Ingi jirr,le int) - PITBLIeLTICIII. r . .7 i 9 . ' -; ; it: Bp.Anioart' aaroSTES' IS published every 7,:o.day 3liotnirg by $. W. A.t.vottb at Two Pollar: per annum, in advance. . - e_ i r -Advertising in a cues exclusive of subteen). t : olltc the piper. . - 1 :-,IIIOIAI :CiTICES Inserted at rtrrsimt Ca pi , r ironer are! I gertion, and LITz c.xxxs per f , i ine for l , rrifilt i wertiona. , , .1. / 1 Ilea NO ICES. scone - sty - to as reading matter, vriz,rYcvrili a lino. -, .kuVEItTISinfENTS will bo inserted according to the folltiwingitablo of rates ----- t 1.50 I 3.00 I 6.00 . 1 6.00 i 10.00 I 6 15 'ra I EMI '2 - .5 I La) • s.oo 16.1015,00120.00, Ma l let 12 50 1 7.00, I lO.OO I 13.00 20.001 30.00 i s_oo .1 8.50 I 14.11 Z I 3.8.24 25.00 I MOO INSIE 4,2,h - !I _ pab 122.0 Q I ao.oo I 45.00 cTai . .J3ti.0040.04iW570 t lug -- I 1 otamn j 11 i 11111111 20.00 0.00 ( 60.00 1 80.00 1 $lOOl $lBO Mal I ,tor's and too:does Notices, $2 ; Audi s2 50 ; Business Cards, fivs,l l l lol . Tar atonal lines $1 each. " ! • -ortiscre are entitled to quarterly changes's. -ertisements mast be paid'fot in cafeance. tsep i s of kswadatious ; Communication', en: ixtdual interest, and notices of liar. snths, exceeding five linos, are charged P" line" mrsm having a larger circulation than-ill I i the countycombined, nialtros it the b e st In Northern Pennsylvania. • ••, TING of every kind. in Plain. and Fancy • with neatness and dispatch..;' Handbills, , s. Pamphlets, Billheada, Statements. kc. (ty and style., printed at the shortest R crorrrri; : Ofllce is well !applied with .e, a gsxxl atasarttuent ot,new type, and the Printjng lino can be executed in stir manner and at the' lOwest rates; sItIKELY CAM. : tra3r,istri , 'Snteesi • 5, naili 1• 10pol: • ii, tell or ry mid T T. NZ" P .1.1;r RE" 3I , p xperti y berticltia .101; can 3' l • • ... • OAT 40r Prp , O t -_:r. - thinp t ye 1;14,:t art TF.loii4 trsrozss CADS. TriCerLEY, ticerised. 'tome, Pa. All cane promptly atts+nd lifapo.lB7o' ri s tot. C , ot , 1-,it% I i AL LACE IiEELER, Ell Kan -1-)lY* , s GX iFRESCO PAL.VTER, 5ept..15, 1870-57 ITUDDELL ruhi Shippers of the VAN AtiTTIRACITE'COAL, 1 . 1 .Towanda, i ISE r 1-1 CIA)r i 1,. % r. VINCLVILikSISTRANCE fotilnerlded by- Moirtir ono door omit' of Ward HMSO. 161121 maylo-'7O R. PI ONTLER T , REAL ESTATE ki.}lll. tin. 4 tC.O Wasiiinaton 'Street. Elf in,. and 'Went; S,trcietst, Chleago..lllinois. pnrchn.Fed and sold. Investments made Loaned. , I ' .• May 10.'70. 'S -BEING, PATTEAN TlNti AND; FETING in all fashionible 11nrt notieol B9OMS I.n Ef - T.'t., occr Porter Rtyys Dt MP. S. . E... ra.. April 13. _ WORN OF ALL A= SWITOTIES, CrTA, BRA, th-e best rATtp.nPr znd ilarber ISli op. Terins 1‘1".). DTZ r T TT.kr 1 • it T TIT', k LA . i • - CIS E. POST ; P...ADITER, ^.la. Pa.. wif,l) tr , ri gears c...7pericnre.lK tzive tiLest atisfFiriion iu ;:tt. li:tion paid tp tilr. arTil 'ea. OE pass Part:clit , r atter:ton to 1 - " 7 f 1 :•1 - 111 s, k r Tire spt and )t, on Work and charecs ;12,15.figeff I'EN . Y;Tr.kC it IRT,TI, Tr IS ;.. ; 4 4 1;; ;Il grif itvt flu , TAIT tvr.ING , ...- I ' . -. :41 . •• , , 1 , .:•::‘ iIl ft.'" lq t , kt '..- Y l' ', ' .; ~..•.'". .\;..: , '2"'1'70.-41 ', I 1: 1 1 1 1 .'L - VS VILLE IVOOLE.7 MILL . , Ai r -1- reFp,,t fully a - nrionnri". to .• pR votplarAly on 11.1 , 0 Vi - i -, 61 , n Tlaanpl ,, . Ira7ns, ana all 1, - ifls at anal ri tail. 1 - 1 - .11f,;11 & 13IIOAT.)LEY, l'roprivtor. =I 7.5; ! fiIIVES !-AtCTION! U A. Lic•tn7 , l aft:tint - tea to and Far. action I. C:1 1 1. , .r A. P.. 11 , 4 . . , ton, I c ,, 11111 : y, Ort. et, 69. • C 11.1; SSrL L 'S • • . • t . CF, .I. C 1: FEJ I -" tf , . ' aral t • c.-1. 1)-a as . _ . Art', St c'f 0.0 11",1 / 1:%,•. alf,l Drir.29 M Y T 11 TI L, PELTS, iLr- ,l 0 S:,EINSI- Ftll , ;, cc ;% , .=.ll paid.at n M. 1:.-Els.NIHd'e Storft, alain-st DAYTON. ?' F ,~;. MMIMEMI i 1" E I.7NI)ERIG'NED . WA V E a Baia:ink. owar.da,ifir.der the 1 . 1 G.. F. 3.IAttON. CO. rt prti,a4ed fa draw DP.DS of Exchange., and 11(•,•titeei Gl Sr* Vork. Vhiladclidna., and all ‘,l Stat,s, Ger- Franci, Ti loan :poen?, rexelvt4deroetts, rid Banking leteitteee. one ~f the lute firm of Laporte, Pa., and Ilia knowledee of gili 1 1, r, 't I ni of Bradford and aikioining counties in the banking buidnii'es for about :•';'.irg. 7 nlato this house a deen•able'ono through r.,llealona. F-21A-StiN 3. .,G4, A.,. 0. aLksoN i , ... , • ?- 11 - . 4*t9 011 S ..1N1) LO IV .P./11 . 0 ES ! i . Ai , IT)Nr.OETON; PA. • i _ ----... .. TIIACY 5., - , HOLLOIC; ' i::: : . d• i . , , En.Orereries and Ttovis:on3, brags .... •.,.•,:. i K. - ,.•n0i, , ,,ne 011, Limps, Chilextrys, ... 1 . .- .. ~ - tar, PaLuts Oils, Vaimish, Yankee nu. . i ~...3. .9, 07ars and SnnlT4.Pure Wines and ••. ~• t;kr 1,, :A:quality. for ‘,V,:inal purpc,sea . ~„ 4...,.• 14 - , - ,111 al the vory lewest prices. Pre :; ..c.ily coinpound,d a all Lours of the _... : :,-....t. ',GINO ua a Fall. J .. TTIACY . 4 nOtt,ON. • •,, r , -..nin,-.; 24.3Ar; , .1.—iy. . I' E.ll' I:!_V=.;S.l.d.r., FROM OR TO 011_"ENGLAND. .>, OF , - 111-lx;rtrps rr.om OIL TO •1• ,, Olt LIVE1:1 . (i uld. ••.:1113.11i. '• of Lr crory..vot.k. MMElMt==! at: , 1.5: , ;,:1 - and ray _ . . r p ';r07.:4113, Pa. INT, STEA:MVIS, Ncl re •ip. 7 AV , :-Atual.ty, , an,l • 14; I 31.1.0_••=a1 . 4 ,-, this Arc, Will: C'S .;;.,. Trale, v...th ail t:lt, the anal - v .1?—•w.i.,••;• , . l'aribte ,r. t LIN - I:Lwow. .1 • i 1,,51 • ‘75 , •11i,1 X 75, v.e.conlin;: t.n 1 oration. 11:11'.1:N TI , ! s.7tti. 131 i, N.urlng 33. blrk.-.7,11t- fr:,114 , - - ; in ay.: Cnnii re.lti,i.stl rates. For fur loy (11.1:N1)1:It-SON Illtf)TIIE.119, N. Y. or to S. G. I'SfENNSt. Central Pa. niar.l.7ll IYEBUT.I4 "ATILLS VIIEAT; RYE AND BUCKWHEAT "..1 0 R 1 MEAL FEED bag,: iii for P. 1 1 ,;_ chop for-CNSLI WO= w.kunANTED c.ll aji 'arg, printtty of GROUND CAYUGA ‘.. - TEII., fmni Ohl Ymigur Beds: \". rima ano.,-tiani ill:en in esel2ll,lo for ME 1 ~ 71 STFAM FLOURING 3111,L IN ..,;1 tul;vl,vii,er deiire 4 to give niAlte V.:at Lis new• 7 . 'sTE:Or. , -FLO-UltiNG . 3.11:11 I.: .mid Pat E.ii prc r.cd.: 1.1:4 line un ehk.rt notice, 1)0\r. ON TIM, SIIIE D.A.Y TIIAT ir I ilkucurED ' - \ • '-‘"Lii t. 4u , liwbeat ant Itgi \pour, Corn !treat, I" -.1. 1-..ntn‘ i abA-ays on hand and fur rale at livithge -the *'*t mai' of (hi- riser tlunrittitto par nize . my atif haye their ferryago pan] both trays when they bring grieta of ton bustiela.and upwards\ • .ap1.4.'71], r. 8. A1..F.128.. S. "VV. 'AI4VOII, , Out!liab.itr. VOLUME. XXXI. TAMESWOOD; ATTORNEY ' IND to a? Taw, Towanda, Pa. . TTENRY PEET, ATTORNEY AT Towards. Pa. .June 27 60. WIaFOYLE, ATTORNEY AT vr, Towanda, Ts., Moo :with' Marian' Smith, south lido Nercur's Stook. , & pa la, 70 • aEORGE D. MONTANYE, AT vug Tows= AT LAW. Mai- - barner bf Main 41nd Perm Street*. OPPOIffe Porter!' Drag Store.' • VB. irguriY, DENTIST. spF— • nee over IyLetham & Black's, tinvoindb c pL May 2d. , ' DR. IL WESTON,. DENTIST.. 4-- (Mee in Pattou's Block..later (3ore's. Drug ea Chemical Stoie. Jul, 'GEL P. WILLISTON: : _ - 1 L. ATTOIINNY AT I.P.W, TOWANDA. South aide of kereur's New Block; up 0 1 0 1 6 I A Otil 21, 10—tf. -.-: z . Tr B. MoKBAN, •ATTORNET I_l9 AzticknrsErmosi Az Law. Towanda. Pa. tieular attention paid to business In tha Orphan' Court. 1 July 20.'6 H. CARNO catAN ~ ATTOR kr • ;MT AT LAN!' Mistrict i Attorney fet - Brad ( C°Pntr). Tro7. Pi: Collections MA& and prompt. ly remitted. - feb 13. `69—t . . , & D. C.!DENrrit, Attorteys-at. j:ip,T6Pl"i=fgaPar h4nder tteirpr al aeicea tOtit pubitc. Special attention given to EVERY DEPART 'ENT of the burgneser, at the counte seat' or ;else- Where. SACO'S DzSVPIT. ' • D. CLDITON DzWITT. TOWANDA, Pa., bee ? 12, 1870. w. P. {' NCL7 T. e j - 01(N.' , N. CAlarr, /ITT° RNEIt ..i:r.Lear, Towanda. Pa. Artlenlar attention gIV4 en to Orphans' Conti business. Conveyancing and Collections. 0111ce in Wood's new blikk. tenth 0' the First National Bank, up stairs. IFeb. 1, 1871. - H. WARN - PR, Physician and • Surgeon. &Itayartille, Bradford Co., rs;. All rallg promptly atfimded to. Office }lilt door mouth of Leßoy - grille Koilee. Sept. 15, 1870.-ii • FORGE SA:SI:MR.BON, G_ siddladelplA, Attorney -at -la Yr. Office with Sarntirl Robb. Fit.)., 330 South Fourth, iltreet. nese in any. of the sereral courts of-` Philadolpbia 4 , 1 . 01 - aptly and faithfully attended to. '.ruar.lsll-3m (AVERTON & ELSBREE, A9rQrt- NET'. e F Lew, Towanda, Pa., having entered intyi eepartuership, niter their prdiessional scrvtees to L`he puhlig. Special attention given to business the Orphan's and Register's Courts. A mid 14'70 t ; )V.CIITOti, JR. R. '4ll.tisnunn. ATERCUR & DA.VLES A.TTOB.- ICTTf!. AT LAW. Towanda, Pa. 4tte undersigned aving associated themselves together in the piadico Of Law. offer thiqr professional seniees fo the pnblie. ULYSSES IifEILUCTFL W. T. DAMES. March 9. 1.870. A. kk . , .B. M. PtCK'S LAW V • OFFICE. t. opropite tho-Court lions% Tqtands, Pa OA. 27.'70 B r N . MOODY, D , PHYSICIAN KND surtGEo:•.r, offers 114 professional services to thepeop'e \i'y alusing and vicinity. Office and residence . at 4..1 Lloyd's. Church street. Ang.lo, . TOM.: . W. MIX, ATTORNEY. AT FJ LAw, ToWanda, Bradford Pa. GENEP.4 INSUBANCt AGENT. Partb-tilar attention paid tcre.llectiorig and Srphans' Court business. Ocoee—Stercur'a tier Block, north side Public Square, apr. 1, '59. SU T )1 , . - VNI) DUSENBEIiRY, would an r.ounet• that in compliance with the regneat of hiR an lf,rol/5 Bends, he in now pl'ep.?red a!min- i+h• itrene Oxide, or Lau 114 (tan, itir the pain veS N hetion of teeth. • Itay 3. 1570,-1y Tr.o I hila . I°riz• 0,1D.11- I 71 3,n • • 'ZZE.NEY, COUNTY ITI:I.NTACDENT, Towanda, Pa. 0f5e14 With It. M. Peek., Feecrl door below. the, Ward Homan. Will be at the ()Rive the last Satttraay, of each month and at all ot times 'when not called away on bug& nese, connected withdbe Snperitendency. All letters '.bout] hereafter lie addregg.ed ai4 CLoce. clec.l,ll) ate of the GoLe f of "Phyqiciana and Surgeons," New York city, elate; gi , ics exclusive attention to the practice of big profepdon: Ofsee•and residence on the eagtcrn elope of Orwell Hill, adjoining Henry Howe's. j an 14. 'O. E RI , II LITIU, MEI TOW _Vs D DR. D. SNITII; De/lir:4, has G. IT; Woad's. 'property. beta - Qen Mer:ur's Block and LT.I4 Elwell !loupe. where he haa located his glico., Teeth extracte4l without pain by uy, of pas. ToWand I, Oct. 20. 1870.—yr. Hotels. • WARWHOT3SE;TOWANDA,P . A.. On Main Street, near the Cenrt iron,46 , v C. T. SMITII. Preprietor. ' Ori. S. lar,G. DINING ROOMS - 7'.iNNECTIONWITEI VIE BAKERY, 'Near the Court House- We are prepared to feed the hungry at all times of the oily end evening. Oysters and Ice Cream in their Pk .mans. March 10. 1870. D. W. SCOTT .t CO. VI:WELL HOUSE, tOIVANDA, II '4 PA. JOHN. ar WILSON flaring leasod this Hon!, 01. now reSdY to accom, na6. date the travelling publio - Nopaina norexpense will be apared to give satisfaction Va those who may give Lam a call. ere North side of the pnblie avian, east of Her cur's new block. • RUSIW ‘ RFTELD CREEK HO-, Having purchased and thoroughly rentlea this old and wvll-I:nowm stand, formerlylopt by Sheriff Grit tlA, at tho month of llommerfield Creek. is ready to girn flood 'accommodations andsatisfactory trcatmcot to all who may favor i r ,scith a call. Dcc, B.3—tf. 4 - • xi - EA.NS HOUSE, TOW:k.NDA., Tho ntycses, kr. of all guePtft of this again 4 loss l Fare, without any ex- tra ehar7p. •, A FllretiOr quality of Old Bugliela Bass Alo, jw-t r circa.- • T. B. JOC.OAN, • TwA•niir , 4. Jan, 2'4.'71. Propriotor. V•MERICAN •HOTTL, BRIDGE. STREET, TOWANDA, P.. • it. 4 1 10, GOFF, Proprietor. . Tilts Hotel haring been leaSerrby the anh,ceriher, bas been repaihted. papered. and . refurniihei thronghont. with new Furniture, Bedding. ke. Bit Table will be supplied with the hest the ntarket rwda, and the liar with chotiv, t brands of Liquors, This house now offers thu comforts of a bottle at atons.natin rntcea, Jurnnen and others attending Court. will find this hone a Cheap and colnf,rtabh) idaee to stop. Good stabling tttached. a...34.10;10 A GOOD INVESTMENT.-FOR 4AL1f.. 2 "-%tiinety acres of land. liezeily timbered and 5t..11 adapted to farming, situated in Ws!tact. 4 !tles from the river and 1 mile' from a nrldrEbU4 raw mill. For tai •trap for east, or I.ltort credit. Foe partlrulal-s 2(1,1ms:I ~ CEO. a1.1.4-2m. Sng.ar Eno. Pa. -VEIN' - k. PLANING "TILL! 111TG2TING; ftEPANVI'NG, 110cLDINGS, At the ola rtalf.l of IL 13. Inghttnt's Wooleti l'actory cia,l gawmat, in A 11.E.AVi" SIX r.AL rLSA.N.NCLAND MATCLIaiO it: eliar4c of an experience:l Mechanic and bitililcr the public may expect a GOOD :us, E. E. MIT& - Froru,thc soccut erdargetnent thia water power, work can be done at a scasonfr of the year and• soon bC2:11.4n. In connection with the aaw:min we are ablelk furnish bah of sawed lumber to order: STEWART BOSWORTH. C,lmptawn, May 23, 1370.,-.15 NOTICE TO' CARPENTERS The undersigned have made =aside inents to in sure Carpenter's' CRESTS Or .11.)OLS, reverie th,uu witanuvrn mar mat sta.. All desiring Such insurance ire respectfully invited ft, give s a call: CAMP & YLNC zrx. • • Gen. Insurance Agts., T Oda, Pa. REKEISIBER THAT FOX & I XER. CUR are retailing all kinds of-Greenlet, at wholesalepriccs. The largest stock in town. Goods first elass. Prices.low. E. T. FOX. Sept ' 2 • lIIRCRTX SIERCUR. 7,00 TO N.. S BEST C GA. TON ..S Ground Plasti , r, for Bale at Tiacl."'welra dllla, feb.Bll W. A. ROCKWELL. GOOD MOLASSES FOB 50 cents pit gall= at • IPIA & Octl4le. • . PROPESSIONLL CARDS. TETER LANDM,ESSER. =I OAIII - TUA 7 N, MACHINE I=MME= Rail-Boas: El u - .P., TABLE OF THE BIJLLT-'' KAN & En= RAU.StOAD.—Tailag effect as IA Jan. 23,1371. 61. a. fra W : . ' o . osaarweam. 1 A OllO ' 67, 41AND41. -.., ;il l . r it sao - 1 -Jumciiiix stag 7%.0 8:00 .. ...,MORROE 11:50 6:40 9:05 .... ...WELOOI2I 11:15 6:05 3:33 .... ALBANY.... 11 .*5 645 sas ' isturas :Ism 5:45 9ZO OILT. 10:30 1:30: A. M. L. Y. P. X. - , r.. R. DU Gang PasaanscrAl94:l7. Eltt!2 P. Si. 2430 - 230 3:00 • 3;35 3415 3:55 4th P. x. Jam. EMI] 1plIA:& N.Y,.-CAN - & R.R. CO.- AP- , • 62111.516010dENT OF PASS 1 •, Datinneixtng Feb. 1 _ (=go MMPARE. ' NOPTII. Leave A.M. I.M. P.M. move r. P.M. 'A.M. ..Waverl ,y... 6.311-3,25-6,40 " ;ISA 11,53-k2O 7 2S-4,16-740 ' " 4,5 1,05-1,30 Tortkhannock.ll.3s,B l / 2 10-w.38 -. 42-a.ac Pittatory - .... likt6.-1.80 "_ 7.65...... a ..., WlllreaSaiva,lo,oo-8.15...... "1.91.98--759- ..... • White 11aven,12,90 r. a[. . " 11.18 - 1X... .1.. blanch Chunk.l,4o . " 10.55 Allentown, ...3,37 ••• " 9,49::'........ Bethehesa„ ...2,50... .. -. 9.35 Easton. -3,17 „ " 9.05 . . Ptdra (Fr)....5,05 - - le've7.3s ... '. '. ... ,:. liewYorkiarr.) 8,05 " 6,00....... Y.Y. &X. Down Trains dine at "Idle Haven. dinen at Pittston. . Pas engets to and from New To* aid Pidiadid phis without dishes of cam Down train connects at - Allentowii, with Through fast Exprcu for Harrisbrg, Pittsburg and the West. R tic - PACKER • Supsrintendied: • RZE 31#ZWAY. 1300 muss UNDER - xtus WITHOUT OXIL fiLAMII, o, 00ACUIL BROAD WAGE—DOD= TRACE CLEVELAND, TOLEDO. DETROIT. CHICAGO. EITLIVALIME. ST. PAUL. OMAHA. And`all points Hest and Rarthwest. • wszorrtrtn. 1716./1.14, DAMON. CLWCETSAIT. DIDIANA.POLIB. LOVISVILLE. ST. LOUIS.' , And all points South and 'Southwest, New awn rirpuovED Cater= aid sew TililiOrOn Wrsuorr, CUANGIS Boalurint, TILITALO, DVS -17/Tt?t, Ca - MAIM CINCF2TASt., ; f ----- • 6n - and after,Moii, a y, DE'VE sth, MO, trains will leave Waverly al about the Mowing hours. rin : • GOL'fft Irm-T 4:24 a.m., NIGHT £1.1"12t.59 (Mondays excepted) for ..itoche Pier, Buffalo, Dunkirk..Cleyeland • and Cin cinnati, connecting Nitt. the Lake Shore, IlUebion Fionthern, and Grand trunk Railways at Buffalo. 'Dunkirk and Cleveland for the West also at elegy land the C. C. C. Ina. Raitirsy for IndLin apdlia; and at Cincinnati with the Louisville Short Line Jtailway. and tha - Ohio k Illeataaippl Railway for 014 Sonthweit ; also with connect: fug lines at principal stations on main Una. 4:4? I.:X.PIIESS, daily, for Rochester. 'Buffalo, Dunkirk. Ch.-veland and Cincinnati.. mak ' lug direct connection-with trains of (}rand Trunk. and LateNtiore Railways at Buffalo, Dunkirk and. Cleveland, for all points West. and. at Cincinnati with the Ohio'k and Lordsville Short Line Railways (or the South and Sontn-wesi 81 8 41 With all connerting lines at_ principle stations on main line. 7:15 a.rn.WAY FRETGTIT. Sundars excepted. • 8:43 a.m.,--NLUL TRAIN, Sundays excepted, for Buffalo and Dunkirk. , . 3::50 p.m.—EMIGRANT TRAIN, daily for the est. 5:35 p.m. —WAY TRAIN, for Elmira... Sundays cx. rented. 6:251p. 11., D4Y EXPRESS, Sundays excepted, for Rochester, Buffalo, Dunkirk. Cleveland. CLAldlina, ti artd the South. Stops at prindpal stations; and connecting points on main line. New and improved Drawimr, Room Coate/tun. r any this train from New York to Buffalo. and Sleeping Coaches ate attached at Ilarnoltreille. li ning Quo'. to Moreland and Galion lettbout nee. 10:46 p.m.—EX. STAlL.,ihnidayla exempted. for &- lido. Dunkirk and eand. connecting with train* for the West. - . . . A gimping Coach is attached to this train running through to Buffalo. • ^ aorta 'EAST .1:37 IL:rn.-311,311T EyPlXESB.l3nndaylexoepted,con 'tenting at New York with afternoon trains and atetmers for Boston and New England cities. Sleeping Coaches accompany this train to N. T. 6:03- a. m.—CD;CINNATI EXPRESS. Monday's ex cepted, connecting at Jersey City . with afternoon and evening trains of New , Jersey 11111roso for Philadelphia. Baltimore, and la'astoilgton: and at New York with steamers and afternoon Express trains for New England Cities. Also stops st eipal stations and connecting Points oil mkt line- Steeping 'Coaches soeompany this train to New York S:3B ain ..—ACCOIIIKODA.TIVIS =Ant. daily for Binghamton. 12:35 p.m.—DAY EXPRESS, Sundaysezeepted, sorting it Jersey City with naldnight Earnest train o 5 New. Jersey Wroad for Philadelphtt. Alta stops at principle stations and connecting pohatr on main line. New and improved Drawing-Room Coaches accom pany this train from Buffalo to New York. 3:30 p.m.—SCSQUEEIANNA DAY , I:30 p.O . —WAY FREIGHT. Randal* excepted. p MAIL. Sundays excepted: 8:55 p.m.—LIGHTNING EXPRESS, daily, connect. ine st Paterson foe Newark ; at Jersey City with Morning Exprvis Train of New Jersey Railroad for Baltimore and Washington; and at New York with Morning =press train for Boston and cities. Also daps at all principal statiWiliatiat necting points on Main line, Sleeping Coaches accompany this train f throtigh to N6w York. BAGGAGE CHECKED Trateuat • A relised and eareplete'.'POcket Time Tail" of rassenger•Trains on the Plcie Railway And con necting lines; has recently been published, and can be procured on application to the Ticket llgent of the Company. • • ' '- L. D. HUME% WX. D..-15A1tit, Gong &LPL . Gen't Pamir Met- Nr i aW .11 - OIITE TO PRILADTZ- CIZI NORTH . .PRSIS6ILTANI.A RAILROAD. Shiniest and most direct line to Madelphia. Dal• timore, Washingtoat t aild the Beath. Passengers by route tete Pennsylvania a sew York Railroad train. passing': Towanda at I:15 A.M., taste close connection at Bethlehem with Pl press train of !forth P.erm'a Railroad, and arrive In Philadelphia at 5:05 P, 3f., In time' to take.nlght trains either for the gonth or West. City passenger cars aro at the Depot en air . Iva of al trni convey passengers to the varioris Depots d to all parts of the' city. 7 ' nuprernm. • Leave 4 NoittiPetues Itailiidsd Depot, corner Derka and American streeV, Ptglidelphia, st 7:351 Id, arriving at Towanda 4:59 P. 3f.. same evening. Mann's Baggage Erpr se collects and delivers bag. gags, office No. 105 Sant I fifth street, Plittadriplibi. IitZIGIEVACCOWitODATIONS. reir.b,:t received at Front abd Noble iambi, rhila dclphii, and forwarded br Daly Past. Freight train toTowanda,and.all points in Susquehanna valley with quick dispatch. ELLIS CLARKE. Gen. A gt. N. F. n. r.. , Front and Willow Sta. Nov. 21, IriO. . Philadelphia, '7,liscellanoors. TAYLOR ' S ELECTRIC OIL ! TL:s 0:! has proven ltself a medicine usrarpassoi in-the cure of hheumatie lameness of use lead re ontward application. We defy the meth cal world to bring a material better sdapt:4 to the alleviation of pain and • lameness in M. or Beast than is this inediHne. It works upon the same min epic as its 41earest kin—Electricity ; and although. like all of our beet medicines, it sometimes fails, yet the cased of failure are very rare, and' are always complicated ones. It works like magic upon burns. frost-13it s. sting of bees. and all external poliOns, Every:latully should have it in cases of fresh-gut - a, bruises or sprains. It win not smart most med icines when applied to a new sore. Ills' no quack preparation, but, is composed.ofnine Of the best materials known to lescteria medico, compounded up. on scientific principles. As a horse nacilidne it is taking the leadpf anything in the market. Ilny it and try it. If Yon do not like it, return it -11114,re mire yourmoney bat*. For sale by all druggists and . dealers In medicine. Price $0 cents 'perbottle: 11. lIII,OWNOIIa TAYLOII, , Proprietor. Leltayerrnle, Pke de-c—ro.ts MISSES KINGSI.EI' .-2L-EATON Have opened knew DREss •SIASMI ESTABLISHMMST In the room over Miss Kingsley's Millinery store (one door sonth of For. & Mercur'sh where they are prepared to do air kinds of work in the Dress Mak ing line, at reasonable rates. • . raarox Time Of the latest . style received Si soon u published, They will also give itlftrUCtiOCl, in . CUTTLYG AND FITTING DllrqSl23. .IMCNIZ KreOKLEY, LTDIA O. EXTON. Sept. 22.10. MERCkRS• PAN TOWANDA, cSoccessor to B. S. Sur, ell & Co., Bakers.) Receives Devi Fits, Loans Idoten Macs Caw , tions, and does a GENERAL BANKLNG BIISINFSS, same •{ an Incorporated Bank- To persons desiring to Mead money to IVY PARS of the United State*, Canada or Europe, this Bank anus the best facititits and the lowest terms. PASSAGE_TICKETS To and trim Nora Scotia, England, Ireland. Secb. land, or any part of Europe and the Orient, by the RATED INMAN LINE' Of Steamers always on hand. • Bays and setts bold, &taw, tinned Stated Bonds at market Egad, f s The ale rthern• Patine 7 3-10 Bonds. fitr 3111673. President. - ; WiL 8. moon, caager. MEM it. i LOOK AT-:.1IS LIST I LApIII4.ii,IJPPMS t 1 J! f; 4 t i e M 4 i LADIES r O R GAITMS, (high cat) from .. sl 50 to $4OO GER TRAMS, 1871. • LADIES FOX GOAT POLISH, LADIES SERGE BUTTON, • from $2 25 to $4 50 By Trains KENS SLIPPERS, MENS LACE BALMO RAL . from 00 to $3 00 MENS CONGRPSS GAITERS, . ' ' froth $2 25 to $7 50 KENS CALF BOOTS, from $1 00 to sl4' 00 BOYS AITSSES SHOES, CRILDS SIIOES, And yon will See how it is that we ale now selling more Boots and Shoes, and G;TTLNG ovn CASE for MHANKIN-C' pur old friends for 4- their hearty endorsement of our new style of selling goods, we can assure them that as in pastl.years we have sold more Booth and Shoes than' any other establishment in To,v'auda, we propose to continue in so./doing; lied With this in view, have in stook the largest and most complete assortment of good ever exhibited in our store, flinging in grade from lowest to highest, and with prices for all the very' lowest km good work. CHASES OF .US YOU ARE BUYING SPHERE THEN IS AN ENDLESS VARIETY TO SELECT, FROM, WHERE 'YEARS j OF Et= REBEKKbE HAS 'I'AUGIIT WHAT THE PEOPLE WANT, WEEIitE BOOTS AIMP SHOES ,ARE. A SPECIALTY, AND NOT A SEC- N.D Alt T CONSIDERATION, WHERE CASH BUYERS BUY, AND THERE ARE NO BAD DEBTS TO MAXI/. tip FOB. mar.l3ll •.• . - TOWANDA., BRADFORD COIJNTY, 1 PA. ! 'APRIV-20 int"' . I . ~ Rm. cobutm. fo'nP()Pt?.ooo from 750 to $3 00 from $2 25 to $3 50 from 50c to $3 00 frimn A SO to A 00 from - 7? $3 00 from 2 . 50 to $3 00 EXAMINE THE GOODS, EXAMINE THE GOODS, 'EXAMINE THE GOODS, also , also also our stock of TRUNKS TRUNKS TRUNKS and and and TRAVELING BAGS, TRAVELING BAGS, TRAVELING BAGS, them than we were formerly tm der tho long credit, system IN MAKING YOUR 'PUR- : Humphrey Brother& apeu 22. leis. r, thrteb • When you meet with one suspected . Of some secret deed of shams, And for this by all rejecied • Ara thing devil fame, Guard thine every look and action„ Speak no word of heartless blame, , • For the slanderer's vile &traction `Tat may soil thy goodly name. When you meet with one Firming ' Ways the lost have wandered in, Yiorking cult his own midobm ' • Willi biatecklessbeesi slid sin; CT" Think, if placed is his exedition, Would a kind Word ha in min? ' Ora look of cold Win thee back to truth again? - There are spots Ursa bp sr Po &ovum Not because the soil is bad, But the summer's genial showers 'Never.rrialts their Weems es& Better have an act that's iindly Treated sometimes with , disdain, Than by judging Willi tdipd/y; Drive the innocimi,l4 pain. ME teiitanunn' • WHAT A WOXAI lEEDI3. I. In the changmg—silence of a wo- Man's life-so friumOtt with joy 'and suffering a man can never know---the loveand kindness ot a - true-hearted husband smooths every ripple of care from her heart and ins it with a last ing happiness. • • • Woman is great in her strength and weakness. Strong to suffer 'in mind and body, when supported by. the arms .of love, bid. old so w when unloved and unappreciated. In her weakness looking to man as her protector, if she fails to inspire him with a deep sense of his obhgal tion to guard her tenderly, lovingly, then is the-life of a Wife a failure. A young man who strives by in dustry, economy and good habits to become a reliable' -respected man among nien, finds the door- to some worthy, noble maiden heart open for his ag.mittance, and he can make a fair a.ioice in taking a wife. But if he has not cultivated the finer quell : - ties of his nature, even a true and worthy man will unwittingly wound the delicate, sensitiVe nature of his wife, and a longing, hungering void in her heart will not be filled. Men who-do not Study themselves and the nature of woman, may never hope to approach her most , sacred inner sold without desecrating and trampling upon . • precious, beautiful flowers, which, when understood, 'yield the) richest - perfume to life. Love at first sight is not the kind of devotion which may be relied up on to brave the stems of a lifetime ; but' when the heart counsels with I judgment and ieason at; to the adapt ability of natures I and dispositions, and all most heartily approve the choice, then may a man or woman believe in a lifelong happiness. Wo man must hare greater risks in the matrimonial compact than men, litit both need to ponder I.he step well be fore taking it. A young man who has no settled'imrposes or principles, no habits of industry, economy or ambition to be somebody in the world, need not expect to become a happy husband. Mif ho marries a woman of whom ho is worthy, she is 'not fitted to make a good wife. kid 'if by chance a silly, lovesick idea en ters the head of a really good girl who marries hini against the jnilg melt of loving parents, his own un steady life, will plant the weeds of discontent and unhappiness where flowers might have - blossomed. Suck a man cannot know what real happiness is. If a woman descends in marriage sooner or later she mug be dragged down to the level of her husband, no matter how high her Ambitions, how noble her purposei, hole fitted to shine among the cul tured and refined. - " To find the right ono I " - Ah, that were - n difficult task in deed. • Only 'the' uncertain Future can' prove the choice a wise one, or that hearth have been deceived, sacrificed upon unworthy altars, or thro xn up on the world for sympathy and kind ness. Love curdles at suchunfoldinents! And the world gives to disappointed hungry-hearted women the , sympa thy of the destroyer—the protection that N ' Volves give to lambs. Oh! it is a fearful thing:to "lovu--- 7 opening heaven's gate or hell's. Friendship were far safer.:-, Even in choosing a life companion a deep, earnest friendship based on harmonious natures and tastes,• is a. most scene foundation for a life hap piness. • Then love will follovi; Not the im petuous, sweeping, tempeet-tossing love, ce7paision which sfigids'itifury, and in the calm whieh:succeeds, rea son grades to a true b‘fi, or all 'is lost—but a deep, heavo-blessed .nn ion of lives, of purpoies, of interests, which make two - hearts at one and every day one of sunshine. , Appreciation, sympathy in her no blest thoughts and aspirations, a soul to walk'side by side in. closest com munion is what a woman needs, be yond the every-day kindness *and thoughtfulness for creature comforts. • 'But oh ! how thankfUlly would mul 7 titudes of noble women close the ner temple to all but: God, if_ their husbands would only speak. kindly sometimes, and not treat : them like slaves[of passion and servant of their wilf! Woman gives all to the man she marrie's. He holds the dearest hopes of her, life in his hands. , And how often does she pray to God, bathed in the misery of neglect and broken vows, that He will have mem, and take bark the life given only to tor ture and suffering.. Thottglitlesshus ban& ktibw not the' sadness which lives in the hearts of their patient, waiting wives. And there are secrete of broken hearts charged in a Higher Record against men whom the world flatters 'and introduces to a new life, while the first snows , are falling on a gFave. More kind in their- cold' parity— ' covering her- ; from the frosts , and Waits otwinter.—than. was s he who promised to ltive, cherish, and pro- Oh I AI men would be kind and true W. nxtr)rawrzas 11107[ :AirilgiAllllll. COUtMr.- and loving. s If thiSy.would haretiteli breath pure, and sired, that the home atMosphere might itc4 %fainted: - If they' would-le' prudent -and itidnie; thst'llie-groVring neheosities of their increasing Wallies might be applied, - • If, - they would speid iheir •ey upon devoted home once, rather +a ‘. upon heeitlidni, deceitful strangers r If world Infuse - to enrich the coffers of grog-sellers I - • Then would' him -Worn, drooling; despairing women look up, and, with now:hopes smiling von their leo" by energetic) devotiOn to home, hap puumut; bless husbauds and children,, who now wonder at negleciedduties, lost ambitions, and comfort ,dying oat in smoldering embers , upon the domestic hearth.--4/ut Orlou. tAes. 13 6 DEATH_ NOT. P • . The pain of dying must- be distill-, guished from the,pain of the previous , as e, for when life ebbs sensibility declines. As death - isrthe final .ex tinction of corporal feeling, so Jiumb nese increases as death conies on: The Kostratign of disease, ble health; ful fatigue, engenders a growing 'stu por—a sensation of subsiding softly into a coveted .repose, The transi tion resembles what may be seen in those lofty mountains, .whose sides exhibiting very climate in . regular gradation, -vegetation luxtiruttes at their base ' and dwindles in the lip preach to the regions of snow till its fullest manifestation is redressed by the cold. The so-called agony can never be more formidable than when the-brain is the last to go, and the pres.ervis to the end a .ratiOnal Cognizance of the state of-the- body; yet persons thus suited, commonly attest that there aro few things in life less painful than the close. "If I had - strength enough to hold a pen," said William Hunter, "I would write how . ,etisy arid delii;litful it is to die." "If this bodying," said the niece of Newtbn of 01r.ey, "its is a pleasant thing to die 7'; " the very expression," midi her uncle, "which anot her friend of mine made use of on her death- - bed a foijears ago." The same Words have' to often been uttered under sim ilar circumstances, that we could fill pages withinstances which are, only varied by the name of the speaker. "If this be dying," said Lady Glen orchy, ,"it is the easiest thing ilcallarri nable." "I thOught that dying had been more diffieult," said Louis XIV. "I did not suppose it was sb sweet to die," said Francis Suarez, the Span- . ish Theologian. An agreeable sur prise 'was the prevailing sentiment with them all; , they- expected the stream to terminate in the dash of the torrent, and they 'found it was losing itself in the' gentlest current. The whole of our faculties seem some times conentrated on'the placid en jOyment.- The daY Aftliur 31nrphy died ho kept repealitv from Pope: "Taught half by reason, half by mere decay, 20 113:103111111 death and calmly pass away." Nor does z trie.calm partake of the sensitivenyss of sickness. There • a swell ije the sea . the day Coil •g -wood breathed his hist upon th:. ele ment which had been the see e of his glory. Capt. Thomas expressed a fear that ho was disturbed by the tossing of the ship;' "Go, Thomas," he replied, "I am naw in a state in which nothing in this world chn dis turb me more. I am dying, and I am sure it must be consolatory to you and all who lolie me, to see how conifortably I am earning to my end." —Fonteneile on the Signs of" Death. . Puie llomura.-11Ound the idea of one's' mother'theinind of , man clings with fond affection; It is the- first deep thought stampbd upon our in fant hearts when yet-soft and caps bleof receiving the most profound imprestions, and the after feelings of the world are more or less light in comparison. Even in oni old age we look-back to that , feeling as one of the sweetest wo have through Oar passions and our willfulness may lead us far from the , object of our filial love; we learn even to pain her heart, to oppose her wishes, to violate her commands; we may become wild, -headstrong and angry at her coun sels or opposition; but when death has stilled her monitory voice, and still memory remains to recapitulate her virtues and pod deeds, affection, like a flower beaten to the ground by a past storm, raises up herheadtand smiles among her tears. Round that idea, as we have said, the mind clings with fond affection; and even why the early period of our lot forces memory to be silent, fancy takes the place of remembrance and twines the image of our dead carent with a gal landof graces and beauties and vir tues:-which wo doubt not islis pos sewd. larrxtriun Axe Nrcrssrrizs. —The re finements of increasing civilization transform what were once- deemed I luxuries into necessities.- People who have not passe' the meridian of life can see marked contrasts\ in the style of living in their. own - short lives; and how,much - greater the . contrasts' when the lapse, of time extends 'over two or, three generations! Carpets and chimneys belong now to" every cottage; but Queen Bess herself Swept her ermined trains °vat , rush-strewn floors, and noblemen ao sat blink- . ing in the smoke that curled along the rafters with no chance of escape. The potato came first to be stared at as.t curious tuber from South-Ameri can-wilda; and tea was sipped at great entertainments -two hundred years aga, as the rarest and costliest of drinks. We remember that nails and pito had their day Of value, when we, see in oldhouses the floor-boards fas tened down with - wOoden pegs, and consider that pin-money meant the greater part of - the eipeused of `the toilet. _ . I rain; who wished to invest the accumulation of his industry in Unit ed States securities,"yent to a bro ker's office to obtain treasury notes: The, clerk inquired: "What denomi nation will you have them, 141-r Hay ing never heard that Ard ::used' er cept to cruithlguish. religions sects, the farmer, after a little delibiration„ re plied: "Well, you May gives me part m Old School Presbyterian, to Awe the oitiladir, hut give.eie the heft ceil ha. Free van wad.- - REMO 1111120111 tAOTO LtittLii PHILOSOPHY. grg . t.tof Matter is siecepti blq of bemg- beyond any known limit of - melhemacal calcula-. tion. A single grain* of ranak it is said, will perfume a room containing 3,00000 cubits - inches of air for _sev eral years.. Andythyt air,l too, is ton stantly beulig changed, yvt so minute vided jii.thennudt. that every par field of air contains an atom of th e perfume. And Air' lian.y ' millions of cubic inches of air bare been daily imprigtuOd fin, years, yet the weight Of the grain of Musk has not sensibly grown less. . Newton tells us that the , thickness of 'a soap-bubble at the moment of bursting fs way_ the one-millionth part of an inch in thickness: ; . • Nothing connected with the ma terial world ised. 'By the learned it is aloud that not an atom of Matter luus bent)* from the earth since its Creation up to the preseist day : Not the .fractiOnal pot of grain does our globe weigh mores or less new thaw when it was " without form and void.k!' Change in , . form ore ocrastantly in-: progress, but no particle of matter is destroyed. Ap ply heat to ice, and water is the re sult; still more beat converts the wa ter into steam or teerial vapor, speed ily , condenses toilortn clouds, and soon returntto,earth in - the shape of rain, and gath - ered at night as hear en's dew. - Fire applied to Mood and. other combustible matter _ concerts' the mass of which it is compos ed into aslies i .Am3oke, gest" and stow% the weight of which' when collected and weighed r js found to be the same as was that of the original tOstanee When the' bodies of animals die and undergo decopaposition; it natist not be inferred that anything is 14st. Carbonic acid,. ammonia, and other substances are thereby generated which soon re -appear in the bloom. inn rote, majestic oak, or the modest violet. With nature nothing is lost; a greater economist than she cannot • . • With the exception of glass, all other kilown substances containpores or vacant spaces between the. differ ent particles of matter. In wood, sponge, and most varieties .sten , , these pores are the unaided eye. With metals. i is different. In some of theuith, high est magnifying powers.of the cros cope fail to detect traces.of orosity. But by other, mechanical su cans it is pr'oven that even Meta :' pores do ex ist. If a holldw* globe / of silver or gold, or ether met 'c substance be tilled with much fo C 8 in an iron \vise, the water 'will nde through , the walls of the glo T. W. Tindal , - GUNPOWD —When gv.ppowder vgts first iscovered to possess a pro-. petile I wet, its military application was • nfined to a kind of mortar ,or bo . are, intended as timbstitute for th enormous battering- machines en usually constricted. The cora= mencenieut of the fifteenth century wag the time of, their origin- in the for though the - more modern author, Vilani, asserts that they were used at the battle of Cressy, the more accurate Froissart is entire ly silent about them. • Bilius iaoble and learned 3ralanese, 'who lived at the time, speaks in his history of hand guns as first used at the edge of Luc ca in 1430. The Florentines had ar tillery., which discharged. large stones by means of gunpowder. "But the Lucchess" says Bins, "besides darts and arrows, invented a new kind of weapon; in their hands they held a kind of club, about a cubit and a half in length; to this were attached iron tubes, which, being filled with sill pher and nitre, by the force of fir emitted iron balls. The. blow; if it struck, - was certain destrUction; nei ther armour nor shield were sufficient protection for often two or three deep, if fired upon, would be transpierced by a single ball." . YOUNG MEI, ,DON'T DO, IT -No, young men, don't do it.. Don't mar ry dimples, nor ankles; nor - mouth i nor hair, nor necks, nor teeth; nor. chins, nor simpers.. These - bite: and scraps of feminity are very poor things to tie to. Marry- the 'true things—look after congeniality . , kin dred sympathies, disposition, educa tion, and if this be joined-with social position, or even filthy lucre, why, don't let them stand in -your way. Get a woman—not one oftin* par. : lor automatons that sits down just Ao, thumps on a piano, and dotes on a whispir. Living statues are poor things to call into. consultation. The poor little mind that cn scarcely fathom tie depth of a dress- - trim ming, can't lie a. helpmate of any ac count. " Don't throw your time away on such trifling things t A O. P. J. A,ceetrxr.-:= l Tai Cooke, of Philadelphia, early in his career read " Gold and the Gospel;" andre 'solved to take Jacob's'pledge, " 01 a that Thou shaltgive me, I will sturely give the tenth unto thee. Ile diiec- , red his .clerk to open an account with 0. J., (Old Patriarch Jacob.) and to credit to it one tenth ofall the corn missions that. came into theri office. -Some of the largest financial transac tions'of the country havebeen intrust ed to the film of-Which he is a-mem ber, and its suocess is oneoT the won dens of the land. ,' 0. P. J. account must now amount • to a. sum that Would take the "figures of five places to express. When 'asked how he could afford to give such large con tribuerons, he says, "It don't' cost me anything; it's the Lord's, money I ' RN PALEazabou.-='The first sin Axamnit tea in-this world was a lie, and the liar was the devil. The Nee s; who allowed their deities almost every weakness and,uvery _via3,. held that they foxleited heaves!' by Idsehood, an, and Oath vies as sacred tajupiter, the clOud-coropeller, as to the meali est denizen of earth. A. *card: to truths is the first of all• virtues unit sumsed high cultivation. •The say- . ago is full - effalsehapd, bekth e and deed; the ignorant Dien *ill •de-, ceive when he:can, but learns to keep his word when-he has given ituaim porbuat port of truth but' not tho wholes =2= ;! rim) nt "BEET soorn- =.- ThoOkostm Conuneivial Bulletin ins this to - say conterning inebriety among" hishionable ladies,".and the ,probable - causes : : .We hope that the fltartling statement of a contempora ry,,about ' the 'tendency to inebriety among the- "fashionable " :ladies " of Gotha - in, is greatly. exagerated:' But that it haiC.some .fotuidation; Imors than: rumors have,' for some time poet, is „clearly betrayed. ,And , if there are., such - cartes in onr "best so-: ciety, ciety,"- becoming' pearly more fre quent, the warning cannot startle too* mu., no ,csll attention too win to this- .. : . ,It may c?be argii - 4 - iithat aninke.' , ess is Just' as'bad •hi the poor woman at Fire Pointe, as in the lady in Satin and lace who lives in Fifth Aienue. - And so it is. Yet, since the latter is, or is suppoied to be, :refined. and ;cultivated, and there foregmows better; since the fine lady has not the- poor excuse which the . poor woman pleads, of hard drudgery, fehr congests, and,.iisnally, ill usage by braid husbands, her . -excesses would seem- to betray an:. alarming tendency in -all society, and would indicate that the - evil is spreading =ire rapidly and ; widely' than .413 e public are aware. - - - Society is necessarily - Corrupted by a.sensitional andiremoral .press, b.. loose noyels, "by indeceitt plays, ',by a di the frequent recurrence; tnpura ed, of commercial defalcations, hi ntic railroad swindlei, and • o ffi , Ilia honesty. The frequent 13"i tur e) .- ning of such , things, • th e epee etriacitil of them, (for it is encouragement to. purchase the bad literature, to make heroes of railroad swinfficia, and to keep rascals in pulke offices,) dulls the moral sense ,Of pUblic opinion. 7 So, too, s oci e ty; 'especially the fen3i nine half of it cannot- yield uncon taminated t the , rage - for fashion, / the excess of dress and fashionable dissipate the ambition to excel in frivolitiand the easy admission to ifs eix)ifcs. of adventneera and impos . tors/who happen -to be- rich. When 79 think of the tremendons- indu ces which the devil can bring to sear upon society, and t4O 'semenr dons victories he is .gaini'ng in this . very Matter , of dulling and 'so' cor rupting public- opinion, we may be no longer -very muclir surprised to hear of the sudden illness,' in the street, of the'" lady leaders of lash:: ion,"'the cases of fair. young ; ladies who have deliritein. tremens, and the sad filling tip andteenstant recruiting `of the - private inebriate asylum. .: We need a hea4tlner' tone in our ctuTent , litenitinee; in our public bod ies, in Comnierciel circles; until there is such a healthier 'tone, society is to beinfected by the contact' of easy Morals around it. -. '.. "WANTED, A. BOY TO AWNDEAE,." . • The paper dropped frotk my hands as I read thiS advertisement: • ri ;seemed as though I had read, " Wanted, a boy to send down to perdition !" . . '. i °I fancied I saw -a bright, cAlikest boy going t 6 a 'bar-roOrn, seeking" a. living by tlrat fearful trade of selling wine-and rum. I-could imagine how, one by one, _all the good impulses. 9ml desires lie had-in: the beginning; fell before the evil inflUences - of the dram-shop; bow he learned to drink, to swear and'to steal; howhad cora h panions Caine around ' , and lealped him on to min:. - - Al, my lad, or. who T e• r you are, who may be; tenipteil by such-lcall, let me tell you that you, may, better workin the field, or at a forge, "or digging ditches, or anything--honest, khan to degrade. yourselfV - Y selling death to others. - 14ZO matter how hard you work, - no matter if it , soils yourhandi or elOthes, so tong as it leaves your heart pure; .-Beware of all such' "good place's " as -will lead you into the snares of the .evil one: There are many doors, besides those of bar-roams, - which are - almost the same as gateways down -to the world of woe.-4iforning Light. •i We clip the following truthful notice, Complimentary of Hon. 11. Maim, our, ntember of „ ongre 4 sn, from ► Washington letter te the Binghamton Y.) Daily Republi • . "Many of the old ',members re elected to, the XLlst Con'gress, who have not been abli` heretofore td reach a chairmanship, on account of the: senior right of older, Members; Cvill come to the front rank in the present.dongress; by. being placed ht the _head of important committees. The . , Hon. 'Ulysses Mentz, of the' xmth ve4nsylviiniatsdistript, who is a lawyer of eminent ability, and who was during theTast Congress a mem ber of tha,Judiciary-Committee, will for the present Congress be . made chairman of:one of the most-impor tant Committees of the Howe. It is not possible for 'a new'raember. to reach such 'a - position. 'He may by ability ana activity become useful .but he cannot gain, that subatan prominence in the public estimation which is achieved 'by being at the head Of an important committee: Hence the folly of - danstint change; ,of representatives." Tristan Om -- 2 ,6 We are. judged usually by our public ;sum:3Bes, `by the esteem of distinguished persons; but the real test of character is the feeling of those b6foro whom u 4 e, play no-part. What does the nurse in the nursery think of us, or the por ter in the store ? If amait's children confide all-whom he em= ploys at litufia . and in business feellhat he is full of thought and sympathy for them as brethren ;if those "who * meet him perceive Abe 'Charm of his urbanity, and as thciy diaw nearer and know „Id= _betteir, honor and love him more and more, we marbe very sure helm' the no blest human qualities, whose intlu ,enee will be a possession to' us for- • A roim 3 o Irishman, who 'had mar • tied when ho was shout 19 jean -of aRo cont. plai,r4og of the dials:n:llW 'to- which his oorly marriage had subjoctod him, -said Do woul d never marry so young again if he lived,to bo es oldie Methusalemn. , • • bigamist doctored, • that,.. wilts A1%1414133, two boot eat oats. NIMER 47. TY.'" - - 77 .- - * TErliniritrirlir':-' in the endeavor to-discover ow which hand sud'ein which. Anger- the wed ding .ring was placed. The4ewe haves tradition that *au; when she • evoutied joseph,lrecemed, the ring on her-middle finger, homee no . Jew- - _ ish - woulan wears her bridal' ring - there, but ailways, _ on. the -forefmor. 8t Ambro , *, m one , of hie - sermon% - sills the t llnger.the finger, fee the zing . Meerolurfsgivee_ths -eur- - sexy lIIIMCS Of the fingers in the times of the Ilonxims; die third finger - is. celled unsfilari4; the - law . Norman ... -name for the slime - Mil*:is "Jan of the seals." In thii, , anment - ritual of marriage amonglife Englislt.Bap--- tists, the ring was phiCed.on the end of the left - thumb, 'with the words, - "In the name . of the , Father," thou , on the forefinger, with the words, - " and of the Son," then on the mid- dle finger, "and of the Holy Ghost;" finally, on the third, the -114 g finger, with the closing word,"Amexi-", The ancient Greeks used this finger; el- so because they believed 9.:•neryq , run directly from this fi ger n - to` heart. Lemnins says I,t is not an er-, tery, but a vein ; -and Modern science shows that there is nothing, ' of the kind in existence.' • the right hand is thehand of/pow er,; hence the wife wears the zing on the left hand. The third ,finger is the only recognized ring finger,. though it is true that the 'statues of the gods had their signets on the forefinger, _both is-Greece -and in Italy. This waaonithe rig.ht hand, but, from convenience and long es tablished crastoin, the 'left hand is' now generfilly,considered 'the right hand, and the least finger of that hand holds the ring. Lelnnius says the same tnger.was called Idedicus, for, ."oryitccount - of the virtue it de-- rives from the heart, - the old tianse".would „mingle their medica, Merits and potions with this finger, b use no venom Can stick upon the ery outmost part of itcnit' it' will . offend a man andiconimtmicate itself % johns heart." Some married;Women - are ao superstitiously in their notion respecting the wedding, ring, that they will never, evenlfor a smo 'went, take it off their finger, extend rug," it would seem, the expression, " till deith do Us pad," even to this; golden pledge to matrikaony. TILE RAILROAD TROODLES. /Th . Senate4nclieinry,'Conl" mitteo,, to whom was-,referred the difficulties between the. Coal and ilaiiroad'eciin paniesand the mineis/ha.ve made a lengthy report, embraCing. a resume. of the evidence taken in carious parts 'cif the state; Ou •the general Ties tlon of limiting ; the eltargeS,for trans portation, the report is as follows "It becomes, then &n important inquiry • ascertain to ellaePent Alm Legislature Lazy " . interfere 4,r) regula t e the rates of freight. In this conntetion it it proper to remark, that we have not: 'en able to exvalue and collate all the railrtted charters rtranted previous to tlei „- general riot on that subject, passed on the lf.llQ - . .. - day of February, ISt3. 'TO consider, air these, • - with their numerptisSsupplements and amtnd-, meats ; covering a period of twentyyeara,liotild occupy months of close arplication..- So far, however, as the Committee - have been able to examine them, Wey find the directors 'clothed . 1. 'with the power of fixing a =that= rate of freight. even higher than is 4 now generally charged, trod- questionable-arhetBer this • power can he taken from thong without an . in- Iringement of their franchises:. So•long as they -:' • keep within the masinrunt, it is a question fur the courts to .decido whether the public can• rhaVe \ redress, provided they do not transcend- , chartered limits in other respecter •••. •• !charter is ack eitten contra - et betteea,tho ple 7 throtigh the j.egisrature—and,a-linmber • of citizens, raider which, in consideration of eertaitcp - rivilegei, the latter invest their money.. It is just as obligatory-bn troth parties as a con tract made isetween•individrials, and ~the eanio law prevails for enforciOg_ it. . •'• • • " In adtlition.to the gray e con.stiti —"rational cult, we are entifronteil,43:r practical most diflieuli if 1.4. t iiiipb , ssibio to ovcr ermie. •- A rate of freight:N:l4h wmi reasonaLle_ year might, from- various canses, to very na reasonnble the' next. The difference in grad.: worild _teak°. a Ilse,' rate 'fasoral4e to some roads, and very-nntair ethers, while the iu tricate problem of the arrangement of rates fr local zinct through freighl,. would demand for ita solution a period of titno utterly beyond thu coniramid of your Committee." - • Wiurn, the - Repubßean racial lier - of the Committee, gave notico that'll() did not sign the report, !init. that he should ."present ti:minoxitr report. - . • ' Disoystid, en .—A few day ,, _ since tfiere were several persons in house where there was a young child some, two or three days, old—among ' them a black : eyed boy bi fora' Sutd mers. Wlrall the grandmother soon after, eame inewith the baby in her aims he was much "pleased - ivith- it,. - 3dssed it, and evinced every symptom .. of delight; asked his aunt where she got it,and was told she bought itof Dr: Adams; then asked how: much' sho gave for it. She told him ten dollars. He then stood , by:her - lap, - on which the' child was laying 4leep ; his eyes beaminn , with, -intense satisfaction: The ba be Boon ' - awoke and squalled - I vociferously.. Instantly his counten ance fell; and'with utter ilisost pic tured on his face, he. urned , and • • "Aunty,-if I was you, 'l'd take it back to Pr. Adams and 'get my ten dollars again 1" ' _ Ser JErr Darts DAVIS has taken oh fresh courage. He feels -his heart strength : - cued withifi • him. Whether it was McCrealy's•insolent speech in Con gress, Blair's.re-adoption of his old infamousletter; or the revolutionary prpcCedings . of the Democracy that has produced .thiS -- eilect cannot bo certain,* 'but probably all .combined.- At al events he has been making .speech at Selma,Alabarna, in resp,onse to ri serenade, in which lie .asserted "be Would yet live to seethe s:lverit-,m -ty of the tates-vindiehted." If Jit:.4- tice had been meted out toibim, he would haye lived tong enough, at all - ilvents, to have seen the soverignty of the .United Stat4P3 vindicated. Atlength'the question of nat uralization, which has been an open one• involving much petty annoyance.' and, trouble, has been settledbetween thb 'United States and Great - Britain according to, tbe. treaty negotiated lifiniii . ter Montt at the court of St. ainaes, and ratified by• the Senate. •V i nder its proviiions from henceforth the subject' of Great Britain is fully privileged to-renounce all-f4legianes. tO that Government and become •citizen of tins .Gauntry, American citizen is privi leged in Great , Britain)fo renounce allegiance tu ouraCoserninent and beoome a citizen there. i The Democratic, leaders' hart_ a great 4ealio* say about likpublicah corruption and . •extrainanr,o, but forget t&say what is true, that whop." ever and wherever they haie been power, Democracy and corruptioke. were recognized by the people as al. : most the same terms. W© have only to refer, in prbaf of this, to Mr. 13x•- crusiN's adMinistration,. tp his die , cessar,.Jurssson' Dews, and,_ recently, to the State. of New York. The.DemocratioLadmin*ration iu the State named has got so low as to cease to care for.publio opinion. EEG