao AY; Joy that may not be spoken!' Fills mead and flower and tree. Look not, they wilrnot heed thee; • !, Speak not, they will not hear; 'Pray not, they hive no bounty ; curse not, they. may not fear; Cower down;' they will not heed thee; Long lived the, world shall be., . Hang down thine,head andjutarken, For the blight eve stocks thee still ; Night trippeth on the twilight, - but tbeettminer bath no will For 'woes of thme to darken, Anp the moon hithleft tho sea. Hope not to tell thy story • In the real of gray-eyed morn, In tho dawn grown gray and rainy, for the thrush, ere day is born, Shall a shiging to the glory • Of the, day-star mocking thee. • Revenant, worn, and weary Till this,tyranny is past, - For the summer joy shall darken, and the wind • wail low at last, And the drifting rack, and dreary, Shall be kind to.hcartuid see. Thou shalt remember sorrow, Thon . shalt tell all thy tale • When the rain tills up the. valley, and the trees- amid their wail Think far beyond to-morrow, And the sun that yet shall be Hillside and vineyard hidden, And the river running rough, Towards the flood that meet the Northlands, shall be rest for thee enough, For thy tears to fall unbidden, For thy memory to go free. Rest, then, when all moans round thee And no fair annUtten lie Maketh Hilt of sorrow underileath a brazen sky I And the tuneftdiroe 'lath found thee, Over land and over sea. —Scribnces Monthly 4bzittilimens. [For the Itizeorrrn.] AOROSS THE WATER. No. XVI The World is a book—of which ho who has seen no other country than his own, has read but a single page." So says a French proverb ; and it may further be said, that the _travel er who visits Europe without seeing Itleland, has certainly missed one page, and that an importaztt one. The general idea of the Emerald Isle and its inhabitants is often-asso ciated with_that of turbulence, want, and disorder—so that it is frequently omitted from the programme of a tour abroad : while its fine and re markably varied scenery—the oppor tunity it affords for antiquarian re search—the truly original character, disposition and humor of its people —the interest connected with its pe, culiar political and, social condition =these, with various other features and characteristics of the country, combine to render it In fact a plea sant and profitable region for travel. The Irish people will generally be found courteous and accommodating to the stranger, and especially so to an American ; frequently intelligent, and " ever ready to communicate " —sometimes, it is true, to an extent beyond actual knowledge. The cultivation of the soil, especial ly in the south of Ireland, is bat lim ited—embracing throughout its whole. extent not more than one-fifth part. The production of beef and butter is extensive, and the quality excellent ; but the most of the producers are, alas! too poor to afford the use of 'such luxuries at home, and by far the 'greater portion finds a foreign mar ket. As beasts of draft or burden, the donkey and the horse are in gen eral use, to the exclusion of oxen. The plough is generally of wrought iron. Its general introduction into use I specially recommend to the ad vocacy of the " society for the Pre vention of Cruelty to Animals," as it is of such extraordinary length that .the utmost stretch of the imagination can hardly render it possible for the ploughman) to reach his team with either whip or goad. The axe is pro vided with a remarkably lcng bit, and a perfectly straight handle—like that used for the scythe (as I afterwards observed) in the West of Engliaal The handle of the Irish scythe, how ever, branches out into two, some- , thing like the letter A, with a nth on each projection. While it has been dogmatically asserted upon high tind learned authority that " a spade's a spade," the Irish spade is in fact but the half of one longitudinally—Ahe blade extending out upon one side only of the handle. Barns for the storing of hay or grain are seldom to be seen : the crops being neatly and securely stacked, with a thatched roof, and in form like that of a build- ing. The humid atmosphere and the mildness of the winters would seem specially favorable to the cultivation of fruit ; yet rarely, if ever, is an or chard to be seen,* and although wild fruits and berries are said to bthibun dant, they are seldom found in flit') market or on the table. Limestone is found in abundance in most parts of the country. ' It is often burnod 'Passing one day pp the lino Eausbonrg St. Honore, in Paris, I chanced to form some se- iinaintance with an English gentleman of Qoa( ker proclivities—a teetotaller for 27 years (thereunto converted by an American preach er)—non-resistant in .policy—not believing- . in written discourses from the pulpit—vegetarian and Gratiamite—the owner of a place at Bou logne, and of an interest in shipping at Liver pooL Touching upon the subject of Ireland, I alluded to the absence of fruit orchards through the country. With a lack, as I thought, of due charity, ho maintained the idea that it was wholly owing to the general proPensity for plunder, rendering the idea of them cultivation there absurd—as connected with any proba bility of the planter's even sharing in the pro. . ducts. Such a supposition world hardly agree with statements made to me in regard to the general security of peatetacks Indsimilorprep! erty exposed to pillage. At the same time, would it notte difficult to vouch for thosemeri ty of the fireffruif orchard in any country, un less surrounded by the high walls within which English and Irish proprietors genersliyimmure themselves? P. MI jeT EMI , for use upon t h e sod Where eulPvat4 , One - of the incist reinexliable tures of the- country tonsists in its extensive bogsior -mown* of peat;--a wonderful provision oUlinture for the cheap and neeessarluel of the great Matte of its inhabibuibi.' tiittiof great .eitent nre .flynna,,freque#7 14 feet or even more iii thickness . ; mifis the formation peculiar to the lower lands or levels. While the formation or origin of the substance - of these bogs affordiftni interesting subject for the geologist, no less interesting: to, the Antiquarian% an acqUaintrinci 'With the strange deposits often found be 7 neeth their =dam They *eel, like amber, to preserve for centuries, if not for ages, whatever may have been entrusted, by accident or design, to their keeping. , I have before alluded to the kegs of "Bog butter," and the immense deer's horns, relics of a nevi unknown race•of animals, here die-- 1 coveredi Prostrate trees; of Italie size, and in ;great numbers--their wood of a jet•black color, and ex- Aremely hero:land heavy (known aa Bog Oak), are also quarried out, and I supply the material fore greatvarie ty of articles, ornamental and useful. l Even the:, shillelnh--favoOte- 1) 111 9 - thing of Ireland's soms'—lis sometimes made of it, as combining weight and i toughness. Flint arrowheads' and,' axes`, resembling the relics of our American Aborigines, strange :orna- - mints of gold and silver, together with a ,great variety ,of stonejars, querns, and other ,queer utensils of an unkno*u. period, tiro also found in the Bogs, and form collections al most rivalling the wandeis of Hercu laneum and Pompeii. While the country is to so great an extent beautiful and' fertile—its rivers spanned with - stone bridges of I ad le construction and abound ing hi the finest of salmonand other fish—its plains and mountains alike traversed by splendid roads--ita towns and cities connected by finely bitilt railways, and many of them dis playing excellent architecture and great outlay in edifices both public and private,--its interior surface dot ted not only with majestic ruins of - .7castles and abbeys, but slat) with fine modern residences—its climate re markably salubrious and delightful ; yet with these and • other. important advantages, , i natural and artificial, -there is, as everybody knows, " some thing rotten " in Ireland, as was once said of Denmark. " Sure and it would be the finest country in the world to live in—if a. man cortld only Use there, do you see !" The great mass of her inhabitants lack the feeling of inde pendence which can alone give rise to, successful industry and enterprise; —the small extent of their uncertain tenures is fatal to improved culture and the true idea of home. While the cottager ekes out a scanty liveli hood from, the few acres for which he probably pays an exorbitant rent, his children (frequently, of course, con stituting his most abundant posses sions,) are growing up, each to need a eeparate allotme nt—and where shall they. find-it? Great scarcity -of . em plained of ; even at the .shilling a day which ordinary labor (and that but occasionally) commands in the south of Ireland. Many were the enquiries made; and deep the interest evident ly felt, concerning - America. ; many the wishes expresa.,ed - for the means necessary to go thither. Ours seems the land of promise to which the waiting eyes of Erin are ever turned. I The amount of emigration within the last few 'yeari has been large, and I many of those who leave their native soil being not of the lowest class, pub lic attention becomes of late More in terested- in a consideration cop.,, • the probable results of an exodus which is, and has been, reducing the popu lation of Ireland's aides, and vacating through the country many, a row Of straw-thatched cottages. 'Brit, for all parties there, in the existing state of things, it is undoubtedly desirable that it should be so. The final re sult, as affecting our own national prospects and institutions, remains to be seen. In regard to the terms and elandi-. 1 , tions of land leases in Ireland, the Scotch and English, who, as I found, were: not. generally disposed to be lenient in their judgment of the Irish' people, state that the-system therekst the same with their own : claiming that the lack of thrift with their neigh bors of the Green Isle is only the re sult of their lack of industry. But Gansrose—who should - certainly be good anthority—remarks thus in his Parliamentary speech of Felletuury 15, 1870 : "Irish land tenures are widely different from _those of England and Scotland." • He adds further : "The Irish landlord usually differk from lila tenant in politics and religion, and seldom lives on his estate. The tenant was bound to provethe land; but was often deprived of the crops be planted. 'The people believed that the soil Was - their ern, and that it bad been taken kola diem by conquest and confiscation— Dur ing the - last ten years; while the value of labor had remained 'stationary, the cost of livrng bad. increased and the progrcia of Ireland bad been checked." Mil - Even supposing the mode of ten ures to be the game, it seems certain. that if in England and Scotland the masses 9f the'people had' no otker resources than from the land they themselves rent and .cultivate, their general condition would Vary but lit tle from that of the Irish. - The great advantage of the former would seem to be in the , ; prevalence of manufac turing• enterprise and .investment '; and also, in their having, more gener ; ally a , resident proprietorship, ex pending a considerable portion of its income -in' dOmestio improvements., These manufactures and improve ments create widely diffused oppor twaities for induitry and US compen satzion,•to which the greater portion of Treland'is almost uttnrlY?ii stran ger. 'To a greater nxtenCprobahly, than in any civilized country under the sun, do the Irish huidlo;ids spend their lives and their incomes at a dis tance from their own doniains. And„ thus is the Irish peasant call ed upon—like the enslaved Israelite of old=" to make bricks without straw " ; thus, with scant opportn4 nity for employment, is he,Compelled to pay aligh rent, destined merely to swell themeans of a fereign career of extravagance, folly and dissipation on the part, of a fellow man who is, I perchance, personally an titter stran-r ". When things come to the word, TOWA.NDA; BRADFORD `,COUNTY,I'A.,. N9VENBER 24.1070, the nest, change must be for the bet-' ter" ; and'sOme tibnilei,7aCoordin . gly, have irekand are being - -LTV. • with: , Thni; the syistem known - in Irelandna .that., of ,Midiffilae, — . -4aaeU to n great extent in„.yogge-- - -is noir, fortunately fpr, the lower' classes, mostly suppressed. Under this ar 'rengement, a single individual would formerly rent hundrels. or thousands of-notes froni their proprietor, divid.' ing-it up at An advanced price to sev eral- others ; in which way the hind frequently pmeeid through a Timber of baba' befOie riacliing the poor cultivator oU a few .acre-n, who was thus compelled-to pay' an 'exorbitant price for his trittence'of soil: :The " Enctitabered -Estates `Bill;' which became a law of -Parliament not many years since, applies only to Ireland, and' was the result. of the hopeless pecuniary embirassments in which . were often ' (naturally enough) involved the ahtailed and dissipated min-r&sidint heirs of broad acres and sometimes-lofty titleti Un der its provisions, both estates and titles--otherwise inalienable—have frequently passed into more thrifty And deserving hands.. The story was told me of the returnof,anlrishman; who had been a fortunate adventurer in Atuitralia, to the'cottAge home of his boyhood. On glancing over the Columns of ,a. newspaper, while at breakfast, not far from the place of his destination, he observed the no. , tic° of the sale, to occur next day, of . the whole esto; to—a small portion of which his aged father had so long loc. cupied as a poor_ tenant. He pro ceeded without delay to the plaCe of sale, and (having fortunately &UR cient means at , -his command)-bestune the purchaser of the entire property king subsequently•exter.sivi no provelients, upon its long dilapidated surface. _ - ~.- • - .J. 111 Th • .--: -i: .. .:,. \ • MB se ~s » iieir (;). ' 1)81601;21011 sa a ilt i , 4102015111 Not unirequently . , while viewing some fine manorial residence or aris tocratic- mansion, the traveler may imagine it still descending, "from : sire to son;" through the lineage of marquis, earl or knight ; but - on :en quiry wilt*iid it to be perchance - the property of some parvenu banker, merchant, or professional man—the architect of the fortune he has found opportunity to invest in a noble es tate, and in improvements thereon— to which, in original hands, it would have continued long a stranger. " B muove!"—as the imprisoned GAinto exclaimed to his persecutorst "And still it moves!" Block its course as you may, the wheel of For tune will still revolve. The present condition of Ireland is too much opposed to the spirit and progress ot the age, to be henceforth of long coritinnance. Under the ten dency of recent events; let us hope that at no distant day—freed from the social, religions and political bon dage under which fur centuries they have struggled—her people may emerge - into a degree of light, liberty and 'happiness corresponding to the natural advantages which Providence has bestowed Upon this fair, but un fortunate country. C. C. T. Iturniixo rnoi Busntss.—One of the greatest mistakes men make-is in their "Tetiring froui business," as it is expressed, after they have made what they consider reong gnough. If a man means_ simply, Dy retiring from business, that he changes it, or pursues a different occupation, well arid 'good ; but if- he means, as he generally does, to cease work alto gether, and live the rest of his life in laziness, no greater mistake was ever made.. Stick to - business. Die -in the harness. There is no greater mistake ever made by sensible men 1 than that of supposing that, after an • active life from twenty to thirty years, they shall be hay7pier in retiring front business, and in having nothing to do, or only some, puttering around every day to make themselves think they are busy. Idleness, like every other trad e,' to be enjoyed, must be o early. A. man who has woiled . for thirty or forty years -will fuid lit tle enjoyment in idleness. , `ThOse men who.retire from busineis in the prime of life, go on to' "estates,"- or live for pleasure, get tick of their bargain speedily, and frequently ab solutely die because they bare nab lag to live for. The fact is, that work ing the ,normal condition of man The active use of our faculties, in some regular business, is a condition of happiness, and, when old age comes, of life itselC Thigh!, the Most sensible view of,this case, althotigh peculiar cases may require and justi fy a different course, now and theE But the general idea that as soon as a man has amas§ed su ffi cient wealth to live comfortably he had better re tire from active business, is likely to lead men to unhappiness. An old man who has nothing to do is seldom a happy man. Jrfamar..-In' Spain; when trait vlitildbetLi o nfarit':dieit, a - least is spread, and all the neighbors round come, not to condole with, but to congratulate the parents. "We re joice with you that you have a c ld in glory," they say ;.and the las nay, the first journey of . the sin ess babe is' a triumphant march, theJu neral a festival; the music glad. Oh ty the/mother weeps. In Greece, the . last journey follows quickly upon! death. The next day, at dawn, the train of vtlitelrobed priests and chor isters ;nay be seen,.:winding along the road 'toward )-thechurch. There, dressed as in life, and having the face uncovered', the dead lie - at rest before the altar , until the moment comes when they must be committed to the earth. It is in the church that the last farewelLis taken, that the last kisses a.re`given.' What ofthat ter rible.last journey in the cold North, where 'the dying Esquimaux is built tip in his' snow-house and left to draw his last breath alone'? Or of the M.- rican tribe, who bury the- hiqtelessly, sick before Ideath—hurry them out of the world altogether? They have been described as taking =affection ate leave Of their relatives and per= forming this burying with the. con-' sent of the person chiefly concerned. Habit is everything, and they are used to it ; only one fancies it must fall-rather hard upon each individual as it comes to'his own tutn.—Onee a Week. ' - E . t =II .. ci; NM ' :'. .:,.!".1.1.-. .-'- •4r., ' , i;L: I . }l.°u " h°2 f aneh * nk ''''''cral./ . e i ght days we sojourned, and it is 'of '', ki -4_ , , ..„. 0 , I / 1 40.! 104- :.. , -, that delightful time that I now pro pose writing. „; - i . Orvrell ' townshiP-' was originally ' ( . si i. , : ili s , it t:h.., ,ef ., o d i te h er. ,4: D . , Claittiedanider.what- is known as: the iv* . m„, ,,e nvanylw ithms o i x wp., - 4 Old Conneeticht Charter, and in "rf3- - tear ttadit on the Z. ,V.:.- Ifs.lß.,.,forqt. :Wien to which there was-for an . in definite period a' moat 'bitter fight. sPnriinil.tter-t 6 " . iitinakird county . Th e da y : was, et - o• e n dlah ,ts.2 i . The early settlers were all Connecti rain, but the arrattgementa -lieeFet t .-92 - 'cat nien, and have transmitted -to .I eewli d ete.o 4 oo awar.we spe d ;e n 'their posterity the' customs, habits' the lion- rail_ Nothing. 'of intermit, aid dialect of . the Nutmeg State attracted our attention.-:unfil ' air "Be you_ goin' to the - apple car thtuidering -charger, breathing . ..fire " Br ing titttile ceows," " Wall' ae°w, " !` Linnet to knew," "Dit tell I" and and - Freak° :from his .red nostrils, sereamedids wild meeting; from . o i n World of other odd idioms, met me. lit every •Peint and'amused me not at DelitsusitieneneobannattLeanlatitgbenh looking:to. the :Wari to 9nt.; e little. ,For hospitality and ,:_greet *mime discovered that , we, wernon 'hearts I have never met the eqals of It mattered not in what thelop of the-mountain 'overlooking ,that people. the .Valley .of the . Wyoming. , Oh, :direction I treyeled; there was the what a worhyof,,thonifht leans, . ii n to ,liarne, wonderfagenerositYeXhibited.: life - as the lig= ftre cd rin h a i n . that If I went into a man's private life Stretching away iiß"and grounds to shoot squirrels, as I fre down for miles, i s . one. of the m o s t quently did without first obtaining consent, • I foiind nowhere - notices magnificent scenes , that ever inspired poet or painter ,Large tracts • of warnin g off trcssPassem with a do g"' in-the-manger nnaannessois is largo landbut in a high. state , of:*Cultivation, ly practiced in C irbon County, separated from each other by patch- upon the other band, the owner, if es of woodlands, at this season of the, about, invariably approached me year wearing the tinge. 'and ‘ tint, of with.tr warm sympathy for my suc -More than the rainbows.: colors, tene t incited me into his house, in spread away*over . the valley; and troduced me to his family, (after down to the river, and back to the first introducing himself) and then mountains, and up their steep -sides advising as to where the sport' was to the very aummittewhere small best, volunteered - to pilot me to the groves of trees still itanding, cast place designated. Throughout My` themselves ageinit the sky, and look -entire visit 1 - found 'no „deserted. like castles and battlements of the olden time:- The giert rive rent al homesteads; no poverty born 'of indigence and . sloth ; no' seedy through the centre ,pf, the "beautif mendicants asking alms; no ; .. pale, -valley, adds largely to its lineally en emaciated wives, or forlorn children; traneuig loveliness, and completes a no rickety, tumbledown - nimmeries, picture before most splendidly corn- . or bestial drunkards with 'purple plete, Memories, too; of its ear)y settlement intrude themselves upon , nose,-and : reeling strgger; and. upon' inquiry learned that there was a full the mind, and paint in panoramic explanation the non-existence of, freshness upon - the heart the. red baptism of blood to which its virgin all these miseries, in the fact that there had not been a licensed tavern soil was subjected by'the barbarian seems or grog shop in that township for a red man. His wild whoo p fix period of twenty years. On that ac still to burthen. the - air, as f count content and thrift crowns every es won some spot where the devour .. - homestead, and the Almighty's gold, "".i flames licked up the homestead en sunshine streams in fan happy iof the hardy pioneer. And tis the ' hearts throughout all the borders of ''minds eye wanders. to the - far' _ reada . the land, where the invading demo n site of WyomingV 'and illag e, with desolating woo, has been kept the names of the slain in that fierce out by the stern endeavor of Chris and fearful massacre as to-day they tiau men and women. In 'that tem are insiribed.upon the monumental peranco community, extending over shaft that marks the spot, a new, but an entire township, there is no want sad and mournful interest . invests the wandering gaze. Advaaing civ- and no crime, and no scalding tears of sorrow over the falL-of loved sons, ilization has dotted the valley from end to end' with flourishing towns fond parents, or doting husbands, but each of the sturdy descendants and hamlets, until from the Valley of an illustrious stock looks out with R. R:: on theimountain top the tehote . _ hopeful heart for the advancing, fu- , seems one: • , • ' ture that is to crown - their gray hairs. Arriving at - Wilkee - -Barre; which with honor and. peace. in their chil li; the county seat of Luzern county, and is in a most prosperous condi- di en view from the hill near Mr tion,- we were almost inblined to Frisbie's house, and upon: his .splen leave the train • and sojourn. for a did property, is rapturously fine. •I I season bi the centre of the loveliness that from our first peineef observe- am of the calm judgment that it is equal in grandeur to that of the Wy-: tion recalled the familiar lines: ow ing Valley. to which it bears a re- 1 " sw,et fl i iida arrayed in living aree '--- And river or delight.- n ' . niarkable likeness. And :then those great, broad, - smooth, fifty-acre pas "screamedßut the bell..rang, and the whistle true lands, graceful ea. lawns, and its echoes over" the sur rich as thavirginaoil of the San-Set,rounding country before our Minds were fully made up, and so onward joining one another, ono after the other, for miles at a stretch—how we whirled. At Pittston we crossed can I ever fOrget them'? ''l traversed some imaginary lines, bounding or them in search of game while the defining imampary rights, and with out a change of caul, engine or con- pearly dew drops yet lingered in the lap of -Nature, and before the . early actor, we found ourselves -transfer sun had drank them uR front -tiny red from the L. V. H. R. to the Penn. I &N. Y. C. S, R. R. Co. Upon this blade of. grass. But in these 'early end of our route we were under a hours I foundlnit little game for the , reason that from watching the Day new management as to Superintend ent and Assistant, and while it would King rise from his cloud-curtained couchin the east; or the long Linea be a most ', difficult and impossible , of fog that struggled skyward from thing to improve upon the able corps the far off river, or ' the, catttle . anon lof gentlemen who have the L. V. R.. proper in charge, yet I must snyS a thousand hills, ,or the hundred 11,. , [that the supervision 'of I P. Cox, other objects of pleasurable emotion largely assisted by the born qualifi- I with d whi o ch that region is so blessed, ha n time for anything else. Andl cations of his Assistant, Mr. Thomas so by the hour I have sat -on soap© Desmond, of Towanda, is exceeded - by none and equalled by few. Deg- commanding eminence.-not en tingil re- is one of - those seldom met but feasting upon the splendid r personages who is a host within hiiii- past 'So bounteously- spread before self. While on the Lehigh Valley- me, until I was in the ,condition of Josh Billings' goat, of whomhe says: R. R. as a conductor, his very pres ence in the charge of the train, was All it cats seems to' go to appetite," a guarantee to passengers of safety, and I have wandered back - to the and his large experience has at last horse as -ravenous as a wolf, not -like deserved and won a promotion that the goat "'preferring to steal a • rot hae placed theright man in the right ten cabbage. leaf , out of a garbage _place. I was on 'his train' once at barrel, to coming honestly by a peck Xilendon when engine, bapgrge and of oats," but to partake - of the good' -passenger cars, all le ft ° the track cheer that ready hands and generous while in rapid motion, and ran for a hearts, had already prepared and kept in waiting. distance of several hundred yard on 'the 'rough cross-ties.- We were all 'Of my sports I can say but little dreadfully alarmed within the cola on account, of spice. Suffi w ce, I en for at that point on the road the all joyed everything hugely, and Was is perpendicular fe the' river and cti- fully sati s fied. The 'Squiremade a nal, but no one -sustained the slight- handsome shot at 'a squirrel, and est injury, for when at last the train after recovering from the recoil .of was stopped, we found every wheel the gale, ejaculated enthusiastically, in the entir e train again,on the track' " There goes his head, anyway," to' - and ready for an advance: Desmond which his brother. - quietly replied, explains this wonderful feat in rail- " Yes, and his body with it." Time totaling with a glow• of pride and aeon sped away, and the' end of- my pleasure, but I have never been able. visit was at hand, and I bade fare- The road front Pittston to Waver- well `with heartfelt regret -to - friends ly, N. Y., ,is substantially . built,. in and region; indulging the fond"hope, aplend repair and as smooth as a however, that in theanear future—l floor. It hugs the river for almost may renew those _splendidacquaint-. the entire distance, andis tireless .in . antes, and live over again those its introduction of its passengers , to thrice happy hours. ' new .scenes of beauty and interest. Wild ducks may be seen singly or in large flocks disporting in the ; water, or winging their flight through the air, and there they may continue to be seen for all time, if there is no other war made upon them than -that which I waged from the door of, the baggage car with my Henry rifle, for while I am esteemed a most ex cellent idiot under ordinary circum stances, I could effect nothing. from a train of cars flying along at the rate of thirty-five miles an hour. I had the fun of shooting frequently, 'however, and am glad now that I .killed nothing, for, with all the ur banity and kindness of our' gentle manly Conductor, Mr. -Phil Fagan, I do not belie - v - 6 he Would have stopped Ithe train to get my game. We reach ed Towanda and quartered at 'the Ward House, where our aceemmoda tions were first class, and the kind limas of the worthy ost so agreeable, that we were soon at heime and de lighted: In the morning Mr. Hum phrey placed a pair of horses and ' carnage at, our disposal, and in a short time 'we were a Sugar Creek; ~disyant about 3 =ilea, and elaughter - ;ing the aquirrels.: - On the evening of -that - day, Mr. Gaylord ' Frisbie, of Orwell, -one of Natpre's noblemen,, diet and conveyed _us by carriage twelve miles into the 'eastern part of Bradford county, to ..his S hespitable -home, titer& for a Period of about • -.,',.,- i 4 - , c-.-: - ;. - 1• : ':=;'., RENS • , . = •r. 02 per Annum- in Adv an ce. THE Banc.—BO as for the baby, whatever_ rudimentary arts he may develop, he does not show the slight est possible glimpse of the_ develop ment of n moral sense. Hid notions of sleep sin simply inordinate. :His, times for awakening are the small hours, when all conscientious babies, are asleep. He then displays a ca pacity for yelling which' therwise could hardly be expected from so.mi mite an insect.-At„ other times he reclines, sucking his thumb, in dim yearning after a pipe, or ddubling hiS fist in view of life's doiaing struggles. A baby is generally born looking ex tremely old. One_ almost begins, to speculate whether theiPlatonie theo ry of.reminiscence may not be true and whether; thus alleged baby may -not be some extremelyiilld_gentleman who has acted ratherAmdly in anoth er sphere of , existencei and has an other mundane chance given him. Babies look awfully old and wrinkled When they are horn. Sometimes they look . ninety, -but I have seen them look as'young as eight-and-forty. In. a few days they throw off the old ex istence, and unfairly embarked up on this real sea of human life, where Cloy will have rocks And shoals. and quicksands enough before they 'can come into Any sort of haven. And yet there is something maddening about a baby. Boswell is reported to have once said to Dr. Johnson IMI • : NUMBER 26. ""Sir r what would you , do if yOu were shut up in a tower with a baby. ?" I forget what theresponse was. "Sir, you area fool," I should Suppose, or something - equally laconie Or straight forward. - The suggestion is an aw ful, one, probably , animpossible one ; hut still the dread idea recurs: "What , would a man do, if he were shut up shine with a baby ?"—London Society. WOMAN'S DRESS--WAIST OR SHOULDERS? This is the point that I wish to int-, 15ress on my lady re.aders---tliat their clothing should be suspended from the shoulders rather than from their waist or hips, because the shoulders from their firm and position are bet- ter adapted as to points' of support, those portions of the shoulders on which braces . or suspenders rest be ing 'formed mainly of, bony parts, which have hardly any other office to perform than to furnish points of at for the muscles, and, for `support for the a:lair-and it is -Un necessary for the braces to.pre-sshea vily; on any part of the•chest , that is actively'. :. employed in l' t .respiration. That is why the shoulders should be used for the support of the clothing ; and.now we will show why the waist should not be used. On the freedom of the frmale from all undue abdomi- nal pressure, us Drell in t the single as in the:tarried strte", depend Snot ly on the health, but the very ems-. teuce, of tbcir 0ff51024 , --tair entiro. race. The 'organs affected b 3 such pressure are couiplicaied and delicate in their structure, and if confined or. prered upon in way become sub mt. to' those innu;verable " diseases of women " which Were but little known among the sex, until the intro ; duction of tight. corsets: and waist bands, and the dragging skirt, and which increase in frequency as fash ion increases the innovations and styles of drese, designed . merely •,[o' please the eye(Wit - generally failing in this cieti)• without :the least regard to the comfort or health of the,wear er. • Men,. who - would not be liable to suffer one-half the injury that wo men aiekliable to, rarely wear their elatliino suspended this way, the light weight of,the trousers even being sup ported' from , the•shonlders by braces. That the abdomends not as well fi ted as the shoulders for 4 4the support } of the clothing, should be evident to any one from their - different form and construction, the latter being bony and resisting in character, while- the parts about the .waist are soft and yielding'; the superior shape and vo sition of the shoulders is a great point intheir favor. Women forget—in deed many are never aware of that the abdominalniuscles have im portantotlices to perform in addition to the part they play in.respiration. This'3'sanothir indication of the great want of education in, .the physidal constitution of our ,in, which is so apparent in even those classes of society where no pains or expense is spared to make the pupil's education perfect; yet , the one thing needful" is neglected. applies to both sexes, and until the rising generation is taught something:of the construc tion and organization of their bodies, we cannot expect to hate a healthy race of men and.women. If a baud be tied tightlkiround a- muscle in any part of the body so as to prevent its natural contraction, the substance of the muscle will gradually waste . away, become smaller , in size, and; in time; lose all its power. This is just the way that the milscles of the chest and abdorrien' are affected - by tight lacing. ,Every physician is familiar, with the thin, attenuated appearance of these muscles in Women who have been in the habit of wearing tight corsets and bands. Women in the lower orders- of so ciety; despite ' their vicissitudes of hard labor, exposure, want and suffer- , - lug; as .a general thing suffer less in this way than their more favored sis ters of the upper orders, for the rea son,-I think, that the poor cannot afford the luxury of tight corsets, and their active duties preclude them wearing their skirts . and dresses a its tight as the fair ladies whose hands are never soiled by labor, and whose' shoulders never bore a burden. The*oustion of the relative merits of rthe shoulders and waist as points of Itilitport for the.clothihg has long been discussed, and many arguments have been advanced - in support of both modes, but 'the, preponderance of testimony is decidedly in favor of the shoulders. It is said that straps - offer the chest will impede respira tion ; and so they will, if improperly worn, but a little judginent will easi ly 'remedy this defect.. It is also kid they willjyestrict mnscnlar motion and freedom lof exercise of the arms ; but this will not he effectedone-half as readily by braces over the shad ders as by the tight-fitting waists of" dreases.lhat are worn now. No wo man can make her hands meet quick ly'over her head with =the arms ex tended at full length, with any cora fort, while tied up in ono of the fash ionable costumes of to-day ; and the objection that braces prevent respi ration itt-tiot valid, for they can be so arranged 'that they need not, interfere With the movement of the chest in any wa,y,—Good Health. _ Wuv JEwEssv.-*ItE BEMATFUL.— Chatearibriand gives a fanciful but agreeable reason for the fact that the Jewish women are so much hand somer than the Men of. their nation. Ho says Jeivesses have escaped . the .curse4W r hich alighted on their fathers, husbands and sons. Not a Jewess was to be seen among the crowd of papsts and rabble who insulted, the Sou of God, scourged Him, cro wned Him with thorns, and subjected Him to the infamy and the: agony of the cross. The women of Jndea believed in the . Savior, and assisted and sooth ed afllicfion. A woman of Beth any poured on His bead 'precious ointment, which she kept in a vase of alabastei. ° The sinner anointed His feet with perfumed oil, and_ wip ed-them with her hair. Christ, on `His part, extended mercy_ to , the Jew esses. Ho raised from the dead' the - widow of Nein and Maitha's broth er, Lazaruk. He cured Simon's meth . er-in-law, and the woman who touch ed:the hem of His garment. To the Samaritan woman he was a spring of Ovate i "Limi4• if etnntfeellhona . te judge. the woman* adultery, The daughters of Jerusalem wept over Him, and the holy women: _ • pied Him to WWl , ' brougbt,Si va balsn and spices, and, weepier, eougA l t, Him in the - sepulchre "'Woman, 'why`Weepetit' thou? . His first' ep; pearance,after the resirrection was toillsty Magdalene. He said to het, " Mary.' , - At the sound of hfil sofcq Mary Nag: dame's eyes were opened acid she answered " Master." The reflection i)f some beautiful ray must have rested on the brow of the dew- .. T • ORION' OP THE BAXZEI OP STATE& Maine-was so called as early . as 1623 from Maine in France, of which Henrietta Maria, T Queen ofglaid, Was at that time proprietor.- 1 • New Hampshire was the name giv en to the territory conveyed l i ri a - s te Plymouth Company to Capt. by, patent of Nov. 7,1729, with refer ence to patentee, who was Gov ernor of Portsmouth, in 'Hampshire, Eng,land. . . Vermont was so called by the in habitants,in their declaration of in dependence;• January 1777, from the , . French -yen! mon (the green 'no u n-, tains.) „ faxsPehnsetts was so Called' from - Maslachusetts Bay, and that from 'the Massachusetts-tribe of Indians, - in theiteighborhood of Boston. T _ he tribe is thought to have derived its. name from the Blue Milton. •• " I have learned," said :Roger iams, " that the Massachusetts were so called froni the Blue Hills." - Rhode "Island was so called in 1664 in reference to the isknd::of Rhodes, in the Mecliteranean. Connecticut was so called from , the . Indian name of the principal river. \ Coannectient is Mosheokartnew word, signifying long river. ' New York was so called in 1664 in reference to the Duke - of 'York and Albany, to whom the territory - Was given b the Kizqcof England. New Jersey was so called in 1664, frOm the island Hof Jersey, on the . • east of rance, the- residence of -the family of SO, George Carterel, to whom the territory was granted: Pennsylvania was so called in 1661 after William- Penn'a daughter, Syl- • ,vania.4 Delaware was -so called in 1603 from Delaware Bay, on which it lies; eta which received its name -from - Lord Delaware, who Was killed by the Indians in this bay. Maryland was so called in honor • of Henrietta Maria, Queen of Charles I, in his - patent 'to Lord Baltimore, June 30, 1632. - • Virginia was so calledt i in- 1584, . after Elizabeth, the Virgin.nreen of England. Carolina was so called, by the French in 1594, in _honor ' of King Charles•of France.' • Reorgeoras so called in 1.632, in• honor of King . George 11. 'Alabama was so called in 1814, from its principal river, it being an Irilin name, signifying "here' we ' rest." 11ississippewas so called in 1800, from its western boundary. Mississ ippi is said to, denote the whole river, 1.. c., Jiver formed by the union of many. - - Indiana was so called in 1806 from the American Indians. Ohio was so called in .1802 from the river whith forms -its, southern 'Axpunattry. Missouri was so called in 1821, - from its principal river. Michigan was SQ called in 1812 'from the lake On its border. - • Arkansas was so called in 1813, - from its principal river. - Florida was so called by Juan Ponce de Leon, 1582; because it was discovered on Easter Sunday, in Spanish Pascua Florida. Boys AND Suons.—The French pee- pie carry the-practice of smoking .to a degree of perfection which_ c,onsti tutes it ahnost a fine art. The men ' 'smoke, the women smoke, and the boys smoke _whether the girls and babies smoke or not we do not know, but they have so few - of/them that , it does not perhaps make much differ ence whether they do or not. The effect of smoking; on boys, is said by inediearwriter, who has been investigating the subject, to be most favorablelo;the development, not of a manly, noble, healthy character, but of pallor, anemia, palpitation of the heart, a diminution of the . nor mal number of red globules, dyspep sia, wantof intelligence, and a liking more or less decided for strong drink. This information must bo 'decidedly gratifying to tho , satNins of science who have so often proved tobaCco to 'to so-wholesome a narcotic.. Added to formercfidence, it will - make an =argument so strong that. even : that enthusiast laborer against its axe; George Trask, will ,perhaps see the folly of doing any more, and give up his work of distribnling tracts broad tast .to induce the boys - to let tobae -co alone. 01 course, they will not let it alone. Its effect on French boys is : incontestable. What better evi dence do they want • that they can Use it? And then again, this same authority has noticed a very Strong objection to breaking off. - He says, - I 'Those .who - abandon the prastice before any lesions are pro duced perfectly recover their health." This- is unfortunate. Why should boys wish-to be so unlike other peo ple as to be .he'_althy? If they are sickly they ean c be petted and pam pered, escape werk., and die, and go out of this naughty world early. But serionsly, Why do boys ever smoke? Because the example is set them by _their elders. They are theimost per fect imitators in the world. They like to try their hand at whatever they see others doing. Set them a good example' and they will follow it. Set them a bad One and they will fol low that, too. 2 A. RIVER IN TILE OCEAN.—There is a,_ river in the OCean. In the severest: drouths it never fails, and in the mightiest floods it never overflows. Its banks and its bottoms are of cold water, while its current is warm. The Gulf of Mexico is its - fountain, and its month is the Arctic Sias. It is the Gulf Stream.: There is in the world no other so majestic flow of water. Its,,current is More ` rapid' than the Miisissippi or the Amazon, and volume more than a thousand times greater. Its waters as far out . as Carolina coasts, are of an indigo blue.l They are so distinctly mark e(l, that the line of-junction with - the . comialan ,ka water may be, traced by the' eye. Often, one-half of the vessel maybe perceived floating in the Gulf Stream water, while the oth er half is in the common water of the sea, so sharp is 91Er line and the want of affipitY'-between these waters; and 'such too, the reluctance, so to speak,' on the part of- those of, the: Gulf , Stream, to mingle with the waters of the sea. MI