TERMS i11?'1411113LICATION. Tun itsiorourf liirciasza la published eriS7 srmlay 711ctilisg by; 8. W...ALTOID at Two per annum. in advanes: fir Advertising tq , all Gaon irscluidre of subacrtp• 11 to the paper: NOTiCrIf inserted st nit= CMS per ine or Ant insertion, and FIVT; =lll per Has gar ti t‘, ,, quent insertions. , _ . I.OcAL :NOTICES, sa*to i styla IS refitting mistier, rs-rx,or.vre a line. ApvEßTlSMlMafiiidll be inserted somata following .nble. et rstes • S I Isv 1 411 :-.1 2732 I 4 111 lem 1177.; I $1.50j s.OOl 6,.00 j 6.00 1 10.00 15 2.00 1 !s.OO t a.OO 110.00 115.00 190.U0 ME 3 0 , Lt; hes 3.00 tuo ii•co 1 1E45 I 25.00 I 3590 5.00 112.00 18.00 7200100.00 145.00 20.00 10.00 f 0.00 I U.OO I ?&0O 10,00 enlutun 1 40,001 80.00 I 80.00 1 $lOOl- $l5O Administrator's and Executor's Notioes. $2 ; Audi r.g Notices. $2 60 : llasiness Cards, five lines, (per : „, e ; $5. additional lines $1 midi= V. arly atiVtirtiserS are entitled to quarterty charige4 advertisements must be paid forasadrance, -111. solutions of Associations ; Corninanicatimil -f :ilnded nr individual interest, and notices of bLsr s .aUd Deaths, exceedisigtve lines, are charged ;vs . t . r.NT.:Ter 11416. Tl,,,ltneor. - rnn having a larger circulation than - ill pipers in the °nutty comlidnod, roans it the best ~,ertiina medium in Northern Pennsylvania. )r. PVINTING of every kind. in Plain and Pansy rs, done with neatness anddispatch. Handbills, lards. Buniableta,Billheads, Etelternents, he. , v ery 'variety and; style. printed at the shortest ItEronron - Ofilee is well supplied with r Trepgelt, a good assortment of new typo. and, rything in the Printing line can- be cremated in ~,ost artistic inan*r and at the lowed rates. T 1:11d11: INVARIABLY,CASH. • • ME BUSELTESS CARDS. ". 1 ' Th "GLEY, Aud tibver, home, Pa. All calls promptly attend p.l tA. i M1LY9,1870 BLACK; General Fire, Life I\ n AN-Nerda g IrisuranneA ent. bin r..,47{1,1C; 1-jotel, nyalusialt, P. .jn14,"146. WALL JCE KEE'VER, • jjeirSE: ! SIGS 'A ND FRESCO - PA/STEW, T0w:613. Sept. 15..18.70-yr: yrNcEyr,plsup,AxcE formerlyoccupied by Mercer • • on door santh of Ward How. maylo-'7O W. I. yuccrem. ,D .FOWLER, REAL ESTATE • Pi;ALr.r.. I.:n. 160 Waildnnton Street, , It LaSalle and Wells !Streets, 'Chicago, Illinois. l'state parehased and sold. Incestmenta made t , r)11 - Loaned.. - May 10;70. MA.KING, RATTERN crTTING AND • FITING h ail faalifonsble ,n short notlrti. 'IIOOMS Iltereur's New Main•st., over Porter k Rirb*'s Drug Store. , . MRS. R. E. GAMVIN. wanla. Pa.. Not - 1113. 1870. .• LL 'A31 11 1 ...": " 5 -OI CHE ‘. 8, . 13 c "I S, IMAMS, .gitPi: !nide iri-the best wanner and late le, ,01„.;Wara Ibmse 'Barber Shop. Tertas reasdnable. 'l' J. 3169. F‘NCIS. E. POST,' PATER, Thwanda. Pa.. with Geri :rears etperienev.tecon. ,11,1 ViVO tak begt ratisfaction in Painting. Stainfzig„ ralkring, ke. ,Paiticalar ztteirtio4 raid to Sobbing in. the - DUYFEE,BLACKS3I,I f Thr,. 3 N' iN1101.70: 4 :: PA., pays particular attetit3ott to • .71 r.ig• - ice, Wagons. Sleighs, Aze. Tire sot and. Oont• On short notice. Work and chimes .atisfaethry. 12,15,0, I MOS PEN + TrEPACK.EII, HAS, established himself in thii TAILOIUNG i.t • iNES.S. Shop over 'Rockwell's Store. Work of ry s,siption done in the latest styles. vaii•la, April 21, 1;970.—tf F- R -YciVILLE 'WOOLF,' N . _ would renice.ifully announce to t , that he keeps ennstautly on land Woolen : •':g. nannols, Yarns. and all kinds at nr;rl van.. 11,11 Gil 15: 13110A1)LEY„ " Proprietor. OH YES ! OH TES !-A.UPTION I t A. rt. 310 F., Limlzed Attetioncei •.'l o.lts promptly attended to and satisfaction vr - address, A. R. Mon, Mortroeton, ePurity, Pa. 0'0.26, 69. Clf IFFORD'S NATIONAL PAIN nod Lift. Oil,. are thh .G at Family find, a welcome in every' home as a ..•r, Iteruedy for more. of the common ills of other :medicine in the market. Sold I •! ,:ere in inedioe generally. Manufactured ~.. T. 4 :11T0111). Chicago: 111., and 143 °Main st., I..LSVII.:LE. N.l. March 10,'70-5* S. R SS L • . GMaTAL I. l L'iL'l?4.4\rCE AGENCY, MN= 0()D TEMPLIRS 1113TIIkL .k X fit:Association. ftto to secure st death $2,000 slo' 00 : sal .1s•:-.9‘5meut ' • 2 00 f: Assegsmont, age from 15 to 65 1 10 • " • 26 to 45' 1 GO " " 46 to GO E• 210 G. WYetudeig. I I geut for Ilradtird county. LOCai ´ Sept. W,'7o. OEM THE CONTINENTAL LIFE. IN aurapro Company of . Hartford. Conti. Pay. ur nr. application for Wilt:trance to be made at Di- STEvEN's office, Main at, Towanda. • WILLIAM lIRACAMT, General Agent 1. 1:t.'70.-lpfm* 7 1 -11 4ACKSMITH.ING I • * . c.nrnricted my new brick shop. near my r. -...1. , nre -on Main-street, I arooanwpreparpd to do ..-k in all its branches. Particular witentibn taiid fil'unic and edgo tools.- fraying spent many Irs iirthia community, in this businods, I trust b a sufficent guarantee of my receiving, a liber slawount of thespublic Vitronage. - . lIENRY mFamitcncE. Tovrantla, Nov. 3, 18C0.2-tf, V ATF:Nrira. J. , N. DEXTER, - Solicitor of / . 3 fi(", it,t, 1:110,13) STBEET, wAvEnt, Y Y. .. - I . r , •pares drawings, specifications and all panert n,•:.•,1 in making and properly conducting App li c .11,S for PATRNIS in the UNITED STATV.S. Sind Fon cuaricrEs oft trissoccEsormr. - A.Nn N l 3-ATTORNI:Irs FY.A.TO PAT vicar., rdar...NT 1- 9 •.I.•:tsr;, • . I).vi - TON. , D. 11.011 Dealers In OOL, HIDES, -PELTS, ,CALF-' SKINS, TES, &C., ti th ,-111 .'Ibet cash price Is path at all times. 11 M. IZ.Lieutlold's Store, Maln.st., 1 . y um • .14,';0 TOWANDA PA ( . 1 STEVENS, COUNTY °SITR • o ;:ey..n, , Camptown, Bradfsrd Co.. Pa. Thank : ciurloycrs for best patr onage, world • • • in'. mu the citizens of Bradford County Pre:iared to do any work in bisline of blast :. - clay, he 'clitraPted to him. - Those having 1 l.cca Ml-1111t1 110 Weil to linve,their proberty r-urr,yed l:vfore allonin.a themselves to their neighbors. • All work warrant the nature of the case will per ,' anpatentrd lands attended to .as soon as az, 01,i , O. N. STEVENS. . rjTHE UNDERSICANED,- HAVE V a Itzcallnth llor.ar fn Towandi, ntider the ey arr. yuierareb to Aram' Bins Of Esibange, and New York, Philadelphia, and all 1 rt United States; as also England, Ger i, v. :el t• France. To loan ra.oney, receive deposits, r• %1 t•• .1 , a ;.:.; nem: Banking business. N1.1,0n was one'pf the late arm of Laporte, 3 r z: Co, of Towanda. Pa., and his knowledge of area r I 13m1ford and adjoining counties. o'..l . l.avnuz bven iu the tanking. busines.o for about 11 years.' tual..' this houss desirable one throngl? thak, G. T. 'MASON', e1 -t. 1, Isex, • • ' A.. ( - 1; MASON. BMA PYO tD 001giTY.; LTAL ESTATE AGniCY. 11. McKILIN, RIAL STiTt . • F.1..."=.2, Mill PrOrertiCS, CRY: aid Town . , 1+ baring rroperty for Palo will find it to their leaving a description of iho same. with at this oireitcy, as parties aria constantly for farms, &c, U. /I. ,lidctE.ol, neal Estatts'Uctit i , vcitrazioa's ttank,.Tomuldi. E . ),Nri RM ! . 4 : ;I' (70(5D LOIV PIIICESI IlosztOETON,r& TRACY •& HOLLOW, I:,:iers in Grixieries and Provisions, Drugil lieroisone Oil. Lonips, -Chimney", 5...7 n r studs. paints, One, Varnish. Yankee No ogars and Snuff. Pure Wines and • et: the hest quality, for medicinal purposes • All Goothi poll at the very !aired prima. Pre. ear fully coma ptinded at ail Amin of the 4L.1 eight . (Jive us a'call. ' . s. 4 G.9-ITRACY ItOLLON 1. !'r Pa., Jttue . - - riaPAP PA,SSAGF. FROM OR TO npaND OIVENGLAND. uNr. or FTTAVORTiII TROM OIC TO Qa:MIzrrOWN oftel.lcl3lXoo4. kt Ilion's ell Black Star Lino" of Ur. o l'acifets. Nailing every week. ' Line . of Pariwto from - or to London, 41i . ,:,1 , 410E a motel. ' r: , 7w2taprcN to Eoglanlklrrland and Scotland par. of,inawl. • pattienlars, apply to William & Union, Br9allTa,r, New York, ter k CO., \Bankers. Towanda, Pa. •t• 11.00 D MOLASSES FOR 50 VI cents per gallon at FOX & MERCUM 1416, iO. a S. W. .A.Lvon.zo, Potablimausr. VOLUME XXXI. JAMES . WOOD, Arloam Agin Cousamum 1.4 w. Towanda. Pa. s al . t . .46!a.;7,k WIIaFOYLE, ATIORNEY AT W. Veranda. PC. Moe Id% Mamas Smith, eolith side Xeroxes Block. Aged 14.10 CIEORGE- D. MONTANTE, AT roam AZ LAW. Ofte-00eller Mill sad Me Streets, Malts Deft Slam B. KELLY, DENTIST. 0 v • los over Nnettiama & Meek% Tama* Ps. May 211. , D an I. . R. IL WESTOkT, DENTD3T.- Chemi Oare in Parton% Bieck, over Gore's J Dreg sea cal More. LP. VtiTMINUiN. • . AITOBNILT TOWANDA. South ibis of Netuttes New Block. stairs. April 21. 10-43. 1:11" B. MOXEAN , ATTOItifET .1.1.• row Oroxsamtrot Lax. Toirsols.Ps. PEN ocular stAeution paid to bubutoo-!a erpbsibe Court. .t 111720.4111. Virs. CARNOCHAN,- • Anon vim me ItitWCDOIT L at Atterasy ford Mindy) Troy,Pa. ‘aa- made saigm* regated. ' 6104 T - I t 0. DRWITT, Attorneys-a:- el *Lair. Towanda. Pa.. baring fanned a co-part nership. tender their protesidanat services to the public. Special attention Wen to MST DEPART MEW o f th e business , at the count/ seat or lelse where. ..7L0311 DaWITT. ,Thf" r =ATM DzWITT: Tow:tient, Pa., Dec. 12. 1870. A - ARMSTRONG, Paihicmable .LIL • Berber, sow the Elwell Haase, Taiwan; Ps. Pnblte pstrotiege solleited. . • ileel4;7o TOTER N. CALIFF, ATTORNEY LT Law, Toivanda, Pa. Nstlaidae sttemtkra giv en to Orphan' Court business.Conserchwt and Collection& • sir Office in Wood's ism oar. south of The Pint National Bank, up stairs. Feb. 2. 1871. nt H. WARNER, Physidan And - NJ* Surgeon , LenaTirTine. Bradford Co.. Ps. All mils promptly attended to. • Me first door smith okLellaysvllle House. wept. 15, 1870.4-yr t l , :j U. BEACH,: M. 'D., Physician , ' • am: Surgeon. Towanda, Pa. Particular &Um on paid to all chronic Thames, and Diseases of Females. Oflicp at his resident* on Weston 'street. east of Dr.k. Overton's. • A0v.11.C9. CiVE.RTON ELSBREa ut Arron- ISET's AT /AV, Terwands.'..l%., entered - into copartnership, o ff er their' protaulenal services to the public. Special attention given to badness in the Orphan's and Begiapses Courts sgll4lo crezarroar. Wen= 1/fEltallt & DAVIES ATTOR, 'AAA- WETH AT LAW. Towanda. 7%. Tbnatilardved having associated themselves together , in the practice of Lam; offer their professional services to the bib. ULYSSES MEII.CIIB. IP. T. DANTE& March 9.1870.. O A. B. M. .)11'61 LAW Main street, opposite the Court Etcsase:Townida, Pa. Oct. 27.'70 B. MOODY, Offers Ws professional services to the people of Wy singing and vicinity. cc and residence at A. J. Lloyd's'. Church . . Ang.lo.lo JOHN' W. 11:01; ATTORNEY AT Law, Towanda, Bradford Co., Pa. • GM:IUL INSURANCE AGENT. Particular attention paid to Collectionapd Orphans' Court business. Office—Marcur's New Block. north side Pablicliquare. apr. 1. IL DIISEIiBERRY, would an., nounce that incompliance with the...request of his numerous...friends, he is now prepared to admin ister liitreue Collide, or Laughing Gas, for the pain lees extraction nf teeth. Lerteyeville. May 3, 1870.—17 ra. A. KEENEY, COUNTY Sl3- VERUTMDENT, Towanda, Pa, 'OfWe with B. M. Peck, second door below the Ward Rona. Will be at the officethe last Saturday of each month and at all other times when not coded away Shbturt ness connected with the Superitendency: All letters should hereafter be addrrased as share. dee.1,70 MOTOR 0. LEWIS,.: GRADUz _,.., ate of the College of "Plwai and Surgoons." Hew York dll . Class 18484. Ores exclusive attention to the practice of his profession: °fate and realdessok en the eastern slope of primal adiondnit Henri acrwb'is. pinta. 19. D. .D. 'SMITH, Penhst, has JLI parcimed O. H. Wietra property, bet Ween Mercur•s Block and the Myren House. where he has located his office. Teeth extracted without pain by nee of aea. • Towanda, Oct. 20; 1070.—yr. . GREENWOOD COTTAGE.—This well-known house, haying recently been refit: ted and supplied with new furniture, will be found • pleasant retreat for pleasure, seekers. Board by th• week or month on reasonable Ohms. E. "W. NELL. Prop'r. Cirecnwbod. April 20, .1870.—tt WARD HOUSE, TOWANDA, PA. On Main Street, near the C6llll. Horse. • C. T. =TX Proprietor. Oct 8; 1868. • trEIEPER.A.NO.f. HOTEL 1-Sittik _L ted the north-west conger of Main and Elisa beth sterts, opposite Bryant's*Carristre Factory. . Jurymen and others attending' court will especi ally find it to their . advantage to pstroldse the Tem perance, HoteL . 11, HBOri, Propr. Towanda ; Jan„ 12,19;0,_17. 1 HER, r DINING- ROOMS „ oNNEcnox sirin THE BAKERY, Near the Court House. • We are prepared to feed•the hungry at all times of the day and evening. oy4tera and Ice Cream to their 130980119. March SO. 1870.. ' D. W. SCOTT & CO. VLWE.LL HOUSE, TOWANTDA, :Tom; 0. wnsas Baying leased this House, La now ready to accOrrimo• date the travelling public.. No pains nor expense will be spared.to give aatinfactiem te those who may give' him a eall. .2W.North aide of the public Ivan, east of .2der• enr's new block. • :pp s Is FIELD CRF,Eii .3.. t TEL. • PETER Loan Having purchased and thoroughly refitted this old .and well-known stand, formerly kept by Sheriff °W ax, at the month of Rummer field Creek, is mar to give good accommodations and satisfactory treatment to all who may favor him with a calf. Dec. 23, 1368—tf. iAfEA.NS HOUSE, TOWAN PA, ll PA..' • • ' COIL StAMI MCP DrIDOL tirt.ELTIL The Horses, Ilartiesi. de. or ail guests of this house. insured against lose by rireorittiont any e 2. tra charge. A superior cinaliV.; of Old English Timis 'Ale, jut received. • T. B. JOHDAN, Towanda, Jan. 24.11. AMERICAN HOTEL, This Betel having been leased u 7 the inbeerfber, has been repainted, /*mend. and ref urnlahed throughout, with new nttnre, Bedding. be. Me Table will be supplied with the best the market at. foils. and the Bar with choicest brands of Liquors. This hones now offers the comforts of a home at moceramm raress a • Jtirmeck and others attending Court, will And this hones a cheap and comfortabie place to atop. Good stabling attached. sug,lo,lo ' NEW PLANING KELL 1 ALAT . CULNIO - , 1ty.44311M6,.1101:1LD13013, - fee., At Ina old stand of IL It. Ingham's 'Kooks netts" mul Sawmill, in• A . HEAVY SEC ROLL PLANZG AND MATCHING in cbazxs at an itrperienced *satanic attiLbutbie*. the public ennY,expeca a • • Fromtbe recent enlargement ofildrester poser . . work can be dons at an semsosts Ott* per and soon as seat in. In connection irk* Ike eirrenUl WO an able to tbantsb bilts at sawed lumber to seder. • term= BOBWOBSIL . Can plows. Iday 2& ' • - NOTICE TO CARPENTERV s undersigned have made urtingemes stetS 10 0 to carpeater's CHESTS 011' TOOLS. theta spruttursa Inn KAT as. &siting visa tantrum:a ire respectfully Invited to&tieg • CAMP it Asa. Insunutee Apts.. Toirlisits. Pa. DRIED FRUIT OF -ALL LIIDJI. MI paezzomi CA3Z PHYSICIAN AA') SIINCIEON, Hotels. BUDGE STBECT, TOWANDA. PA. 11. G. GOPF,Propriefor. CIMPTOWN, rzNrA. F :►.Lyt~~~a GOOD JOB EVERT 1311EZ, riunrs. • I was 14 the 3lasquarade last night. I flayed the Ippeeette eansommata, I =w4and voted and fanned the dying 1 j oy toil heart with all raymental Might, till it shoes st Usti ip sed balms Through my eyes, and eat in Motion ail the Wheels of fancy, in erpreambe.gleares, Upon my face. AM , some poor fools Ire pleased, And gay; and laughed, and their gnat bit heart grew Hot to me haw bright I was, and thoaglit Beat in sympathy andl unison with Ye; when I was anima among them, And stood beak myself, and laughed A oold, eta hough to see the poor Loots bMill - and My own self laugh'With them. Oa t what a J Great aching void there was withhinky eoul„ an. }PIA meek nesPtlq A lore flolrer owe • Bad Med 11 vIR Ha sweet petfactie dhitmo, And ItaidabelpeoAdulnat fair Wad sod Howl-the - H4ebe meter. Bat it watded No t, and the mining spirit ate, devoured Da own perfume sad sweetaeaa; ' bitter Farce! I stood : There paned' the Eh& with , out his Courtly bearing and idimannam; the Foal Close oo hii heels : the Empress; and beside Her Fair Folty, with her tinging, lang►tngbells; The Comfy Beauty, and the Eases Dame; Old women and lair maids ; the HighlandLese ; The Hainan Girl ; the Tyrolean; the • Daughter of the Regiment ; Dark Night; and Others, dozens, beauties various, whirled And twirled throughout' the dance: • And I whirled too, To see 111 might not,perchance, with! some Dizzy maze or dim forgo:lathes. into My soul, and 'feed my life with sham instead Of beauty. We danced and chided fill aar ,Did aeera to Area little And Tenet to aches. How dull and hes" cold and sad, lam to.clay I How I tamed npoa my rillow in the twilight of this morning, And battled with a misty dream. Wha Aching in my bieut ,What is this want! Feel? What do I search fir? Why rings that dreadest, Saddest, most severe "It might have been!" through An 4 throughout my soul? • • Oh, here is myst'ry I Solre,it ye ems Ponder it ye sails! • Tell me, oh my heart 1 and let me clasiyou Closer, and rocking, kiss the triunded place, And soothe and heal you stdrertag, u a Mother does her darling This fleshly boat' be in sympathy Witt my Olin heart ? Must IL still be bound with Chains, and none to serer, to a foul and Ghastly, cold mortality 1 . fix this Anti \ - Dead to all the quivering cries of anguish That well up, dumb, fromlhe depths?' Is there no Tongue tO send a clarion elver tone From each gaping wound? g one to word a - thought Intelligible to it? • Oh, pitying " Christ! . touch thou the rirste and Endow , the Banda that bind me here, and let me fly up, Up the blue, out through the. golden western Gates, that seem to opo right into heaven I " . Like a dame, let me fly upward and let' Me bring the empty veiled of my soul Beneath the eternal crystal Onion at Thine unbOunded love, till I am filled with Bliss and that healthful Joy-refreshment, Frith Which sweet welcome Thou dost receive amen Bowed down before Thou, salaams' tre end con trite! reinvurry 9. tcli~uos~~,..~ (Per the Itzposno.l TExplowtos. Desn Eamon; "Life is a sea how fair its face, how smooth its dimpling inters pace," when man follows the • precepts of God's holy teachings, and walks not in the ways of the ungod ly; but " Life is a warfare, beset with tangling thorns and treacherous' net," when . man tramples upon, Alm just laws Of our Great T eacher — the just • " I Am." 4 • . •It has beeein any mind for - a long time to send you a communication setting fortli the evils of intemper ance in our midst, bat I have delay ed for fear of wounding some one's feelings indirectly connected witlithe hellish traffic who otherwise would be respectable. I have waited, too, hoping that the proper authorities might take legal steps . to check the miseries heaped n tis by ourheart less rumsellers.. " en church mem bers—and deacons at that—rent their store-rooms to liquor dialers and sa= loon-keepers, and sign petitions for landlords and all manner of ruin venders to, carry on their .nefarious business, is it not high time to raise our voices and utmost efforts in op position ? lam glad that the tem perance Cause is prospering as well asit ir is in my native county and S There is a teMperancedparty here, , but its efforts are very feeble. There are ne active teinperance • organizer tioni novi at work in our village. Almost every day we are startled with news - of a fearful character, viz: drunken men fighting in our 'streets, in sakions, and in fact everywhere. Onlylast weeks man was severely injured,- having been stabbed while in a public broil. Thelnife entered in front of his ear, and cut its way down the face and across the t, =cm the jtrdar He barely esca with lus life. 'On the following s y a man of genius, and a' firsteclata mechanic, became intoxicated and wandered some three miles into the country, and was found dead, having frozen to death. Right on the heel of this, another melan choly death occurred from rum on C street. Our station houses and jails all over the land are full of con victs that would not be there if it were not for rum.: There are fifteen places here where the destroying lied is . dispensed. Many of them claim to be respects bleu Some men a r e clothed in Chris tian who that say so; but who can be so foolish, that have their hearts in the rifght place, as to even hint that selling rum is in any way rear pedals "Cursed is be who rt. kth the cup to his neighbor's bps.* The Almighty does not look upon the dispenser of liquid poison with ,the least allowanCe. It is s great sin to deal out to blether man a drink that most certainly , dethrones his rea son. A town law Ours should not have a lionised tavern or saloon. We cannot, well afford the temptation that now assaßs is on every hand. Bumsellers are lificmwThg bold new s-days. They sell to ininors, - and the SubbrAh day, and even to women. ZEE All times of night - baochinalian revel axe going en in secret Owe: Oar noblest eimUM. are diagraced with drunken -Kink not here alone but all over our country . . Outheau tad cemetat7 speak* in silent . ye ~ powerful language against nebracy. If the dead . Todd come. forth. they *mid proclaim hi thunder tones, 'that to drink hi certain ruin to both hecly and soul.; - • • . r• .- .1 We need not ask go dead in '' their =hat the co ow of in in strong drink bring 1 about, though, for. the hving, bloatedheings in our very streets too Plainittelliut Weeping widows and desti tute or .hips proclaim it on . every; hand. *l.:pwrecked merchants and broken dowi=kmal men speak it in an tuun li a manner. .. ; Nothing but strikin g the ;hydra headed monster a fatal blow !at ,the fountaioliesd- by proper legialseitan, wlil ever. sOve our blessed Una frOm ultimate destruetion. The' tempest- . Lion must be removed, else our rath ere and our,sons will go down, to.pre mature graves "unwept and tuismig." u Look not upcai the wine when it giveth his color /nibs cup, for at last it biteth like a . serpent, and stingeth like an adder. " - • . 1 : • There are those in our midst who whimper and whine about the, evils of intemperance among - thelves, : and adinit that it le wrong for peo ple to get - drunk, end at the same time they are patrons of saloOns and hotels nearly every day of their lives, They say men are. fools to get drunk, but moderate clrininers are quite tolerable.. I know' man who formerlyirept wine on his 'dinner-ta ble, and drank at hotels occasionally, ' who on several• occasions severely ptiniahed his 80118 in a brutal . man ner for getting drunk The neigh bors often interfered to prevent the father beating his children to death 1 for the v.erylon which he had' en . . wittingly - taught them to indulge in. This man has Taw times - "nt his two sons up, after they had been on A spree, in the barn, and kept them there for two or three days with noth ing to eat and drink but breed , and -water, while he still drank his wine. •I have no doubt there are other. par--. allel cases everywhere. Who -is ‘to blame fer drunken sonsinaueh casali - It is very plain to be seen.: ,/f fath ers and mothers would eiercise a lit tle more judgment and set better ex amples before their children, lefsi misery would be brought into their h ouseholds. . -..., i l , • The stepping-stone , in many in dances to the use of alcoholic stiqa-. lantkis the use of tobacco. acid opium. I trust the reader will bear with me a short time Millie I enumerate a few of . the evils of chewing and smoking, and opium ' eating: 'There are little boys in every Own in the United,States that kayo le'arned to use tobacco, not because they took to it naturally,. but because they se* father and mother chew anki smoke. The result-has been that we have be. 'come a nation of the. most nervous 'people on the face of the globe. Nico tin, the alkaloid of tobacco; s a dead ly. poison; and has a powerfully iiii ja nous effect upon the brain and . ner vous system. It retards the physi cal'and moral , developinent of . our children, and tends to , robl them of those finer ineril an.treligiotui quali ties which adorn the temperate'man. To ltseeo softens the -muscles i and Nines, poisons the blood, eatumeor.-in- Sanity in- ts varicnislorms :produces 'cancer of the lips, destreyst„he gams, thris ruining the teeth; also paralysis of the great nerve that supplies the heart, lungs and stomach, indiges tion, catarrh, ast&ea, sternatitis, or sore month, palsy, St. ; Vitus danie, kn., kc. It engenders an ippetite for strong - drink, and withal is an 'ex tremely filthy habit. •, • . Though tobacco. is used by many good men, yet it is demoislizing in its effects and should not he tolerated. The use of. it is a leading evil. - • Opium is extensively used by thou lands, and is also a twin sister to 13 ± rum and the vile weed. • The plea sant exhilaration produ by, :this • drug soon passes away, a n tho senses arelocked in an imnat slumber. Awakening from this sleep, the pain and depression experienced sends the opium-eater again to his itecustomed poison. - Insidiously the poison works upon the system, the habit becomes confirmed, and , life his droned and slept away. Often the habit is start edby the prescriptions of the physi cians, and both they and their pa- 1 tients should guard against the den- ger.. The warning presented by thou sands. of cases in our own country, is hardly less fearfid than that of the great opium-eating countries of chi na. end. Turkey.- I am !acquainted with many who aretaking one bottle ' of morphine per week, and Not been informed by a druggist in this place that he sells some customers two bot tles per week. There are many men and women in this vicinity that-take from one to two ounces of opium every seven days. . - Ihave made inquiry at four of our principal drugstores, iu:uti am inform . - ed that on an average each store sells -30 pounds of opium and three pounds of morphi a per annum: Op ium re taiiii at present at SI,2A per onia*, and morphia at about sl2,ocoper . or.. One bottle of morphia -Contains one drachia, or $1,40 worth. Of the drug. The lady who.uses one bottle . week spends for a worse than useless purpose $72,80 per annum, and he who uses two bottles per week $145,- 60-in twenty years a *Went sum to purchases small farm. The. opi um-eater gets along with as - annual expense of $65 to $l5O-k sum quite sufficient, if deposited in a . savings bank, 'to amount to a email fortune in the course of :one's! natural !life. Morphia is worth about $l2 per or., or $192 per pound at itali. There are !oaring establisiniumts in this place that sell no less than three lbs. eachiumnally, at n coot to • the =- Tuners, at present - OTO*, of no fleas a RUM- than 44728—enough - money to support a small -- , .. vr . or - school in our Midst ~ .- --i t wh. • - year. ' The opium .. . - . ..... in this vicinity an-. nosily is worth.s2,BBo, to Which might T wi be added some $BOO ' ded kg the various Ft:TeX:thous' . the dreg; Viz: literinnn's Elixir, law nun, .. - goric, s*l the mime 'pinta ~ L : in compound with ,o . - ; m --. •' . es. Even our children are ....i.: 1 : .. with: my not - . ~ • . . • 1 .- • ; MI AIM TOWANI),: , BRADFORD COUNTY, BRUARY ?23;1871. =I ti .~ out Emmy With swabs sit* which iii eontain morphis2En in some of its forms - Thus ta the dreadful appetite- ' our children for uxuaaismslathindantm - oOst of-the in consumed by lual takers 121 the trailed Rates ? ainually amounts to smell mullions of dollars: • Whin we contemplate the inunenSe cost of the opium and Whom, aid their• ' effects uponlbe Min ll* ars astaptidekil and winder ( why people are inch ecansia mate fools as to allow habit to this enfold them in its dreadful meshes: The coat of rum, rind the untold Wi en, which it produces; esnaot be com puted by thpires. Is it not high time that we cry trouble unto God to help us, out of ' , , I`Ooubl extend this article still fur ther, enumerating the 'evils of into . perance, bat I fear I have . y wear* your Patience. Too much cannot be said, w ever, spinet the use of 'tired= in all forms, nor can we afford to 4t our eyes, and fold np.our hands, when such startling truths of the dreadful effects of mangling and the use • of vile stimUlants are visible on every hand. I trust this article will hot impress any oneunfatozably of oar thriving and prosperous village. With all our faults we ate permed of many virtues, and have in midst thorough and efficient temit anoe men. I dare say we are on Lan =tooting with our neighbana,.. - All we lack to root out evil and all forms of vice, is organization and a trifle more energy. lllay God 'help us till we :conquer • WHY wolual WED& Some close observer - of our social relations, hiving looked about among his married female . acquaint;. antes, ventures to give the following list,•with an attempt to indicate the • . 4 ' -.as which influence too • .to marry:_• umber One has married 'for' a home. She got , tired of working in a factory, :or teaching school--sh e , thought married life on, earth lbut moonlight walks, buggy rides, land 'nothing to. do. Well, she haul got her home; whether or not she is tired Of her ineumbrances, this deponent smith not, inasninch as kigis deponent , does not positiyekr knolif - Number Two married becausel she had seven young sisters, and papa with a narro* income. She consult ed the interests of her fatikily.s Per haps-she would have better consult ed her own interests by taking light washing, or going out by the day to work. Number Three married beewase, ,Mrs. sorinded iio - much better ;than Miss. She was twenty-nine yeas and eleven months old, and slither month would hive transform her into a regular old maid. • • bow awful that woulrhave been ! Number Four married liecaluie she wanted somebody to her Her- husband married for precisely the same ?onion, so they we re, - repentirig at leisure. f Number . Five married because Fanny White had a nice' new C hus band, and she Wasn't going to be left behind. Pity if she couldn'il get married as well as other folks! Number Six married; because she was poor and wanted lichee ! She never counted on all those !other things that ware inseparable from those coveted righes. Number Seven married liocausii she, thought she would him to travel. But Mt. Nuinber Seven chiinged his mind afterward, and all the travelini she hal dime has' been between the well and the back kitchen &mi. Number Right married out of spite because h9r first love had taken to himself a s econd love. This piece of retaliation might have done her good at one time, And in the long run Number Bight found it did not p r Number N ine married, became read novels and' ,wanted sympathy.'' Sympathy is a fine thing, but it cools down at a'repid into if the domestic kettle is, not kePt: ,, boiling, and the domegic turkey is undone. Novels, and housekeeping don't run very' .well together in. berme& to use a sporting phrase, and Number Nine's supply of :sympathy didn't hold Oat very long: Nrimber Ten married because she I loved lier husband with all her heart and soul And she limes' him' still, and will probably continue to love him, and is the happiest wife in lie world=so she, say& - We have Of all the riOt motile at liet--one, which, - when siuu:tifictd by a desire and resoluticni to :1 improve and elevate each other, and ;to live true andholy lives before God, can not fail to call down blessings from heaven. But sad is the fate of thorre who inarry from wrong motives-.-to esciape their share , of life's work, or tot sornethin4A for which they have - nothing to giver in return: ' 'WELT CLOVIS Alfl.--Cloves- t are the unopened doe.er of a small evergreen tree that tamable* in appearance the laurel or the bay. ' It is a native of the filolaces or Spice Islands, but bas been carried to all the warmer parts of the world,, and is now 'culti vated in the tropical regions of America: The Sowers are small in sirs, and grow , in large number), in clusters to the very ends of , the branches. The cloves we nee are the dowers gathered before they ire opened and while they are still . green. After being gatherisd, they are smoked bya wood fire, and dried in the Stl., Fah clove consists of two parts, Ta - ,round head, *filch is the fear petels ;or leaves of the flow er rolled up , enclosing a number of small j stalks, or filament;' the,Other part of the clove is terminate with four taints, and.* in he:tithe flow. Cr cup and the unripe seed. Vessel. All these parts May ibet : 'distinctly been if a few cloyeente soaked for a Short time in hot • water, when the leav4 of the flower softeri and readi ly unroll. I- Both the taste and smell :of chives depend on the quantity of oil they contain. Sometimes the Oil is separated from the cloyes before they are *rid, .and the o&riand' taste is in consequence much weakened by ; eachunhr proceeding. • it. 1 IE nos An 'etras t 7 [Par the ftrorziß4 Lit Fin OOLOUDO. t CoL P br a., ' Me. , . The °City of the Mdair" is . iktiiet atpresent, and we are - with thel. win ter weather that I ever"saw. With the exception of the extreme cold weatherof whist give you an- so. count in my last letter, • the winter has been very Imild blared thermometer here indicated as : h as eighty degrees Ahem) zero, on some days, in the sun. The ,great snow shires, that, as 'I learn by the ' p f apers, extended over a large portion o the East, began with ns. - trat mov ed away toward the East. - Only 'about ten inches of snow felt - on the &um' Local news le' wares. Building is still 'ping on quitil extensively. There are about five hundred build ings., of all kinds, in town. As the colony repine every man who owns lots or ocit-leeng 'bad, to blir upon theni before the• 10th of April, or forfeit their claims, many mere houses will go, lip before that time, as the claim' s are much too val uable to lona. Four or five church , buildings will i probably be • - during the spring. The " Baptists lave already laid the; . dation of theirs house . Union meet ings are still held in' Colony Hall, each denomination j furnishing a preacher in its turn; but the 'usual consequences of such, union are be. ginning to be I visilile. Unsuccessful efforts were made by some to induce all denotninstions to unite and build one house large enough to accommo date all. The religious principles of the colonists are is decided miiture. About all kinds are represented: ,The Methodists, Presbyterians, Con imgritionsliste, Eliaeoix4 Regular Baptists, Frei) Will Baptiste, and Covenanters, have organized church es. One nondescript church is coin. posed of Universalieto end Free Thinkers. What their platform. may be I cannot say, • • The "Indians having received all the _presents they expect to get out ' of Uncle Sinn for the next six months, are on the rampage again. A band of them, supposed to , be Sioux, ereeSea the Union: Pacific Railroad s . idititit ten days ago, and are now winning the settlers ,about Fort Ilearm. I hid just returned from a buf6dci hunt, out in the coun try between the North' Platte. and South ,Plattei rivers, as this band came down, and I "guess," all' - =glared, it was a lucky thing for me that I got home about the time I did. - ' • 'As we view 1 a country not very well known; (perhaps some account of the expedition would be interest ing to some Of mir readers. There were eight of us in the " out-fit," will mounted and well • arnica , About five miles east of. Greeley the Cache la Padre liver Amen a junction with the Sciuth;Platte, and eight miles farther, east is a ranch owned by . an old min who has spent thirty-. five_ years on the plains. His name -isabridge Gerry, and . e is a grand son-tit that Ethridge e, who - was I be li eve, MC pf the • . era of the Declaration Of Lidepin - Forty 'miles .from Greeley .As Fremont Or chard, so 'earned by the Great Path finder, but for what ragmen I cannot say, as I einnot- see. much .resem blame between a patch of willows and an orchard. Some twenty miles farther east is old Fort Morgan, bunt - for the protection of, travelers • the old .Salt Lake stage road, and abandoned since the completion of the, Pacific Itailrcied. , .. This fort was built of " adobe)," or 'suii-burnt bricks, awl has "ism name ways, drawn a- good many dimes from Uncle SW; pocket. The lumber that was used is its eanstruCtion cost from one hundred and twenty-five dollars to two hundred dollars a thousand feet,„ and now lies scattered about, furnishing excellent firewood for the ininderiAghmiter. We camp ed in the kat over night, and as we sat around the fire, some one re marked that burning such costly Rood caused a strong smell, of burn ing greenbacks, which wasrerpond ed to by another,' Hang the ex pense; put on another board r'--eirit lug the action. to 'the word: One of the buildins is now occupied by some herders, in the employ of Mr. John Haman; a Tern cattle drover,. who has * herd of twenty-three him- Ared head of Texas cattle wintering . here. A short iilistance east of the fort is a cemetery. Stripe of board are set in the ground at the head of portion of the graves; the':remain der are unmarked and unknown. On neirly*ery board is the inscrip -1i0n,,"4 Billed by Indians,"—ample evickinee a the prevailing disease of this region. At the mouth of Bes 'ver creek is an Old stage station,.in a very, good state of -preservation. Leering the. Platte river here we struck off into the hills to the south .ward, and About twenty 'rifles from the river,we began to see small herds ' of breams. I shall their forget my sensations, . when • • : up , a high bhdfore paw five .'... -. feeding quietly in the valley.below, at about' five or six hundred 'yards distance from us. I Biding around the hill we ' carpe; out m the valley; aiwat. two hundred lards distance frhin where the nearest buffalo; a hu., • ! 4.4, old bull, i was !aiding. . us a moment 'astonish ment, he [ 'wheeled a bou t . and set off over the plain, followed by his aim-, ; us. ; Digging my spurs into the sides of :my pony with a violence that made him groan, and aecompa niedi by; another of the putty i we Seri over the ground in . .. The bad° has a heavy, him . • • gait, but vni'fcruid before we ea tight ther thatit is no easy job to Ont-run them. Getting within yaids of theta- we dismounted . . pumped shot after abet into their carcasses until one of them wine tumbling to the ground. :Two others were par , tisk !suppled, but as it be to grow auk and we were mime Am-or six miles from camp .we were aged to Osaka the pursuit. Being in a countryientirely uninhabited save by wandering bands of Wiens, it was necessary to be very'cantious in, our morn,* especially , dotter dark. We i never lacked for • music . during the I rig WO INTO 001ItiipmeN , • M *wounded by pacl‘ of Cartes, a apeman:. of welibearing a close resem blance te an overgrown fox, whore) Ulteltredy A113311' . made night hide • andby large, gray wolves, that would meek up close to camp‘ . and sending their frightful howl out on thertigk: , t aiestartling 'the guard in to a hearty malediction on the whole wolf tribe. We soon found that the great snow storm and severe cold weather a few weeks befine, had scattered the large her& and driven a majority of them far to the east ward.' We sew many drovei of wild hornbill at a distance, but they show ed plainly that they had,. no inten tion of cultivating an acquaintance with us.. ,We camped one day near a huge rock, rising four or ifte hun dred feet into the air, and irsadirc# manymaes over the rolling prairie. We had just finished eating our din nen when looking away to the, east ward, we saw what appeared to be a herd of buffaloes scattering over the plain, and heading directly towards us. Instantly every man was upon his feet. Horses s wag saddled, re volvers buckled on, and rifles placed where they ciitdd, begrasped. ,itt a moment's notice. They kepi straight on toirards our camp until they were within about half a mile of us, when the main body halted, and one ap =lt* be coming on alone. This , to look like a little_ too Sharp practice for buffaloes, - and some 'of the boys declared they felt uncom fortable sensations about the roots of the hair.' Ina very few- minutes we could see thlk the supposed buf falo was an Lid.3n mounted on his pony, riding ak full _speed , altar evi dently intending to find out who we were. I must confess that the sight was not a very Agreeable one to my self, and one gblice at my ..compan:- ions convinced ,me that the feeling was mutual.' Halting just out of range, "Mr. Lo " took a good look at us and then rode slowly forward. Seeing that each Of us had weapone enough balis - ,periKiu to constitute him a Walking arsenal, he advanced -with extended hand and saluted us with, " How, how?" Seeing' thlt ho met with a friendly reception; the whole party maple pp. There were some eighteen or twenty men in all. Within the next halthour they had j inged‘for every article they saw or could think of., I began to get Kick of having all the begging on one side, and when one . particularly vil lainous looking fellow, with a streak of red paintrunnizig from the cor- . ners of his month back to his ears, carne up to use, I " went for " him; begging for: his buffalo robe, and every loose article about him, : 'and wound up with asking for a drink,pf whisky. The mournful shake of his head showed that he understood that part, at least.- He could talk a little English, and wanted to know what:l, was &ling there. I - informed hiM, confidentially ; that I was "on it." "'NW dat?" "Oh," said 1, . " on • the war path." " Who for--Arapa ho V' I gravely answered in the af firmative, on which We 'leek- hands, and lighting our pipes, took a "medi cine smoke," and parted with each other • sorrowfully. This .ways the band of Utes, - who are supposed- to have committed the outrages .in North Park, last summer, although the blame was finally laid on the Cheyennes. If our party- had been small and poorly termed, our hair would be of small value to us now. Getting tired of killing. but one or two buffaloes in a day, we turned our faces toward . Greeley, which -we reached in due season, having ridden" about two hundred and fifty miles.. Pro.. ABOUT Cuons.—The New York Herald is not over deTout, but delivi um itself vigorously , of the following sentiments on choirs We .desire that Members ,of choirs shall, without exception, be some thing more of Christian and. less of professional singera. We propose that after they have ceased singing they shall set to praying, or listen to the preacher with the red of the'con gregation. Row often has it notbeen observed that the instant the mem bers of a church choir have finished a hymn they settle down to , a cosy chat; passing thisir little jokes with at much indifference as if they were not in a place . of worship, or as if they had received information direct from heaven that they need not themselves with the question Of salvation! We do not mean to say that a majority of the 'members of choirs act in this manner, but that a minority 'sufficiently great in num bers to attrad'attention do this, no ' person will deny Indeed; we are assured that at some :of the churchee social topics are discussed every Sun day; sabre and .criticism are indulg ed in, and pleasant stories are 'told, between the pauses in the music. Such levity and irreligionmerit and ever merle our condemnation.. ,We are willing to pay these people .to sing us to heaven, but wp taunt un dertake to pray them to that happy home of the hereafter. They put do their own praying; they must be come 'Christian. worshippers. Con versation on social matters, and pls duitries, are very good and all o w ble things in their way, but they not appropriate at ehurch. Tun PRIDE Or Arronerar.—What a silly boast it is to boast of our ..ance.s try when we reflect that, choice or noble SS it may be, it has become very much diluted before descending very tar. A Writer who seems to have had the curiosity, as he has the time, says that every human being on the face of the globe is compelled, by the demand of nature, to have two parents, four grandparents, eight great-grandpa rents, sixteen. ancestors in. the fourth gegienition back, thirty-two in the fifth two hundred and fifty-six in the eight, thirty-two thom 'seven bun- . died andeighty-six in the fift.eenth, - almost a million and fifty thousand in the twentieth, and nearly . one thousand and seventy-threemillions in the thirtieth. The whole number of one% anceitora in the fi ftieth gen eration is 6,362, 794, 914 filA 046, a nmiltiinde which no mini ;Thi''number and no mind conceive. She bloodof this vast host is rimming through the veins of every mortal on earth, and that reckoning back-only fifty gener ations. • • \ • -• , . 4", . , .. 4 . 1 1_ - ..' . 001 per. Annum in. Advance. There is no trait'of human charac ter ia which the deep dapravAY . of our . natere displays iteelhnoreplam I than *Blander, or Itefamation .of The poet truthfidly rep reedits slander as standing _ "Nightly by herhoirld hip' • And hibticems her lies to stain our names And wound out pace. Slander The *West whelp ot MVP It is worse than ..mockery, famine, word or death; and yet bad as it.* there is no vice . ,-more common, no trait of characte in which our moral obliquity more clearly displays'itself. No community is free front it;— h d lu az a: 4 "pestilence it walketh in and hie destruction it,was tith even at noonday:i d Several things go temake up *6 character of the slanderer. In. the - first place, such 'Lanni or'woman • is always a liar. Nobody ever was, or ever can be slandered by the troth. . Nobody can reality be in by it, because every one of us to pess in the communityjor w t we really 'are. Even troth itself may , be' so'dis' - torted as to'conves an actual' false hood./'A lie may be acted os will told;—the nods, and winks, the -Oly hintS and innuendoes, are fall as '-ef fectual with the slanderer as any=. thing else. • Dean Swift describes_ such ,charic ters to the life when he says— "Nor do they trust their tongues . alone, But speak a language 61 the ir own ; Can read a nod, a wink, or look, - Far better than a printed book ; - Convey alibel in :a [rawly And wink a reputation down ; Or by the tosana °fa fan, • , Describe a lady or a man. Another ing#dient in-the clliarac teT of slander Is theft The slander er steals, br flies to steal, what all the wealth of the Indies cannot buyJ A good name is bet te% than anything : ; . else in the world. 'How many to SO', cure it or retain -it, have laid their heads . , with cheerfulness upon the block of the. executiorier. - What is life worth to a man -with out it? As.shalcspme hash "'Tis the pecaliaxlrezptnie of oar souls." • `•\Vithont it none Can soundly sleep, even on a royal bed, I (Sr drink with relish from a cup tit t gold. • .; And with it, on hicborrowed stra or by The leafless hedge beneath n heavens, The ireary beggar takes ruitron • rest." "Who steals my ou-no steals trash* in comparison. The roan who means us with uir liffecl club or 'Cocked revolver on the his Way, detianding our money or our life, i s *gentleman in comtson with him or hat who .goes ,aboat to steal from 'uellan pricelesEf )treasure, "Hake mosiiielliohmeals of goodin en's names." Hence, the slanderer, whether he succeeds in his design ..or not, is a thief both in motive and degign. - The arrow spay sometimes fall shbrt of the mark at which it is di rected, but the intention, the design to do•harm is there, and• the crime of the slanderer is the same as if he had succeeded- Another vice which enters. largely 'into slander is malignity. A man who robs us of our wealth max do it to Satisfy the cravings of his appe tite; he may , use it even to do g - .d to:those Sioimd him. But he "who filches -from us our good-name," takes what can never do him any good at all==hii.-object must, be malignity. Such a pum: wherever found, who can hate goedness and do all he can to destro3rmoral eicellimee in another, is more 'fit to, be an inhabitant of the lowest pit of darkness, than the pale of human society;' and yet these mon sters are fotind almost everywhere throughout the world. Another chiracteristic of the slan derer, is, he - is coward—Mid hypo crite. He has not the manliness and courage to reprove another, for fauna openly and boltlly to his , face. Everything he does is on the sly.; -His honied words andfair profeteions are only a mask to givelim a chance to take a-deeper bite,"or that he may. , h sta eart b hi s victim more securely y to, the Who of us have not suffered,. at 'sometime or' other, from these -htt man harpies 7 • Well, say Some, let a man be so good,' lead so blameless a life; that no man carrhave a chance to say any thing against hith. • - But this is an imposSibility. We readily admit that the good man will not in the end be materially injured by these base attempts of the slan derer; but let a man be never so blameless in Ma life, he need not -ex , ittet to escape the . slander of lying lips and deceitful tongues., , - If a man' has a character high enough and broad enough for other 'men to gaze upon—in sllort,tif he.has any character at all, he will find some one low enough and 'mean enough t o _ slander and traduce him. • Wherever he goes he will be followed by these ,human. wolves, ' • , "With that long gallop that am tire The hound's deep hate, the hunter's fire.". - . , .A man of so li ttle - consequence in human society that nobody envies him, nobody , says anything to his dis advantage, or tries to pulthim down, must be of very, little consequehce deed—so-little that nobody Will miss. biria when he is gone; So let the slanderer ply his ids& mons trade; , We may take comfort in the thought that we are 'of some consequence- not mere cyphers in the werld.' r -or we should not be slander- Defamation is tkind of blackmail that will be levied on us all. Some of us pay more and some less, but the amount will always be in propor tion to a man's moral worth. Waniut, PA. G. W. G.W.S. Tim OLD We .-- - Once it was "Mother," and it Ny a a " Mother, I'm hungry." "Mother, put up - my din _nor, and her loving hands would Small the butter, and sew on the great patch, heart - brimming with .af faction for the little curly pate that mile her so many steps and near distracted her with his .boisterttos mirth. , Now she is"the old woman;" but she did not think'it would come to that .She looked, on thin& the future years and saw her boy to manhood grown; and he stood trans figured • in the light of her own bead- =I NUMBER. 39. . thigittrosii.l arakiatia UM love. Neter was _there* more noble San &Sihei--11 : 14 world, and the - staff of her lc years. ILA he washer; satitott even then, but she did not Whir never noticed that it was her little boy that wre her strength far daffy toil—that his slender form was ' all that upheld hie over the brink of de spar. She only ham bowshekrred the'cluld, and felt that amidst - the • mists of agd his lave would bear her gently through its infirmities to 'the life beyond. -Brirthe son has forgot- tenths mother's ministrations now.. Adrift from them:Kling:l . of home, he' is cold,selfiskheartlemand "mother" !wino sacred 1111311 Ding to theprodigal. She is"the old woman," firirdded, gni, lame, and blind. • - ROW 3: • 1 , MIMS LITZ Our readers know that. dero are - two kinds of, respiratory: apparatus —lungs, which inhale sir', abstract oxygen from it and giVI is return chiefly carbon% add; and .011 s, which absorip the oxygen dinolved in the watet.and,nlee gm off chiefly carbonic acid, Which is more readily dissolved in water thew the xygen.. The. former aprleWs is pan eaed=by' ' , animals, hfr4 etc.; the' latter „,,by &Us; and as lungs are iruspable" of taking omen of the water, and gills . cannot breathe air e animals ,with lungs are drerwried in the watei,',., while fish are drowned in the A small nnn{ber of amphibious animals however, possess - 1 bath- - -lungs 'and •gal 4 and, can therefore' breathe ei ther air or water, and thus live in both. It *us been, however, dawn . - - ad fluit k muskrats and e4me other swimming ankle& with •Inegn could travel considerable distances under ice without reaching any breathing hole on the surface, and it Was for a long time a xrroblem hoed ey. . sue ceededin living so long and travel ,ing so far without sigmas to the mosphere. The problem has' been answered by S. Newininse, in a work' called the " Trappg'i Guide," *Om which'we extract the followine: lifturkmts 'have fe carioca, method of traveling long distances "tmder the ice. In their winter eicursions to their feeding grciundir, which are fre quently at great distance, from their abodes, they. take in breath - at etart- . under water as Icing as they can. Then rise: to the ice,. 'and - breathe f out the air in their - linPga, which remains in bubbles against, the lower surface of the ice. - The hinter sometimes takes ad vantage of this habit of the „muliikmt in the following manner : - When tho marshes and ponds Where the muskrats abound are first frozen over; and the ice is thin and clear, on striking into their houses , with his hatchet,, fez the purpose of setting his traps,he frequently sees a whole-family lunge into the water and swim away under the ice. Foil • lowing one for some distance, ho him come to renew his breath in the manner above described. ' After the animal has breathed against the ice, and before he has time to take his bubbles in. again, the hunter strike with his hatchet , directly over him, and 'takes, away his breath. In this case, he drowni in, swimming a le* , rods; and the ' hunter, cutting a, hole in the ice, takes him, out. lark, otter, .and beaver travel under the ice' 1 the same way; , and hunters have ire quenily told me of tairin . g otter * m - the .manner I have - described, when these animals visit the honse of the muskrat for prey. Tar Lesr Tags Or Isaac.--The lost tribes of Israel, whichhave given so much concern to mimy worthyin -dividuals, and Whickhaye been found everywhere, even among our,own selves, have been in great, danger of being discovered, scattered through the Pacific Oceon, and indulging : in:. cam:able 'habits., The philological .world of Berlin have been much dis• turbe4l by : rubbings: of inscriptions _from that mystertons seet,of 01°,1=1 stone figures, Easter:lsland:. These Inscriptions, set out in good straight lines, look like the . xtition- of Va axonsalphabetical riders, ing some of them a dulling hicenass to - later Hebrew, but, unhaply, unde cipherable. The important restdts to be obtained are,lowever, no in expectation, as Prot Huxley . has solved theinseriPtioni, which might long have puzzled the learned woad.. He has reaagruzed the rubbinis, aa imprimions from motdds useabvihe Polynesians in printing the patterns on the tape cloth, thi`ancient dress of Tahiti and Other, islands. counts fbr the geometrical anp regu lar reproductioclai44 l.,f d l ilt t,p daiilia which are not ideographs,' • lug, or alpha betic symbols — Aiken/rtes.- Au ErrEcrviißissruz.—On his way - from his list tour. in Irehuid,Aer. Roland Hilf irsin very much annoyed at the reprobate conduct of the cap tain and mate, who were 'greatly 'ad dictated to the ungentlemanly habit of wearing. First the captain 'road swear at the mate, and then` they would both swear at the wind "Stop, stop,now," shouted Hill, " let us luivelsir play, gentlemen? it _ is ray turn now" "At what is it your , turn?" asked the captain. ""At strearing,", replied Hill. - • After waiting until 'was exhansted,lhe captain urged Mr. Hilt to be quick and take his tap, for ho wanted to begin again. • " No, no," said Hill," I. can't be hur ried; I have a right to, Ulm my own time and swear at ,my own conven ience." - - - "perhaps poll don't intend t 6 take your ttirti," responded" the other. • "Pardon ine," - said Hill, "but Ida as soon as I can find the good of ' do ing se." „The rebuke 146 t , its domain ;d effect; there Teas not another oath'6n the voyage. . • , Tns following story •of Horace Greeley is going the rounds of the press : When be took his famous trip to Lawrence City, ICausas, he stopped for the night' at the best ho tel m the place, and in due course of time \ wait requested ki honor the reg-, Wier with . bis name. In the Act of adorning the page with a specimen of his chirography, •a bed-b with a remarkably knowing look t it, ran past his !hand. The venerable philosopher *bound it calidy for a moment, and theni turning to the astonished landlord, exelsitned: 'rveleen bitten' by, St: Joe ffewbled. by Kansas City spiders, dined off by , Washington - Imosquitoes, and inter viewed bY New York graybacks; but I ntvcr was in aplace bek4re where the bed- tinge - loo ked over ,the hotel register to find out where ray room was." i Mil A meta .onee. interrogated an old lady la to whe'ther she haw say road which peddlers rarer trivia She promptly replied, Bu one; awl thit'a the road to hearp I" PM