. . . . . .-. T r OF PUTILICATION „ . . - ' . . rtiE r. xi RE X' if pabllabed Ovel7 Thuv.day Blaming by S. W. Awrosri` ot Two I.y .lars.kr annum, In advance. ..,-- - • 1 i e -.tidverlialtig in all eases exclusive of sabscrip. ti ,, wi to tbo paper. •:---i-... SPECIAVICOTIGES Inverted at irtrrusts MSS per tt -, or first insertion, OW Fits ours per limp for abgv,inent iimelons. r , -. . . Luca!, No:ricEs, game style is reading matter, r w F.Nrr enrrra a lino. - miVEICIVII.M.EIiTS aill belt:se:led according to .., , .0 itAlualug bible of rites.: • I *. I .4w 1 -. 2 ra i am Sa 17r. I ,i.sp:.[ 5.00.1 , a oo 7ltiohom j 200 - CUT' 8.00 I 10.00115.00 !MOO lin,lirA J l 2.50 1 1.00110.00 13.4 X 20.001 30.00 j as o 0 ronmirl 5.06 jif. 4 in, hi s i6,0(11 2.0.00 {'30.00 1 40.00 1 55:09 (46A0 ri6 - .00.1 40.00 I-60.00 I 80.00 1 $lOO.l $l5O .kliainlatrator'a and Executor's Hotket, $2 ; Audi- Noticen, $2 59 ; Enaineas Cayda, nue hum (per 'sear) f 5, additional liner; $1 _ Yearly adverti %era are entltkail to.4narteriy change*. Transient adKortisementa mind be paid for in mimeos. Li,ionitions of Asno*ticms ; Comnirmioattena - 4 limited oiindtchlnal Internat, and notices of :Mr r and Deaths, exceeding five linen. are charged Y.S krT.STS ner lino. . , ftentrrrilt having a larger circulation than all th- pa0,144n the county combined. makes It the best mediont in Northern 'renneylranla. ril I SVING of every kind. in Plain and-Psocy ro',;rl, d-m , with neatnerm and diffrateb. liallang. Blank?. rile, Pamphlets. Billhesda, Statarsenia.,ko. carh-ty end style, printed. at the ahorteat 'The lir.ronrrnt Office 4a well supplied with 1 , • . r Pri.sseft. a Roca aeenrttncntof new type and , trling In the Printing line can be executedlu ;, • m a , tartistirt manner and at the lowest rates. 1; , .: N. is INVARIABLY CASH. BUSINESS CA3DS. - - ct- M. TINGLEY, Licensed Atte -4 limn', Pa. All calls promptly atfend-,'! t 1da79.1.810 NIT 'WALLACE KE-EL:E - ti 11 • 'torsi% SIGN AND FRFSCO PAINTER, V -ratita. Sept. 15, IRTG-yr • . , [D - NY, lIIIDDP,LL §A.NDERSON ltinere and. Slif - ppert of the ANTIIRACITE COAL, InAr.l'll • Towanda. ci.4IIIR & VINCENT/INSURANCE V;ENVi. —Office formerly ,t:imlnA•4l by M u ond.d(xle suntth of Wiod Home. may10..70 =in T) FOWLER, REAL ESTATE I • IM.!...U.Ert. Nn. lea Waablncton Strypt. be. !.• Lasalle and Wells Rtrords. Chicago, Minot& plareNaKeil and sold. Investments made moury Loanod. W 4710,10. • --- - rIIAKTNG, PATTERN II r curixr, AN T 5 EFTING In iR fashionable . A 4,prt • Iti2oMta in "lNercttra 'New over Porter k Eirhy's Prng Rtnr*. MTh. 11. F.. GARVIN'. 'i • ,nn.ln. Pa.. April 13. 16;3: T AIR WORK OF 5. .m h ax CTIRL.C. BRAIDS, t.. 1 nnli• in the bent ',tanner nnaintest •• • rd t,,r, 4s , 'Barber Snap. Trrrn. rnnsonnbll. I 15,69. - 1. - INN - I.( )11T) 11110 S., Geiu-ra/ Fire rvr ir,. .1 qPO COVering 11.11-ightning. in Wynmlnp. .1 •.1!: r' t. GAYV ntfl. "May 2.:3/71, 1 - (11T7c: 1)17707 L 011 .1 :,,S'.11-FT17, 11- , 4,- PA., 1,1-9,partioulpr Att,nttnn to • 51' . 101 , . Ti!ro • .1-!, 1: , c. 3V,11; 11112I , , fl•t1 , - • 1712.1: 1 , (7 ). t rA 1 7 :k:,NYP A CICEIt. ITAS F. ~ •: `Tc,ty.: o . 11 to .1..1.t,v ("ATLI hIING • 2 . Work of ' • .n t..t3-1, 1 2.11 AV()()T,EN 'MILL A .1 •I ',I 11. to ;I.nt .. 1 . hintly .11 itrand WoolnT, :4)•11‘111:in.ls at le; .:1 71\1(111 R 1110 , Allktri. PrnilriOnr. , 1 1 4 S I . C1 7 S S S f GENLIZ AI. .1' 1: - .1 .N aENCI, ,11,,11 , 11113..t0rkr of thr,-•l.•brat. , l Iron .• St. 1.1,ikt.. I • Prio• `l-131 of the Worl!t•s Great ;1 , 1. , n. The .•ItialeAt rxhiNte..l. mar:29.'71..1m ' l - 1 . N" Blt OTHER, =ME • PELTS, CALF- IMIIIIIMI 0 .. 3: vrii••• Is 1.141 ft all `,l I I • l• t • • • ,) .• T,IPN..,t,',NIIk 1 . I7N; 01.',1tTGN HAVE .•..- O&M. in TONVallth,lltltkr the • t F. 7sl '•• eQ. - - Bills of .E•cchatos, and . N-w York. l'hiladelpbda., and all •. 1 o f the riefea Kt:ll4V., ea alk , n England, dor- T„ I„:uumoney: n.oelye deposits,•.: 11, a gl•nOral flu 111011,C IMaina.M. 'lra' if Vl' , late llrrn of Laporte. I . oo,„ •r,,,001a..1`a.,,and his knom lexign 01 Rradronl and adjoining conniipa . in the banking bnvinonn for about •• . • malta thy. 1001.1 a darlrable one through plake Nu.scs. MI. 1. ' A. G. MASON ‘TEW II NI! "E Vb . " G A NDEO W P/1/CES! 1T 11 , , Nr.orrr,clN, PA. T 1; ACT & HOLLON, inor.weries' and Provisions. Prngii . Kero.une Oil. Lanips, Chimneys, . In. , !!!!tuds Taint'', Oils. Varnish, Vs , ;;k eji.ori! sod Sn - uff. Pure Won and tho 1,.,t finality, for medicinal prirrosl4, li! i!!!!!!!!, at the 'ref,' lowest prinks. .-elopounded at all hairs of the: I Give ,is a call.. h• N.• • It ,lal ti TRACY At "111.)1.:LOS 1. 1, 1 . .1111‘.. 11t69--.Iy. ( !'.I 1.1 VP I'ASiNGE FROM. OR TO i,.•!:!,.INI),()R•ENCTLAND , „t. "olCio oti . .‘l.l Lnavk Ntar.Linn” of Lir .l 1+.1,4.4.5 frbm or -to London. =8 1.5 I:cland and Scotland pay- nppfy to Wilbano , k Gniop, 1,, I*. NIA!, )N LanbTg, t i ()1 Z 1,1 N E V'. 1... , •1ay sailial:zy. - andj •101 , 1311.11t:Ills . z.1,11'ast-ow , •ra. < - f ,11.• 1,111.. t cc-' Tr -1.0.-, 314 1111,,1 OEM jvj;l ))L I : : : 11: rr. ;:;. sTrEn 1!,!: - .1;', I .:rs )111,1, ;N . [ A U BUCKWHEAT MEAL A n . P.E ED :.nrl 1 ,, r CASA c.l \NTH, ".: qualittty 1.`1.:10 C.ll - litiA .sgr.. I fr I )1,1 V,,tig...r llr la` iaken evq:Vll4 , .. for . 5.1'1.1 - A" - X.FI,(qUIZING LL lt9S, P.l g.re tliat flip ucw -I:I,OtAtING 11111 111/:1 *lSt 110 ill pre 0$ line ou s!iort notice. ~' :TNI, I N,i.I", -O NEQS THE SAIIE, LAY TilkT IT IS IZECTIVED It!'" Ilona. Corp 11044 kr alwayd vu luud and tort Rile at . .1 NOTft...Tersone livlage Ort the the ricvr dr*irinst to Pstrgnile / 31 1 mill * w • th , :rforryage paid, both way., when they Irishati arid upward*. 8. .14.17211. 11~ ES AND' CRACK ERS. -GRE h&jtch How, °magi!. Itatsott,:tetn• ' n ;110 ilillyer, Cake*. Waehit%ton Jutabko 'and t. , d , 'lliscint. and 'Atkin& of Crankera at • Match 4. . W. A. ROCKVIELIAL 8.00110.001,$ 15 AJLAVCOEL.I3, Publisher. VOLUME XXXII. - P710123816NAL . JAMES WOOD, ArroimEr • Awn CorsazuEß AT LA.W. T 01111.11411. Pi. IiTENRY PEET, ATTORNEY AT JUL LAW, Towitula., P. Jaw 27, 'M IATM. FOYLE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Towanda, Pi., Moe with Malan Smith, month aide Mercurio Block. , April 14, aEORGE D. MONTANYE, AT- Pine Sam ILA TOW=app AT etite P LIR. P atter 0111 CO—COMM Sta te Of . Kiln and * 's Drag NFT.LY, DENTIST. . OF- W. fici, orbr Wickham k Towanda, Pa. May WI. 10. t- ,- . - • R. IL WESTON, DENTIST.- • • (Moe In Patton's Block. o, Gore's Dntg and Chemical Store. Jan). 'fa . P.. WILLISTON. ATTOBNET AT LAW„TOWLICIDA. Beath fads of liforear's New Block. rip stairs. 4: A prll2l,lo—tf. IT B. Mc KEA N, ATTORNEY .1.1.• atm Cotrwszwin AT Law, Towanda, Pa. Par tkaLlar stun land to badness In tho Orphans' Court, - jet, 20. '6l. w CARNOCIIAN, • ATT()R -• KIM AT LAW= ai rarator for Engl. ford County), Trap, Pa. loads and=pt. tr runated. 61112. Tk D. C.' -DaNiTTT, Attorneys-d -o Towanda. Pa.. hating fanned a celled nerehtp, tender their pretessienal . services to the public. Special attention erre to EVERY DEPART. MViT St the buidneest, at the county wet or else. JACOB DaRITT. D. =TM'S DaWITT. Torrauna, Pa.. Dec. 12.1870. where TOHN N. CALIFF, - ATTORNEY U AT LAW. Towanda, Pa. Piet&mbar Weston sly , en la Orptuoue Court badness. Con fill and Collection, Sr Mos to Wood's new Wet; south of the Virat National Bank. up dabs. Feb. 1. 1871. * ... _ H. WARNER, - Physician and fa surgeon, Leßayavtlle r , Braltord CO, Paz All call" promptly attended to. Moe first door south of Leßaystilla House. - . -. . Sept. 15, 1870.-yr fI.EOROE . SANDERSON, JR., kft• Philadelphia, Attorney ..tit - law. Mice with Samuel Robb. Esq.. 230 South Fourth atrret. !Mini mum in any of the permit ermrts of Philadelphia promptly and faithfully attended to. :meld:7l4m il VERTON k ELSBRE.E, AI-rou x r . !ores AT Law, Towanda, Pa., having often , into comrinerabip. offer_ their - profeewlemal service to the public. Special attention given to btiaine a in the Orphen'a and Begtater'a Courts. api le 0 E. omarroN. 3n , . It. C. ne a. _ . . AfF.IRCUR k, DAVIES, ATT n 11- 7 1. WETS AT LAW. Towanda, Pa. The nude limed ha, tug toortehtte4 themselves together In the mrtiee of Law, offer their proferaional services to tit rotate. I , INSSI..'S MERCUR. W. T. D'G'IES. March 9. 19:0. - • • B. M. PECK'S LAW Mlill Are( i. oppeFit.4l:e Cnnrt llonvAoti - inda. Pa. / ' :TI.T. 27.'70. 1 _ - / - .. . A -- .A:' KEENEY, CO,,tINTY . SU . • I'EREs.ITENDENT, Towanda. Pa. Ottlcti with It, ',.1. Pert, scrod Anne below; the Ward. House. Wilt be at the office Use tact Saturday of each month and at all other timer when not called away on trnst -111-co connected with the finperitendeney. All letters should hereafter he addressed/sicabove. dee.1.70 B EN .. 11 00 . D7ir , NI-. D. , ToWANDN. TN OIT”r. hi. pintexiiirittal the 111',1140 AVy... 2111.11i1q end Vicinity. tiffh-c .and realtlenco at A.. 1. I,l6sfl's. _TWIN W. MIX, ATTORNEY- AT Towaudgi, / braqinvd co—Pa. Parttenlarattenti on paid to Colirctiona and Orphans' Court business.pftlee—lfercur's 'Sew !Mock, north aide Public Squat°. ape. 1. 'so, „/ DUSENBEIIRY, would - nfmtier that in efnplianre with the r..qnoltt of hig.Onnmerons friends. be is now prepared to admin. I.ter Nitreug/Oxlde, or Langldnr. Gm!, for the.-pain- I of .teah. linynnalle. ?tiny 3, 11 4 76.-1 y - rilOC•t011. 0. LEWIS, A GRADE of the College of ••I'llynteinns and, llturgeonn,"„ New It'rk city, Chien 11i13-1. gives exelnnite attention to the rrarti , n• of Inn IM,reg.inTl. Mire and renntenee en tho n:lstorn slope of (travell If ill, adjoining Henry Hot e'n. tan 11. '07. TAR. D. I). SMITH, .th'iitoct, has porehagell iVood'n property. between .r. roor'm lli. d and the, Elwell Mow!, where he has hosted hip °thee. Teetlt Vltrnetril wit.bent pain by n. ~e of aq• Towand t. Oct.. 20. 1017(1.—yr. 3:* HOARDING.—A: fe .v boarders can ,secure firabclesi rooms with board. by apply ing at No. 32 Second Saved. F. E. POST. _. . . WARD HOUSE, TOWANDA, PA. On Main Street, near the C,onrt Wane. ors. 11186. D INING ROOrMS IN CONNECTtO"; watt THE SIASERY, :Sear the ...... trt MIT*. We are pr pared to feed the hungry at all times' of the day sue erening. Dilaters and lee Cream In their seasons. :Starch :T O , OvIO. D.*, SCOTT It CO, EI it WELL HOUSE, TOWA.NDA, JOHN C. WILSON - Haring leaned OAR now iTafly to aceotnmo- Aste - the trlivoling public. • No palnw notexpense will be spared to give satisfaction to those who may giro him a es,IL SW - North wide of the publir weptare, mat. of "Ater enen new block. ppreltaeed and thoroughly refitted tide old and wal-Imoirri stand. formerly kept by Actin' Grif fis. at the moujh of ittrinmerfteld . Creek. to ready to giA FL good areommodationr, and satlafactory troatrgent to all who inny favor him with a call.. ' Dee. fi:t, grA--tf. • `II impr,,c -c.,,,f,q. and IZIM OEM MEE 1.1111111111=t11113 111.101 . int• it I rtt , P. r fur 1, I N141:1;s: o*: i;;;‘)TI.II.T.S. • t., 31 ntral 1' I. IN'7l .The undersigned having flite.l np fhb. hoopoe for a 11,4 , 1 and It tanrant, nil , n for business (ay Ist: 1%471. 'Flo oldie wil tin very neat and cont. ntoiliont._,booae. S laical J:ntortainmenta. to gether with four of t 1 ant Billiard Table% in <lig se , tion. All are invit•tt to call and riatnine for ttionva•lves. . - C. ~ W. ri , cixwEl . p 1.191 1 . AfKE. .. v., m vElz. I a _ _ . i? ', PUYSICI.VN AND stutoEux, CIENLICAI., IXSURANCE AGENT Hotels. C. T. SMITH. Proprietor R UMMERYLEID CREEK HO- PETER LAND3fMSER; HOUSE;_ TOWAI),S, I= The Ilor.•es, Ifarne.et. J:c. of guest, of thli4 11 , 4,e% insured a{, , ainst ioo by Fire, without any CS. tr., charge. A ~111,n or quality of Old E.b tiwh 11 •junt r T. R. JORDAN. T‘e.van , ta, .TAn. Pi'oprirton. 11:11A1 ) 10111) HOTEL, TOWANI)A, PA I"irc stilownlicr basing loascil and lately flirt np tio• abocc Mulch latily kola by hint as a ',aloof' aid. utruling l uj out south rulr of nett to,the rystl , rtuid, is nuuw prep:q.t.( to I:ty•rat s;is pyyttlyv nOh good accohladation on rest t-uttabl- or c,,petout; mill be rd tttttt .14('• tho)• • •• - calling on Ititn. Hia 1 , I. with clioicr Ivranyl, of l'i im tlacta, Lii i inuni, X. St - tluling - Tidy tiola. hints 1.1471.*t0l ,:tlay72 Proprictivr. I . T.LAN . TIC HOUSE, SECOND STREET, BETIVI;g".!: B1:11/ 6F. SINE STIa:ETI TOWANDA, PA NIIW PLANING MILL! MATCVING, 11143.1NT1N6, MOULDINOS, At the old .tatifivif 11. 13. Inghani's„Woolen Factory and sawmill, in CKSIrTOWNf rr.tN'A A HEAVY SIX Huj.l. TLAN,,NO AND HATCHING 51kCIIINE In cbargn cf au experiPnoul - Weltainc and builder the public 111.1 y expect a GOOD Jul: EVEILY 113.1 E. From this recent wolarnenient this water power, work can be done at all aca•una of the year and boon SA sent tn. In connection with tha saw-mill we are able to furnish bills of &awed lumber to order. - STEWART BOSWORTH. Caraptnan, M* NOTICE, TO C • t,PENTEIIS ! The nudeisignett have made *vraugementa to to. pure - Cartratees CIIESTB OF TOOLS, covering them umr.usyss WET NAY es. 1.11 deatring such insurance are respertf ally invited to give eke a call CAMP 4t, VINCENT. ban. Insurance Agts., Threads, Pa. D EII:EMBER THAT FOX KER. AA, CUR are retailing all kinds of Groceries at irnoleadeprices. The largest stork in town. Goods Sret dam. Prime low. R. T. TOT. Sept. 71:70. ' REX= VERGTIR. II • , MI BEE TABLE OF THE BIILLI *A2I k ERIE ItAIIMOAD.—TaItne teed-on 17, Jan. 23, 187L1 CWARD. rzsrnina. nowntwann. a. ai • P. I. T. M. a oN) TOWANDA = 12:1 7:10 8:10 BARCLAY JUNCTION 17;10 • 7:00 8:30 .... ..,MONROE 11:30 6:40 9:05 WILODEN 11:13 6:06 3:35 ....NEW ALBANY :... . 11:06 5: 9:25 IIILLENII...:.. 10:33 5: 9:50 DIINNORE 10:30 3 1.. U. , h. it. T lif. R. Y. DMA . • Genl Passenger A L IN EX! IN Y. 2.30 2:40 3:00. 2:35 3:45 4:20 Y. 11311 'MEW ROUTE TO P : . t EL- A-N "IA NORTH _PENNSYLVANIA P OLD. shoriait'saL most &root line to hle, Bal timore. Waahlnigtrm, and the Smith. Passengers hy Ude route Ws nnottania k New Pork Railroad train..passins at 7:11 Aid., make dons connection at hem with train of North Penns and antra hi at SA P. 111.. in Bins to take Maid trains tor the 'oath (*Waif. matedpasmn airs are egret ea antral a cense y risecoo ths rariceis Depots d i alt 5,6 Ili ath•cdt7.. ._...... Larre Nardi Panes BeAhead earner Berke and Masekan stns-t., at V 45 A. Yr miring at Towanda CS, P. wane erenlng. *arm's Ballads MEP , '" and &ewer bold. pea. ant. No. 101 Bent Mb streat. rirpnin nom Preiglat retatvad at Ind Noble strata, Pins defand br Doty Pm Yvelfght train teirmds.and all In daagueltsana valley Irttb= dialateb• Sun CLAUZ. Nev. 21.1170A0. P Trent and 'Mot db. . Iddladelphla. . pA. CANAL k R AIMING A v. OF PAPPEENGIai To is effect Ploisity. 15, Clll3ll SE ' • lta I. STATIONJB. ;$4. Alt ' M 1 [ • I r .... T H IS ......73mirs 1740 g 30! Wareily 'll 45 8 40 i .. - ....44tbetis ..... .. Al 35 9 25 , ......Towanda 1915 1015'.....WrahwIng • 950 10 35, .....tacerville...... 9 711 11 00 .... Sfethopp.n.... ' 9nn n 07' ....11rboopany.... 9, ,' 1132, ...Tunkhantgwk... : 933 13 65 ......TAttatrrn • T SS 1 is. ... .Willkeallarm... • 7 10 4.10 ...Mauch Chnnk... ' ..... rmm 2 43 1 3 30 . 340 A 2 48' , 120, 2 09 .5 427 02. 2 57 00' ,40 321 460 4'15 815 445 ax' 8 12, 25, 8 50 535 A Ilettiown...., • x 5 50, .....Bethlehem 1 10 1 10 1 SIN 11 15 9 :;9' Ncer York I I :w I r No. 30 !raven Towstulg at 7 10; Athena': 7 Sit: W. Is ( - HY. 8 ( i n; arrive at 17ntira at 910 A. L. No. 38 I"avpit Y2talra at 5 30; Waverly. 6 30; A tip. +IIA, 6 10; arrive at Tprranda at 7 25 e. "Dosin Traria dine M White liven. rp Trains 411e.e at pittgt,,r . Pagsen'gers In and from New Tort andlPhiladel- Olin without change of pow rnin : mh :t A 11 = 2witlh Lt Eipmsafirlarrh.l and the West. R. A. PACKER. Superintendent. • TAI7,OII,'S ELECT R IC OIL ! Mats Oil has proven itself a medicine witsseposseef in the cure of Rheumatic lameness of asy kind re quiring an outward application. We defy the mein- Cal wqrlll to bring a material better adapted to the elle. tenon of pain and lameness in Man or Resat than is this Mflikitl.. It works upon the same prin ciple as its nearest kin—Electricity ' • and although. like all of nor best medicines, sometimes falls yet thceicases'or fail* are very rare, and are always complicated ones It works like magic upon burns, frost-bites. ging pf hers and all external poisons. Every fam il y should hag* it in cues of fresh ruts, bruises or sprains. It will not Smart like most Med icines when applied to a new Garet It. Is no quack preparation. 'Mir 01 controlled of sting of the best materials known`to teco-ria medics, compounded up. nn scientific principles.. As a horse medicine it is takin; the lead Of anything In the market tiny it and t ry It.- If you do not like it, return it and re ceive your money back. For sale by all druggists and dealers in medicine. Price 50 cents per bottle. 11. BROWNING TATI.OII, der,':7o.tf • Proprietor. LeltaysvUle. Pa., itirLSSES KINGSLEY k EATON Ang.lo,lo Have opened s - now DEES' MAKING ESTADLISII3IMT In the room over Miss Klrit:aley's 311 Merry store. lour door oonth of For. At *Tear's), where they are prepared to do *ll kinds ofiwork In the Dreaa Mak ing line, at reasonable rates. ' riounois 4 PLATE'S Of the latest style received **soon as mabliabed. They alao eta tastritettoth In arrniso AND FITTING DRESSES. Jirsittz Krsastam Sept. 29,10. LYDIA G. EATON. MERCURS 841.101 K, TOWAND#, 4 PA. (SlimesSor to B. S. Russell .t Co.. Bankers.) Receives Deposita, Leans "dozen Makes Co Im. non*. and doe* a GENERAL BANKING BUSINRSS, stone wan Incorporated Dank. . - To parsons desiring to mod money to ►n ta=r of the United States, Canada of -weeps. thts Ban offers the best twitities and the lowest terms. PASSAGE TIC-KEiTS To and from NM,* Scotia, England, Ireland, Scot- land, or any part of-Europe and the l?rlebt, by the CELEBRATED INMAN', LINE Of Steamers alsramon Buys and sells Gold, Meer, United . States'Bonds at market rates. Agent for the sale of Northern Pacific 7 3:10 Bonds. Inf. 5. VINCENT. raftbier liEU\IATISII-NEURALGIA .1 SSOO. \KILL, BE PAID to any person ',mincing any Medicine showing ball an many living, permanent cures an• Dr. PrrEtia's t'sortsuu: fiIII37.IIASIC . REMEDY. UNA Inwardly only. A plesitant Medicine. free !rani injurious drugs. Warranted. tinder oath., to lute permanent-' ly cured 95 infevery 1(10 patients treated in the pot ten yoars.e (Are teatimonyl. It in the adentlfic pre scription of Prot. Jos. rifler, M. 11.; a d gradnato of the Univ6rsity of Pennsylvania. A. D., IS:M.—now one of Philailelphia'a ribbed regularphysieiers. and Prormsor of 'Chemistry and Toxieoloa,--woo has nia.le Neurigia; Chronic and Inflanistory Rheuma tism the specialty of hie entire professional Ithi—a fact vouched for by the-signatures accompanying each bottleland other katimotiliala of many promi nent renowted physicians and clergymen. To pre. telt suffetrigs from poisonous quack nostrnms and winless expfnilittire of money. a legal signed guar antee. stating exalt number of bottles warranted to elm, wilt hi- forwarded gratis to any llTifol7l . WI& ing by letter a full description of &friction. In Carle ot manre to-cosc_amouni paid positively refunded. MediCine edit anywhere by express, eellect on de ihery. - Afflicted invited to write for adAw: all in ' formation atiennssigtal advice (sent by letter watt*, Address Dr: J. P. FITLER. 27 itonth Fourth street, Philadelphia, Pa. The heated) is geld or ebtainett by,lirnoixts. WANTED AGENTS FOR GREAT, FORTUNES. AND UMW TITPIT Wass Kant oa 9ttz itragootics AND Tun:liras or ors Brix-MAT% laza. Ily J. A. McCabe, Jr. Profusely 111ustzated and .beatitifully bound. The most taking, instruelimand universal. lreought after book issued for years. Tseinattng as fiction. authentic se history, practical a. '• Poor _Richard." with lessons more elesting for popular purposes, than the. profoundest . philosophy. Agents are clearing from gral to 9290 per month, in spite of hard times. Sells fast and easily., and dr. lixera sPlenclidty. Send for•Cirritlar, etc, and no. tier extra tenna. GEQ. MACLEAN. Publisher:- 719 Hansom Street, Phlladelpbla mar. 71'71-3m . . • P A T C• 11 E N 'This emit-bred stock horse wit ervo Mares •the present season, from April I; to Ang. I, at ttrepr. cry stable of KIMMITITIM k Sounros, Towanda.Ta., from Menday noon to Saturday morning ; and at Shesbeguin s ora., at the farm of L. S. Ifasusagay, Sate ay and Monday forenoon. Tratne.-$2O by the season. Money due at time .of Perrier. $3O to Insure one mare, and $5O for two mates owned by one person. Money doe as soon as the mare is known to be with foal. -Any person haring a mare insured, and parting with her before the time of foaling, will be held accountable for the insurance. Pastore furnished for mares from a dis tance at -$5 per month. Ali accidents anikgscapil at the owner's riak. rgrouses.—Pstchen wad sired by the celebrated trotting stallion, Geo. IL patches he by Owens Y. Clay. be by Henry Clay.-he by Andrew Jackass. ;be by Tone* Gaahror. ke. The dam of Patchen was jrnrock, grand dam Messenger ? May 14, 11161.-0 m AFULL ASSORTMENT OF Dam end cm= rams. Muth la. it LOXG t XXX= R. A - 00 TONS BEST C.A.ITGA Ground Plaitat. for We at Rocky/Ws Ytllla, Xaartmaatt. tab All W. A. StXIIIIMELL. WM zgliktas. col I. 'Po. Mo. ft. 136. P 1 P /I 6 35 9 45 6 00 900 4 5111 541 4 20,9 115 3 15 7 20 3 1717 00 3 00 6 3* Is an 2/0600 1 31'4 45 1 15 4 20 10 IS .. 9 45,1 6 * 9 301 .7 00 , :la. Easton 111114431-10iia 6.001 AYE Miscellaneous. Di. C. 317.111 CUR. President: mar 15'71 NM MEM rToitiettei . teettp. ona A WORD. friions yam, a sharp retort, A.parting in angry 1! The ann that rose on a Newer of bliss, The loving look, and tht, terider kiss, Ilas wit on a barren waste, • , - Wbere pilgrims tread, with weary feet, Nths destined never more lo meet. A frivolous word, a sbarp ret.vt,- A morning that blots out yeses,-- • • _ Two lives are wrecked on a stormy : shore, Where billows of pension irirg o and roar, • To break in a spray of tears, ' Tears shed to blind the serried pair, Drifting seaward and drowning there. A frivolous word, s sharp retort, A flash from s passing cloud,— Two hearts, are scathed to their nti cost core, Are ashes and dust for evermore. Two faces turn to the crowd, ' • Yanked by pride with gilife-long lie, To bids Hairs*, of that agony. A frivolous word, a slisrpretort, An arrow at random sped,— It cut in twain the mystic do _ That *kind two souls in harmony, /tweet Inve lies blocdiug or dead. A poisoned shaft, with scarce au aim, Has done a mischief sad as shame. rovutoait word, a sharp retort,— • Alas! for the loves and lives ' Be pith, a cause has rent apart; Tearing the; fondest heart hum heart. Al a whirlwind rends and rives, - _ liewer to rer:.wriitc again, Bat lire and die in secret pain. A litrolous word, s sharp retort, Alas! that it should be so: The petulant speerh, the careless-tongue, . Have wrought more evil mid done more wrong, Ilare brought to the world more woe Than all the armies, age to age lieeord ou historfs blood-stained page tstelltmtens. [Par I the 14.rohn A TRIP ACIROSS Tut; WATER, \o. XX \ " Hu pat:willed Fenrith's•Table ltonnti For feats of clii%alry re n o ned, Left klayhnrgli's mound and stones or Ntkef, Ily Druids raised in magic hoar,' Anti traced the Eaniont's winding Ulfo's lakes behind bin, lay." Qridaf of T it rzaill;,,. A few hours' ride by railway in the, early morning sufficed for the passage from Carlisle to Isesr.rrir, where a branch route diverges to Keswick, in the vicinity of Lake Der wentwater. I know not why the poet calls the place " red Penrith," unless from the color of the stone of which the Castle, whose romantic raids stand near the station, was bniti- - ' 4 lliis \ Cristle is said to have been for 'many years the residence of King Richard III.; for a general idea Of, whose charecter and career refer ence may be bad to IV. Shakspeare. The region iu the vicinity of Pen rith is beautiful, abounding in the ceentry.seats of the English •nobility and ,gentry. Relics of antiquity, among which are what is called " King Arthur's Ronnd Table," and tang Meg and her daughters, (upright pillars of stone set up at some un known period), are also to be seen. Almost in the shadow of- the ancient parish chnrch,•is the — riiart't 'Gram Here stand two pillars of time-worn stone, each about 12 feet high and' set in a base. They stand 16 feet apart ; the space 'between, to the width of four feet, is enclosed by large flagstones set upright: The carving or inscription, which would seem once to have been Upon - the col umns, is nearly defaced by time and undecipherable. From its general appearance and surroundings, being in the midst of an ancient cemetery, there can be but little doubt ' that this is a grave,, though without any reliable record of its date, or of the name and actual size of 'its occupant. Upon the *walls of a Free Cliseta mar School at Penrith, I noticed\ an inscription showing that it was founded by Queen Elizabeth in 1614, with the motto, Semper Eadem. dwelling of antiqnated itppearance near by, bore the gate of 1561 Proceeding onward towards Kea wick, the view is soon enclosed by a portion' of the lofty brotherhood of hills, each with its owh wavy and fantastic outline, that mark the vici nity of the' English Lakes. Sweep ing down to the gentle plains below, their rugged sides 'are seamed with many a' wild, deep channel, - while wide valleys intervene in the:peace fal beauty of lovely fields and rural, residences. /non the plain disappears, the in terval becomes narrow ; and rumbling how through tunnel, or rushing across a bridge spanning some clear, rocky stream, surrounded by 'steep, wooded declivities, a variety of 'wild scenes are traversed with almost the rapidity of thought, until we find oui selves at the Keswick station ; commanding on the left, a fine_ vievr of the picturesque town below, with its spires emerging from tile' abun dant foliage, 'end grand Mountain summits beyond. To the right, 'at no great distance, rise the bold; bar ren peaks of SKlDDAlr i —not the-lefti est of the Cumberland hills, but from its isolated position presenting a more majestic appearance than any other. The asebnt. to its. summit, which commands a fine and very ex tensive view, is a favorite undertak ing with English poets and tourists. ,It is said that familiarity' breeds contempt ; thus ' an aged dame (who had, it is probable, always dwelt in the-vicinity), in speaking of the fail ure of the town„ authorities in an af fair of then recent occurrence, took occasion to remark to me that, they no more than yen 'Skid ; evident ly referring to the majestic Skiddaw, which, with the beautiful neighbor ing, Lake of Derwentwater, is or should be, the pride of Keswick. Ssinnsw rises 3,022 feet above the leveLof the sea—being the 'fourth in height of, the •Crimbrian peaks, the 'loftiest in England ; of the otlieri HELVELLT:i ascends to 3,055, .and SCAWiTLL PISS, the highest, to 3,166 feet. They arb consequently inferi or to the mountains of Wale*, Ire-. land and ReollorAl : Cuirimernesx., in Kerry, Ireland, being 3,414 ; .Sxow- DON, in Wales, 3,570 ; and Bax Na ils, of the Grampian range, in Scot land, 4,406 fait in altitude,- while two TOWANDA: BRADFO4I) 'COUNTY, PA., JULY 20,1871. or three of his brethren exeeeci 4,000 Nestled amid the Cumbrian Trill 9, in the Comities of Cumberland and Westmoreland, lie the English bakes, 15 . air 20 in number, 'small in size, but affording it great variety of beau tiful dgenery, .which has rendered this reon a favorite' home and re sort of English poets ; and gave rise, in the days of Keats, Wordsworth, Southey and Coleridge, to the term, originating with the Edinburgh Re i•ieu),.of Lake Poetry and Lake Po ets. These, or the Lakr School, were understood as: profesiing to seek the sources of inswation in the simplicity of Nature, rather than in the works of predecessors or the fa shions of the - times," - " Greta Half near iieswiel:, still stands, a memorial of its 'former gift- o ed occhpant, Roe= SOUTHEY ; of whom' an English writer remarks With• unrivalled industry, infinite stores of knowledge, extraordinary talents, a delightful style, and the devotion of about half his:time to writing what should be 'marketable ratb.f.r.than whst he would have do- sired to write, he defrayed .the coat of that-grugal and homely way of life which ho deemed the happiest ati•. beet." Many subjects, like that of his History Of Portugal, which he had pand planned out, valu t a. ble material for Which he had . collectotl, were thus never completed.. Among these were to kkave been a " History of the 310- nastie Orders " ; also; of ".}lnglisli Literature,' and of " Englit-.11 Dornts- Lie Life." He wits aptiointed Poet L:tnreate, in 1813 ;'Scott hay,inh it seet.nq Pre- Tigtislv dcclino 1 that'Luau MBM2=M= a baronetcy, which wa.s not accept ed ; afterwards best , iwing on Lini ttiftietliing' more to the purpoi,e— liension oft,k3oo a year, which Teli,iy cd him, for the-few rernateinj years life, from the nee..Ksitv of writ ing ineretc fur his Ir.Lrati., hut. wh:tt. a gain might it not ha';'-e been to the litrary world, could lie I‘.:l':e !Ken thins relieve 4 some ton yeat'..:..arlier t..• •L•,,1 i I • t•.:•;',1, 11.••;••• • •.• 'flot •,t,j,•.•t If such lines are in smfri applicable in the re:,nl:s failures of so industrious a career as that of Smithey, they will appl:. - with double force to S. T.. Col.raavOr-,---his bro ther-in-law and colleague in litera ture, who also fui. 11. titliL , resided at 'Keswick : a man of brilliant talent both in writing- and conterßation ; to whom Lord Byron rendered. the -tribute of his g - pieiat admiration, anti whom :itinthey termvil and ten thbusandjfold tho Jaighti,ist of his generation.' Ileft , rring to the -failure of Coleridgii!'s , ,l,elltii, he says: trembla lest his 'lUktimely death sliould , leare to in't the, of put ting together the fragments t,f his materials ; which in s'obcr believe Would be a mote seri , ,u , t to the world of literature than it tsvc: suffered from the Ivreck of aeei, et Ilicieuce.;i, . - And yet ikis said, that, l ialli, , arii _ years, ,6 - ell at the:. cip,t , ut a di:-,- tingnialied career ;It tilt , 1:1,i \-o..ity, Coleridge had so limited an idea of his own abilities, as to have_ bcea prevented only by the most earnest appeals of these who appreeiat e d him, from binding hini:Zell as au ap prentiee to a shoexuaker. While sub sequently he wrote enough to estiib hal ' - a name and fame of eealti - .11 genius—with great 'mental resources at his comexand—he lacked the'stea dy industry and application of Smi they, to whose ever ready frien:Tship and aid, he war; through lite indebt ed ; dreamy and dilatory, with the most liberal .offers from .publishers, yet always, offkb:massed, in 'ciretim stances, ho was continually -planning great' wckks but never accomplishing , them. ,AWattwas most deplorable or all, .he became' finally a' ecintirmed' opium eater J . , and iu regard to - his situation, wrote thus • to a friend : " Conceive whatever is blest, wretch ed, hopelesS, and helpless, and you' will have as tolerable a notion of 41 state as it is possible for a good mein to have.'.' • . Coleridge died in 1834 ; and Son they iu 1844 at the figd of about O. Of Hammer (the son of S. T.,) Col: mums, it may be said that ils in the ease of his . father, his genius was touch to be admired; and•his,failures lamented.' With .PennSylvanians, it should' add soinewhat to the 'intelrest 'felt in Southey, and the elder Coleridge, to know that about at the beginning of the preseiit century, they contem plated the organization of a colony upon the balks of the SUs,:rEIfANNA Itiveß ; where • under the tame of l'a - iiti..ucrqry, " all ,property was to b e h'eld in common, and vivo and misery •tink-nlokvii." In eeni,ieetion with a few otlecr choice spirits, Wes , pranited and labored for some :ears'. to : the accomplishment of this pur pose. - Whether the exaet location of their Utopia was , decliled upon, is, less certain' than that the scheme: was in the event 14 failure ; in an probability, thraigh the very materi al poiht of a lack of fends. .Near Keswick is the beantiftic val ley'of BQrrowdale, once the domain of the monks of Furticra.s Abbey, and more recently . celebrated for • its mines of black lead. The route from Keswick to Lake 'Windermere' formed a delightful afternoon's drive by coach ;• its en joyment being only interfered with by the somewhat excessive heat of the day—aud II ascertaining toward its close, that the great increase of speed alou;Vthe Way was the result of our four in hand driver's intmica lien. i - • • . It would be snpert!nous to descant Much here upon the :scenery of the English les.Etr District through which we were now p_assing : the charms of Derwen w:ii.A . T, - rlsWater, Bassen thwaite and Windermere 'have 'been sufficiently comiusinerat c ed alike 'by put Mid - painter. -Tie Lakes huNe r... 1 peculiar . veliness, enhanced like most itdif 'red,-, lake scenery- by the grandeur . -of, the rugged ~heights 1 which .'eneleie: them,. Winlern4erc, ' the largest, is however dimitititivuin nu American point Of-view, heingput about eloien Mileit itileigth, and one mile 'at niost,in width ttot - , AU - the iiiOnntlitni ittaiiivither to pio iiiiiklit ME . F , ~. ~ . . tics Qt . MEE =I or the wild and precipitous character of thOso of Ireland. and Scotland. We passednloni the base of Hel-. vellyn, upon whose heights Scott's verse commemorates the fate -of ti young traveler, -who perished in the snow; and was only fod flays after, his lifeless body still welded by a solitary companion, his faithful Aog. The•seenery of Grassmere and ply-• dal Water derives an additional charm ,from their connection, for a protrilcted_period, with the life* and poitry of wordsworth.. We gassed his 'former home. and the rustic church where his :remains repose ; reaching Soon after the quiet and lovely village of AIUILAXIDE, : on 'Win dermere : near which for many' years has been the secluded home of. Har riet Martineau. Not far from Win dermere wfts DoiE's Nitsr, the form& residence of Mrs._ Romans. But the poetic associations of the Lake Dis trict seem at present not in, a _fair way to be kept up : Alfred Teuny sou; as it is 'said, : being the only well _known.s master of song, who now, even, occasionally, resides in the ..re gioa which was wont, to be so flood ed' with native melody. . • -Evidently, under such a state of things somethinr , must be done : accordingly take the steamer a little :ways from Anibleside—disembarking a few miles below at the • shaded treats of IBowrcs.i3,_a little_ Port • upon the'ca.stern shores of Lake -Winder niere ; where 'I shall tarry for a day ;Or two before my further progress to the hie of. Ilan. , C. C. P. . A PREDICITIOR MADE On HUN ' DEED. YEARS AGO. ,G. Serious prophecies are usually much beitqr after the fact than be fore-it. But the flashes of wit -often hit the :mark, not hf. , !:.ftire they were internlcil toF•nt hccuuse the rcality orf•r:-.1,12- tl • (lis6r4l.r; Writ ing- to his d'Ephnly, in 17 - 4. ;:slt would he a quote his worth, fo en , ! autl chailt : :?!.ye P: .'r of.antiquit to tillOW allyt11111::, 'orofoun(l trO! ,, the Pvthian or Dove 11f 1)o:1•3- 11:t. ' in one d yzar.; v..e. •1 - N , lsialyle fly° Cl-,;_nese • nvich more fliym we . do,at pre. , :ent. There Aril/ Le • t Vpr:y . rcligious—the one:that:of, the - higher inul lettered c.:l:l4es; the citha.„that of the peoid.:, who be-dividlid between three or .tolerablt good terms:with-rim+ other. Priests and raunlyi will be more nnmerons -than ti key zfro • now—incdcratuly, rich, ig nored and trangnil. .The Poise. will Ist? nothing more than' bi , hop, and. sovereign. ' They will have pared away . 11 his teOryoryll 4 , minion's,.bit by bit. There win be I''l.,x: I:egular,:Lrmies ,Lot., andAynt lit ttt,' ii htah. Tiw troops will :411:1::":114 1 1"Un parade, bat -nei thY2r m 1!i it \Via lye fierce or brasit ; WI.:11' • rich nni , , lorhys, tlyat Tip , c hi e f qnverc - - . ity,n of ig,nroi:e will Inc 11w minar-cfv: of our Tartars —that is fo trince who will Ttußs.ia., Prussia, rur4, command the' r,attic and Black- Sti:.k--1 for the rmtiorls'of the N0rt1.4.414:: . ways Cry.vardly . tliacnlhose of o the S - , nth. The renuti44.4.4luCe,i -1410,be under politic:tl:ivastery, of. predum feabinet;;:t , T ya g vpaiii wi:i 'separate hen:tell froni*tirope: as Japan has from China.: t - `,:' , .slcre' will unite herself with A - meri*:.o..whiy k li she will possess the g,teater;ltatt;tlal• control* the rev - minder. be despotcsm- everywhere, lAC,lle.s; 7 l potisrn ‘Vithout ernelty,withouteitii!4' iou Of I.AoodCa despotism of chicaulr - V rv , founded, alt;Vays on the interpret non of old on tilt - T.:alining and Sleight Of the Quirts and - lawyers—a despotism of tvhich the great alai will be to get at tile wealth of individuals. Happy in those days the millionaires, who will-be ourniandarths.- They will ho everything-, fur the . - niilitary.- .svrve only for parade. 'MannfaCtur ers dill ilonrish everTwirere, as th do now in t; . appeared - to this seer, one hundred vearS ago,. the Europe of 1871: - It is near enough to•make us Wish we conld such dreaming. VA LLANDIGHAIIANA JOHN BROWN The SprinTeld Republi , an says Vallandigc; ; will be longest re membered - nti history, perhaps, as one of the champions ofsla4ory who rushed to,Haipers ferry, in Coto bor,lBs9, to ditort from John Brown as he lay theke wounded,. with the bottiss of ligillead sons and corarades about him, a - "c•oinf•s!.-5..i-.:1 of who his friends were. Lln thy ri I:lark:0)1e conversation 'that fe.lowed, Vallan dig,ham was one c f the rquos 7 tioners, and itiy.ts t __rowu replied : NO Man me here ; it' was my "own promptinA-s and that of I my Maker. I acknowledge. zlo imistir itt hunian.form, want Yon to un derstand, gentlemen, that I respect the rights of the poorest and weakest' of the colored people, oppressed by the sla'vdtsystem, just as which as 1 do'thoSe of the most powerfnl. That is the idea _that has moved me, and that alone." 'Nor didNallandighain;: . ignoble asNiia inetivewis in catechis ing Brown, fail to see what_ the man must be whose, answers he heard 7--- and the Ohioittemocrats tfid not fall into the wretched drivel of so many. Northern Reptiblicans, that the old hero was demented. Returning to Ohio, ,he bore testimony, thus ; while, Henry Ward Beecher was calling) itroWn crazy, .ainl the ISt-gloved tentie styleri "an achroni:•an " I "1-IQ is tho-farthe74 possible removell from the ordihary ruffian, fanatic orl Madman coolness, dering, pen stoney, the stoic faith and pa tience, and a Firnmese of will- and purpose uncbuquenible." By which it was clear flat Vellaudighaui, like Ring Itifew a man when lie' saw hiw. - / .. SiTlaTlOXF3..xtolikelkeins of thread or silk. To make the .most of thettil we.need only ta take them by .the right end.. I Tex passions, like heat 7 bodies down steep hills, once in motion, theinselves; and ' know no ground but-tho'bottoin. \ I: I N., P "- , • RICE. Carolina Rice is aci:rowledgea.•to be the best in the world. Brit why? Because American 'climate atid'Am.er- jean river bottoms art more ongeni al t 6 it than those of Egypt and - of India? Probably' not, but simply because its right oillture has, been more intelligently studied and incird scientifically pursued:. The Ameri can planter has done by his rice on ly -what-the ; English farmer has done by his turnips— made its nature.. and habits his orrn stitfly_iilsterra_of leav-. ingit to the clumsy 'tuitions of labor- . ers, or even of superintendents. : Of all American liusbaudries, that of rice is the most picturesquely beautiful. I The perfect level of the fields, dyked! against encroaching tides, and intersected' with canals and drains, like so Many - veins and arteries; the shining Sheet of. water by which it is first •covered, sncetvd ed in a few days by h, coat of emerald green; then a mixture of overflowing water, and the'green c the crop; tl nally, the rich-looking • heads of a brilliant. golden color, ;drooping - with u .gtacefulness unequalled • by. -any other grain, are beauties' which - ar. rest the eye of the most common-lilace obserVer. At the titue, of harvest the -crop is, cut by the siFkle, bound into sheaves, heaped temporarily into - 1114fie . kg . or stooks, whence it is boated by tncan of the inteFsecting canah4 tot.liti- barn yard. PIZEPARATLON tuts Staelea. in imtnense hoftie in, the kirnyurd, threshed r.t leisure, cither• flails 'or wachinery, and the grain . earefttllv winnowed from the straw. Ei this state it is known. in,.:litiqrl.- "rough India as `'pa tly," 'and is now reads' to to ti a. fOr "'cleaning hitslc, ill, - ..\,• Tile pearly grin whic!il tits it ly it i. ( - 11; 1 .:Nylly :ncl thole. 1,. I);eilig . r-,;1)::il I:1:: 1:1!.d of 'Ail fa *)tr.c", parts thj i - roctss of husl:ing to la. f::••:1.:•Ite11 - )v, ;cal:ling . or : AL. -- ::lachinery rz:nd,r, thl7-z. nj•l,lnm minnowiiitKi,- c;!ss. followed . Oft of • now. , llni.-tatt.s_ the nuts .t; into. -tl.ve I•.trt.,—fir:l - ; the chaff; next, the flour; wYela is a: tletritus of the grain iufa chaff cOinlqu-ect,,and Cif it yelTow ecir or; thirk the,small rice, winch con sists of fragments of grain less _ half, in4;rinixed with:mueh of the heart orleye of the rice; fonrth; nnole up of all ,grains low prime, but larger than th'cr - fini.3l; and fifth!. the prime rice of commerce. Of the. 4 ,43-:several •qualitie i st the ::rnall rice is, not in general fay yt as an or-, tide for the table, it cSlntains:m4t ally an uncomfortable porti ,, n eTavel. But it is nmcli , th3ll trio k. - 1441 :.-r realities that if lativ i;:snol';intif the proce:zs cifiela. :mid havt: reut.uht by wo;ltlik -Achy 14rgo 7“) u:tich y,wriqcl^: :TA ;;. I. 4 , , a articl,:: of flod is used in alnioAt,,ovory poss-iblolori4. tviu9 ; le, broken, half co ar,- c - Vlo,*lictl, reduced 1.4 - . pe‘vaer,. - .tr, iliscrliLlc Breads of - varions kinds, and. of delicate flavor,' 'are itiadfi Of . ii;Aunbined with the flour of Other cereips - ornsed by .It. prepared in the forty of pilaus;, en - startis, soups, and gravies. .2. As . iib t for mya ids, or for in fititts,-Witfali be pulverized in a mor- Aar. tifteiiiifew =inn:6; •in ..plil:V . a.Ter . ; or it may be ground in a 441.! and preparqd iike sago, arrow root, or tapioca; or; Withot7l.'pnlver iziog, it may be made into a light nutsritionS gruel by boiling and. Strai ning. 3. AS. a medicine, in relievirc; flisordered condition of tli'o stomach and bowels, it is parchelbrown,then boiled and eaten; or it is-parched o. a darker bikiwn, drawn as coffee tea, amd.nsed as a beverage. 4. In the; laundry, where "a -white pearly starch is required, Capable . of various degrees - - of stiffness,. it' highlv•valuable- " • b. In the manufacturesitS-paße is moulded-into a variety of-tasteful or nanieuts althost as hard iv.sporeelain.. J. Rice meal, tho detritus of 'chaff and grain already described, is a highly nutritious and fattening food; for all kinds of stock,. from horses to - Pi rough rice; or p?.:ddy; is the fivorite food of the rice -bird, highly pn ized by epicures, and- is ilrollal)ly the source . of its' 1 , 0C1111111 4 .y. ddie:lte It, may be- givcil to li 1,0:11try with Similar effect, and it coiiains so much sikx in its rough hu , k ,that while fee:iing on it they nce,l tin gravel for attrition .in the .It is -therefore _peculiarly suitsd fur p;Ailtry on 'long nryages, oi.lui)litee. where -there is no grax . el in the Bbil. 8. 'hechaff is in demand for pack ing.delicate articles of glass or china ware, and for the tiansportation .of eggs. 'lt is at the dittne — time so per.: fcet a non-conductor c)f kat, that is said:a block of ice 'properly' pail-, ea in it. will withstand the direct rays 'of the sun hot enough, to open the seams of a vessel's deck. 9. The straw:is inauufadttred : into, beautiful hats and bonnets,. and a 1 .10 into mats anil light baskets, and like the stalk of most other cereals,. is used as s a rough proN'ender'for cattle. llmu,Wor.xs.—liorsc hairs 4;111'121 into hair-worms only in the imagina- Con. You inight soak the. tail of a horse in rain-water for. a tboasand yearsAit would last so long, and it would be no 111 ore like 'a 'hair4vorm than before. This nonsense is •tanght• to-children . by , their playmates I and -ignorant people,'and trills the *ion . cleieench; front generatiOn tel . genera tion. -There are such things worms, but as a female:, of these worm's*a foot long can lay .5,000,000 ejgs,,they need.no help frara 'liosres7 lailsto propagate. They are parasites living in bugs and flies' Comin' ,but andergb- a part of - their trans- . formations. . i 1 . . . •per A.riritizri iri .:ACIVATIC.OK HAS NEW EVEHER . AELSEH? • Dr, Dollinger; ottio' eminent Oer matetheolegiati, has been exeernmn nicated.-!from the : .Itornarr Catholic Church.for contesting the 'decree of the Late Roman Council.cin,:the. sub ject of the .Pope's infnlliliilty, Ills memorial to the ArehbishoP ofllu niclr, declaring .his views on the snb jectj• has been published,. with the' Archbishop's circular letter .to the faithful,qf his.di2rcese in reply. "With. every desire to flialtci the best of the cas2.., We are houna. to sa`y, taking , the conimoti. peint of view - of both parties, that the A'reh bishop;has the. right of • the, centro versv. , lir. - Dollino*r professes :to be still ii odd- Catiu:7oe, and to be acting for the interests Of the It . oman Church. He attacks the- decree of rapid in 7 fallibility because, as he says.,.it con tiadicts Scripture, the -opinions of, thelatheia, and.tradition; and is, be- Sides,'{ipposed rto.the '6jrist,itu tion of thiS . country. Tao demands aii-cpportunity to -prove• his . asser-.1 titles at the'. aproirching meeting of German bishop:4' in Ifelda. • But,, is the. Areltbislop appropri ately-observes, it islow too 'late .for any giioA,t;latbpliq.to dispute the (16- cree in ciiiedion. Whateyer argu-. nient there was to make was made •in the ConuciLat which it was Aolit ed:r.wd epponents g . been beard and overruled there,. they .must liencerforth s resinin silent if they . cannot acquiesce in . heart. It is like 3 person going . to• when. the court .of highest. aPpeals has .pro nolined its decision against: him, he further reintkly . To open the subject,ainow 'before, the :Gerinan bishops Would be auseless waste of time. It is hitt Coneovl4;le that 'Dr, .Dollinger' expected: the Archbishop to.,(lootherwise than he 'pis done:, or •Oisti. his :heinori:d iv:is, -not intended to Ix:Jr:oho th -exe . ornrannieatinn he lets since. Sidiered. If this be so, 119' cst als6 hare pre fared Idinisqlf for nirtuer thezisurc;s of .resistanee;to the decik:e„.:ind7the Cathodic in (fel-many infly sOdsni not unlike thAt; which . v.•: ;s I, 4 cgati by .If , Ertill. Lather. • Strength ot cuasists iii two things:—potver of x-c.i:l of sclf i i'estraiut., It.- two things, tttiitr:fore . strong feeling and strong eotatimml oyes them. Now, it is Iter . o we make grand.i4istakt.:; ve i;dstalic char wter. • A'111:1 . 1 . 1 WllO be r., 1111. bef o r e bun,ap.:(l • , visost.: fr,.411 . tics tremble, and whceo' l':nr.;s of fa . - 7 ry hake thd children of hi;:. Jionse hold loilj;.e----bucatisc L has laN obeyed, and ..Is iYvii C; iv in ;:11 rye call I:Lk s'd - %: , ,,ng th i ,tethLit controlled -. l:y weak. :Yoa innStt nicastirc a man by the; Strelg. - 1 of I o Stlbiko noti4y Tower o. "those winch subdue , e;,,sie:,:sai . f.t . ~.r oftui th , 2 result of strengti.i. Did .we .6-ver see @ t :_tan receive ilagrant-iii. suit, 'and only grow a little paTe,. and. tltcii reply -quitely ?-: This is a man spirit did.r7b• ncy.er see a man in anguish stand. as , i f carved out of scilid rod:, mastering hunstif? Or one that, bearing - abor'eless daily triaL . rcitiains silent, and never Aells tht world what' vaulters his home peacd? That-is strength. lie Who, with strangpaSsions, remaitis-chasti3; he who, keenly sensitive; with many "powers of indignation in hint, can'be provoked and yet retain' huuselrfind forgive, thoso are strong .inen, the spiritual heroes.: • • . QcAsLa residing at . Paris :waS ,baited oil by four of his wciainen in -order tO Make their coinplituents and ask for their Usual new year's • 'gifts.- " Well, uw friend's,",said thiQuaker, , "here 'tire your: gifts . ; cheoSe fifteen francs or the 33ible." .!•I 'don't know how to 'read," said the first,."so I will take the. fifteen- francs.'-' " I .read,," sill the se - condAut have pre t ss'n; Wants.!! ,Ile•took th 6 fifteen Hanes. The third: also made. the same choice. .-He now.canteto - the fourth:a young lad •of abotit thirteen or fourteen. Quaker looked at -him with an air-of goodness. `f "Will'yoU, too, take these _three .. .pieces, which you 'may obtain at any tine by your labor and iridins- i 1 , -0" "As you say the book is good,-I. • will take it and read it to :Thytinoth. 7 replied pie„ ; boy. He loOk fEte olienedu it, and found between . the .leaves a.,e-,0111 piece-of forty francs. .The others - hang bown- their.headS, and the Quaker told them he was they had 110 t ;made; a -better* Vhoico APE ALCMr -=Sickness takes:us•aside and. sets us alone with God. , are, taktia into His pri:. rate clraiuber, and there He ,con . . verses with its faeeto - face; tTlin world 's afar oil; our relish for-it is gone ; And we ire: shine Many are the cords-,of grace and truth which He, then speaks to rts: . All our former ,prolis are stru4 away, 'and noW-wa must lean.en-God alone. The thing of earth are. klt ,to be vanity;, man's help is useless. '3lan's:syinpa.- thy deserts us; .we are east. wholly upon. God, that , we . learn that His praise - and sympathy . are enough. "If it were not ~for pain,"lsays - one, should_spend less, tune with - God( Lad notAedn -kept awake with pain, I should hive 4ost , --one.of the sweetest experiencesl ever had in my life.. The digorder, of 4iy. body is the very help Iwantfrear God.. If it does work before it lays . inclintlie dust ; it will raise the up in heaven.' • • A CITY miss; newly- installed as the wife of a farmer,wascallednpon?- one clay-by a:neigh:bat-pi the same.profes sieti, who, is the absence of her. hus band,- asked her 'for. the , loan Of his plow for a short ,time. ("I. am yen be accommodated," was the-reply; 'if Mr. Steno Was only at home=4 do-uOt know c though, Were ho keepi4 his plOw; but," she added, evidently zealous _to ierve,- - i'Llatina is the' cart in 010 yard; you plow With that 'till - mr. Stone gets baCk • • - glass UI wear El NUMBER 8. CTIL . EA.OItF. ••••• 'POOR tIEEtrpoR ?EWE. . • The Rey. T. De Witt, Tahnage, in one of .oiar religions. journals, ex- , presses the , opimon that doll preach- - mg is often caused by poor diet. *lle says : Congregations eometimas mourn over dullpreaching when themselves are to dull_ Gave your minister more beef-steaksuad he will have more fire. Next, to the 'divine unction, the minister needs , ' . - and he cannot make , that out pi tough leather. One reason 'why _ the apos- ' ties preached so, powerfully was that they had healt.hy. food! Fish was eheap"tdong. Galilee, and -this witli unbolted Eiread, gave them plenty of phosphorus for brain-food. These early ministers _were' never ;invited. out to late suppers, 'with chicken sal ad and doughnuts. Nobody ever em- • . broidered slippers for the big feet ot. SimonPeter4 the fisherina,n'preachei. - Tea parties, with hot, waffles; at. 10 o'clock at night, make niunhyrp.runby ministers, but good. , hours and sub- stantial diet, that furnish nitrates for_the muscle , and ...phosphates for utin the b, and carbonates for • the whole frame, prepare a man for ef fective work.: When the water is low, the mill-wheel:goes slaiv ; but a ;full • -race,and how het °the wrists 'are, . ground ! s, man the arteries are the mill-race;- and the brain 'the wheel ; and the practical work of life is the grist ground. The reason our ' soldiers failed in some of the battles was because their stomachs . had for several days been innocent of every- „ thing. but "hard tack.!' y See; that your minister has &Jun haversack. Feed kin on gruel dniing the week, -, and on ( Su.nday ho will give you gat,. eL What as. called the parson's nose' in a turkey or fowl, is an alio goricall setting forth that In many communities the minister conies out behind." '''‘ WHY WQMEN tiV4O,7 What women CAnntties mostly want is magnanimity. Men . ; of high minds are. tonstantlY diem- • pointed-when they find. this lack of - the magntraimons revealing itself.in • • the ellaraCter of. some Ivornin who' • . otherwise seems 'so admirable. 'But .• - men themselves 'have' hitherto, in Eurbpe especially, so sluiP•ed • and ,limited the moral training of Womed-;::-;;•••-•••• ias - to fender . magnanimity a yirtne linvst impossible 'attainment. Ther . •:.:;„4 errors of Wome.n are in theiri.degree almost always the common errors cif 'servitude: ...Brit there is something inore•than that. The Wholatrainina - • . Of wonianhood is directed to tlic.cuf-' tuee :uerely• of Cuie'virtne. It, is not indispensibl4 or even necessary to • a vtonlaa's - -honor and repute that sLe ' .shoultl b2..truthful, or generous, or . or brave.- 'She- has no italtteernent to cultivath.lthe inap.uani•L'ion qualities. SoefetYOnly ashs her to be (Amite; If yon wilt bat!, ey.tiltiwer, you. caunoL , lii days not far re iro•.:lf our a. min was 0:11y.ealledoli to. be brav andtintii- a.ight. 1;e : ferocions.•and vulapiliou-; he chose.; therefore, • cotarao:4 score ferocity: and • AVo:eoli „are conimdnly tralfa•ti,• even now, to helieve.that I I )ag they arc "-virtuous,'' .i.t•is not •ciai,"ite that they S'hall . he sincere . :i!1(I •i ! ingiianinious ; therefore, their dife.:ts ate insincerity and 4 .1_11,110n:77 -Labor 1 . - iabor.• sonic' shape, tin' t' , 2;• thyself.: thy lionsehOkl, thy • • country; the world. - there is nit re- Qnward, drivc:S.the. sinrit of • 4., and let it eleVate, enrich, i.31?1101, - thi!e. ClothiStlivselfgorgeo -usly,fare sumptuously,if thou Wilt i bUt the:F;anie luxuries of !wealth thy neighbor who pessesses not an equal ability to` acquire. 'tyliat there now, or ever has been in the. • World, grand or glorious that-has not. - been th prodUct of labor of ~ either the body or the: mind? The. treasures of genius and art are its work.; 'the cultivated fieldsare its toil; the-busy • Marts,thariaing cities, -rieh empires Of the wOrkl,iire btit the , great treas uries of labor. Theincinuments,.--oas tics, towns,azdtemples.rope , -- i the, mounds and buried cities of ; 4-merles - ---are but the gigantic'achieVments of labor. Take labor from theiyeorld, end it leaves It .a blank withonf, a his- . • tory. Labor on - the', Ova :movement's of the:we - Ha - shall 'direct. If you hare genius, • develop it. you _have perseverance, .prOve . it. - Labor on the more- histilYi . - with wealth, for it is a means by v . chich'all the world can he eominered from , indolence and ignorance, froM fam- I ine, starvation and . nntimely . deaths. • 1:1=110 prcackeisays the tough est customer:la ever came across.in the pursuit of calling wag old fellow in a *alley : of - .the 'Green Mountains, Who' approached him at "the close of an evening meeting with . . a very long face and asked -gravely: - ."Dici I understand you to . say that • 31(ell . was a lake of fi re and 1 brim ' • ton e?" tbedivine, that helad . atdas - t succeeded .in , ;inaing an ~ i mpression upon the , bitheito - Obdtrate heart, and going tdn to enlarge up.on.the place Of tor-- ment.. "Nonsense ! nonsense!" in terrupted .his, ddn't be lieve, a word of it ; you pile it on too wouldn't live a Minute in such ."Theyiwill be pre. pared ,for "I3e prepared' for will . thz•y :ekelaimed a the anxious que.A.- tioutr, brightuing up.. "I'd as soon • bejliere - as anywhere, then ;" oft: he wallced,Peßeetry satisfied, and as gay ag - a lark • • • W;IATI BECOMES OE" ALL THE tiSTEEL PE.Ns.—A correspondent of theAien till(' American says : . - When at', the works of Messrs. , Thomas Jessop & Sons; in Sheffield, England, I was informed _that six hundred and thirty-ono tons of sheet_ steel were manufactured and sold in .1868, to be manufactured into steel pens. I Was about writing home, and dared . not give the quantity, -fearing 'that I was raisinformed. Next day I returned to the {office, and the clerk turned to the lbooks and slatmed , the exact figure, which • W:11 something, over six': ,hun dred and' thirty-one tons. This is from one establishment, others mak ing steel for pens also. RaPh ton of steel ;averages, about 1,000,000, - pens, making total of-631,000,000.1 What - becomes .of all the steel pens ?'' Is it not reasonable to presume that most. of them' are thrown away ?1 How common it is to pick up. "a steel pen, - the nibs of. which are stock _ together, to poll it out the holder, mid in ,a new one T Then this is too soft, or r too - stiff, too fine, •or 'too Coarse, or 'does not make a Tine hair line. For the least trifling fault, it shares a similar fate •and a trifling{wait tion_often em , ties a whole beer into -.the waste basket. Nobody considers_ the eost of s steel that'S when the moot of. •
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers