rr.glits OF pusLicATIoN. Tur. BitikMAD is published every' Ttim , aas Morning hi 6. V,' Awe= at TAM ~.tlare Kr annum, in advance. -- • ni,•Advertitttlig iti All alsekeUitiere of imbecrtp: ,p.,• to the paper. S Et: lAL NOTICES Inserted at Fres= eiXls per h,• or fast Insertion, and Ittvz czars per line for -I,l”.equeut Insertions. . picsL NOTICES, same, style as reading matter. rrr cErrA 11126. A 1 tvErin ,_Sg3ll2kiTS will be Inserted acesivihnirto 1., following tablo or rates _ I 1w 1 tw 14m• I sl±l t 6m I lyr I 11.50 16.00 I 5.00 I 6.001 10.00 1$ 16 2.00 L .5.09 I. 8.00 110.00115,00 f MOO MU r 2.50 I 7.00 I 10:60 115.00 I 20.00 I 00.00 I 18.25 12S. c - r .:, , ,1nAn .7 1 -- 6;iiiil - i 2 . 00 I 18.00 122.00 1.30.00 45.00 TWo.OO a 80.00 t sioo $l5O - , 1:11111i.trAille$ and Exectitoee Bottom, $2; Ana. t f 2 bo ; Business Cards, Live lines, (per sadiWmal lines $1 each. " v. ,rlv zeivertNerp are entitled to quarterly changes. a.lvcrtiscmente rend be paid for ix adeanm li. , .olutions of Associations ; Comnatinkstions ; ; ,,vied or individual Interest, and notices of Mai , r and loathe, cireedie five lines, ere charged y per line. ltrortmrsat having a larger,eircidation than all t ; In the 'county conffained, melees it the berk 1. ITlcai 11111.'11 Norillbrn Pc ntieylvania. • _rit INTINO of every kind..tri Plain sod Fancy. 1-ne with neattlemi and diepateh. Handbills, • rarda. Pai4p - hleL9,.Billhcade, Statements, &c.. 1. variety end: style, - printed at the shortest pr ILI - morn:la Office to well supplied with .„ pr e scrs: a.Cood assortyeent of nowlype, end in the Priiitislii_to - can. be executed In „ ..rti•tie' manner an at the lowest rates. j.l;')Ls INYASIABLY. CASH. BUSINESS CAMS. cc.' MI TINGLEY,. Lirepscii All calli; pftnutitly attend- May 0.11370 • AV ALL A - dE 11 • A YD,'FRE.NCO I,',A INTER srpt. 15, 1870-37- pLY. TIUDDELL A SANDERSOIs.T Miners sod Shippers of Me -;:11.1V.» AIVTI,i•RACITL COAL. • To Nan n eta, Ps. MEI YINCENTJNSURANCE torn:Trip occupied by lidercrir one door nouth of Ward Ronne. maylo-'7O tr. P. VINCI:CT. _. • . Dl3rmocK, Dealer in all J A . Itooling• Matra. Towark a: Pa. All licofing promptly attonded to. Particular .:'rma, to Cottage and 'French 'Roofing. T 2 FOWLER, REAL ESTATE t 'No. *pm ,Washlncton Street, be' LaiJalle and Well* Streets, Chicago, Illinois. r.,tate mirehased and sold. Investments made ).• , ncy Laned. May 10,70. nR-F,SS -MAKING, PATTERN r (4UTTING _AND -FITING 'in all fashionable •, Filort Medi, n. ROOMS in Merenr's New over Porter k Kirby's Drug Store,. • MRS. R. E. GARVIN. , J'a., April 13. 1870. • WORK OF ALL KINDS 1 I a. swiTCTIF.S. rtmts, MUMS. FM7 111a410.in the bPst tnaymer gndlateFt st3 4 1e' i • Barber Shop. Terine reasonable 1a,.11e,•. 1, IV9. p Ge,neral Fire : . ry. covering by 14-I.lninn. WN.rnipa. 1,11.04, ( niar.isni in Michael O'Brien, who keeps a hotel in Conshohoeliqn, and he shows also that he is not Wholly devoid . of an,, appreciation of the re sults of his Fasiness. He'pnts in the window of his . bar-rooom a placard reading . aslollows: - "Young 3,Ten and Boy. Are—Forbid den to Occupy These Scalx: They Will Find Their Way 'Here Too &.on •Fm• ?heir oica.Good." . There is hope f or. .3lichaeL He is evidently-, yuldcr, conviction. A fath 'er Matthew woull convert him into a temperance lecturer in short order. Turrit is said to lie in a 'well, bu we de not= how truth can U, at all. 1 ) 7% . • • N • ; For the ItrroarraLl LETTER FROM COLORADO. GItrXLET, Colorado, J.uncl7, 1811. S. W. ALvar,O—Dear Sir:, As it is some time since you and. frien s - in old Bradford heard from this " I'll once more spread myself f r your edificatien, and this time..- eeley" shalt' be the subject.; GriVey ' how sublime is that word to a ne Greeleyite. Why; sir, •you hare uo idea how we go ahead, and 'what a fast people we are ; only .a year old and :we -go aheiii of some towns t*eiity years old., Ireally think we beat old " Monroe." Buildings spring up as if by magic, streets are laid out, parks, trees; lakes, -,etc., are, coming into existence ; first )rlfige stores, first class prices, fast young men,. with plug hats anxious brisiness men hurryitig about, and pietty. girls that boat the world for • drew and style, old ladies .with‘ sundown& about the size of an old-fashioned_ umbrella, (m wifolas one), and old gentle that-hare a partiality ,for rnn wheelbarrows. • 111 ell fling • . as. Oar - business places .erg about . follows : One brick yard ; two lumber yards, two , blacksMith shops, two wa gon shops, One flour mill, saw • mill,, and something less than One thou sand;carpenters, (I think there:is on an .average about three to erery habitant), and the following stores: Two drng, two- furniture one netva depot, three provision, one boot and shoe, three dry goods,- three variety, 1 , two hardware, one cigar, one, bakery, one ice cream, .and an old- woman that sells butter and eggs. We have five hotels, one Baptist . Church' aid a Methodist Church now building... But notwithstanding all our ino •dvrn improvemento, we have no whis key- 'shop's.- We-don't alloW that any how. We. have that sveille.din our deeds ; we.are a - morelipeople,---". we. 'are." If a man wants` whisky here , we compel him to%get,gick and go to the drug store for it, "(end what a pile of sick ones there is!) • We have a sv.t•of leaaers,loo, - , that know some things, if' we : don't,. and they watcir over our 'vielfare like an oldlen - oyer her chickens, and they .t Ti us we can't do without thew, and 'eve them, and when we kick np \mtiss with thorn,.'they resign their offices, and they say., " Gentle men 1 if you don't want us try kome one else, "and we will prepare*: the tickdts for you.; Three 'different tick ets, so that you can vote as you please." And'they get up something in the following style : • REGULAR TICKET. ForPicsitlent So: 3ILER-r.R. Fur Vice Picbident-:TtinAnyEl:-T1111:31 W. F.- L. litrrnEx, L. BET, Go IT BLIND, And then the independent ticket is the , sime as the first,. and the Reform ticket the same .a.sthe second: So yon see we have our Ohoice(?, and die happy. And they make a law that a man . N‘ho is too poor to pay for his town . lots, is not worthy to - rote, and a man wllia has lots and has paid for them, shall tote as many times as.ihe has, lots. So you see how prettily the Machine is run Siithollt We are heavy on organizations and innusementsi We have Odd Fellows, 'Masons', and Good Templars' Lodges, a farmer? club, and o. Lyceum., -Ah, that's the " rub." If you want 'to hear wisdom, attend our Lyceum ! Then we have a silver Cornet Bimd, and a. glee club,., church sociables, and 'a dramatic troupe, a stock astp ciation, and , a bank at two per cent. a Mon.' Everything is sold by the pound, potatoes, cabbages, vegetables, and fruit of all.deseriptions. And as for "insects, and creeping things," we can beat any other part' of the United States or—New Jersey, in raising them. We hate all kinds, styles and sizes, and can fill) unlimit ed orders for them and guarantee to snit the most fastidious. First thing_ in spring comes a _kind of a nonde— script half bed-bug and hall- beetle : they come around about dark, fetch their slipper with them, and stay. till morning, and are \-scL . partial to us that they crawl down.our backs, get into, our ears, overOni face and 'into our mouth. About this time of year when a young • -man takes his lady love ortt walking, and wants to say, " My 'dear," he gets out- the " my," and a bug flies into his mouth, and instead of "my dear," he says; " my . . gracious ! " . Most of us have trees set - out on our lots and along the .streets ; they. look beautifully, or at least they will in time. I have some almost six inch es high grown from the se A. lioW's thWfOilhigh? - _ .OAr streets are named after diffdr nteliinds of trees, such as Walnut, Chestnut, Butternut, Rickorynnt, Doughnut, Maple, Oak,.etc-, in antic ipation - of the above'named trees that are goingto grow on them. We have occasionally, (not mom than four or five.days a, week on ma average), what Mr. M. called "gentle zephyrs." They are very gentle in their. nature, not generally doing any more dainage than blowing down a house or two,: and. carrying. off:roofs. The lati ono 'we had. 'was "soma" Mr. M. had what.he called a, model cottage; a story and alialf high. The " zephyrs" blow it dowk,and smash ed it into a .cocked hat : one lady was slightly injured,' and a child that, was looking out of the window up stairs was not hurt at all.' Several other houses were blown '-clear off, their foundationi, and another smalllionse clear into—the middle of next week. Our citizens are heavy onpets. We have tame antelope, prairie dogs, gophers, jack-rabbits and 'cats. One enterprising old gentleman brought out with him two eats and a dozen kittens, and , sold them for a dollar apiece ; but now, like another fellow 'that lonce heard of, his occupation is gone, as the cats won't stay at home, but travel from house to house, so now the cat merchant; like McCaw her, is waiting for aomething•to turn up. 'A cat s and five 'kittens came to my house and took up their quarters without saying as much as :you please: Real estate is rising rapidly. Two town lots which I gave fifty dollars for, are now worth seven hundred dollars. OW Pei- Annum - in Advance. IiuNKEL FKAIM =IN When I can .get a good price for what property I Moroi I' hope to , turn to old Bradford county, to rest my weary bones ; for wherever I wan-i d'er I there is no place like Wm- roe, and :YanGordere_Ader Oh, how I would like to see the.stail, ing faees,•once more, of Hen. "Tracy; Harry Hollon i :Bill Decker, and many. others. Ah ! well ,, this repining is of no use, brit thinking •oi that cider mill is too much for me "; so. I shall hate to wipe my -Weeping eyes, and close. Give my love, to all enquiring friends. . . . ' I remain; yours till clellth, J. HXOF.NBOTA3i COOLING Orr. . , . i x, Men andMrses,are the • my animals that...'swe:ff• . The -ox - ls, Off' by accelerated .respiration if ,heated in the - furrow, he -- parti y opens his •tnonth drops:his tongue,and by rapid respiration, or-shortbreiathing,throwa 'off the excess: of heat.which has, accu mulated in ,the system. -.. "Old Dog Trny" that runs panting, 1w the side of the carriage through the intense' heat of a jtily sun; dasheS into tlie cold spring .with impunity, , , and re turns refreshed, having no perspira tion to check when, Men or horses submerged in . a like manner, :would suddenly check" .perspiration,. and if they survived the Shock, it' would be but to .die with acute or chronic infla,' mation,.. In "violent motion,:the res piration of . -beth men and- horses is increased,.but .trot Sufficiently so as. to•.carr . y • off .iliC heat. that is generat:-. ed ; they.perspire through thin, - the pores .of . which become openttd• or enlarged, 'and it is while in this condition that both are exceedingly liable to he. injured, and whengi, eat "care isineee.ssary - ito_preserve the health-of either. 7 -- '. - • . ' -.. . We , saw'', a -noble*-loi)king sutras awhile, ago standing by the „roadside of public ihn,wet 'with foam,- and apparently- highly heated. TI re he stood unchecked by .reia or .rhalter faithfully-waiting his master's return. The day:Wcia cold; the Wind , blowing . a gale from the northern hill ! En patiently be pawed-the frozen ground champed, the bit,. and wildly flung his head from,sicle to side while his lips were contracted and nostrils col- lapsed, g . i : Ving•bim a - fierce and ' un natnral.appearanee. No hlanket.cov . eredlis, wet and itetite4 body, the cold wind`wifs fast cooling him off, - earrsinglis moist long' hair to shtnd on cud like that of• the porenpine. He was evidently suffering severely: And this is no: uncommon sight. • So little is - knowni of the physiology and functions of the hone, tlitit the ipan who worild refuse an extravagant price . a. favorite animal, suffers him to stand , in the condition *lnch I have des.Cribed. If the or es capes an attack of colic or without inflammation' in Soule shape, it will be his good fortune, and • not from any wisdom or Impurity on the part of his, ownem Even in mild weather; truntgh it nr n be summer, men and ,horses , should riot femainAnict, in a cold , di•aft,when„ heated and wet k ith perspirntign.- 7 - Ow. 11::/, nnelnsel.for'-li al. 7 A . GRAND tH.OUGHT. Daniel Webster never,.utiered: truer or grander thought than the If we - work • upon marVe; it will perish.; if' We ;work upon, brass, time will efface it; if we.rev temples, they will cram:able into dust. Bat if we work upon immortal minds, if imbue them WitbAtigh• principles, with the just tear of God and of their fellOwnlen; we engrave upon these tablets something. which no time can efface, but which will brighten to all eternity. -In this 'way we may all be artists, and even the most ordinar,y unlearned, if we have tut an earnest and loving heart ay produce a mas terpiece.- The p fessor_or lecturer' may ,Cut-deep lines and fashion mot Wondrous forms, on the unwrouglat material which be has beforylarn. The teacher in the • Common school or the Sabbatli school may l ,,with the sunlight cif .t.totla, photog ( ph upon the tender hinds comnaft ed to his charge, a thousand • forms of holy beauty. ,The humblest, ,most quiet man, may - write Orion his neighbor's heart good thoughts and hind words, which will last folrever. And such a paonnment - wllf be a real, immortali ty, more ,enduring' than brass; and loftier thawthe real. majesty, of the pyramids.' Such - % record, 'instead of growing" dim with . time;will grow deeper'with eternity, and will still be boldtmd legible, when thi sculptures of/Ninevah; - which- have out-lasted the centuries, shall - have - all faded /Out, aint the steelipictures of modern art shall bo, forgotten. And when the' things which the dimness of time shall lag revealed by.." the light of c tcrnity, tlig names- - .'of these Unknown artists shall be found . writ ten, not on tablets of bronze or stone, but on the "fleshy tablets Of the heart, and the unfadiry , pages of the 0 WE temperance men re 3t. our pause on the simple') scientific truth that.ae/oho/ is twentially a poison, and that all substance-containing alcohols are cogequently baleful to the heal= thy human* system. -We "do not as some that a glass of lager or, of cider is as injurious as a glass of whiskey becan`se it dont:luasa far less cintbatity of alcohol; bat we insist, that an ounce,of alcohol is just as hurt ful' when diNsed through sim glasses of lager is when imbibed in two glass es otrnm or brandy. ; . We perceive, ,therefore, no safe ground whereon to discriminate between one idcoholic beverage and another. Whit we should prefer to do, if we had power, is to place the dispensing of 'Alcoholic stimulants under the sane legislation, with_ that of. a other. poisons. Calomel, opium,' arsenic, Prusic acid, &c., are deadly poisons whence it dose mot follow that, their sale should be absolutely prphibited. .11 should, on the con trary, be authorized and licensed, but (as' with other poisons) placed under such' regnlitions and_ safeguirds as. 'should preclude its abuse. —' N.Y. Tribune. ,„ Way is i of bread like a cater pillar.?-It's tho grub that =Abe tholittttort34! IMIS The Scientific . American says, we ' have all he of the Black Hole at .• Calcutta: ' It, was a room eighteen -, feet. square. In this room '_one.httn- _ dred and forty-sit persons were con. fined. ' It hod :but one window, and that. a small onii., Dr;- Dtingleson, in . , his "Elements of Hygenie," says: "In • / less than an ho pr, many of the prumn- r era were attauked iv4th estrum() diftl- . - culty in breathing; several were deli- - .• gou s ,_and the place was filled with; - incoherent ra . . in "which the cry . - for wate r-w , : predorninant/ This was handed • theni by the Sentinels, - ,• but without. the 'effect of allaying their thirst. In less than"four hours many were suffocated or died in t ol lent delirium. In five'hours the sur livers; except thonat the gate, Were. - frantic and -outrageous. At- length most of . timm / became insensible. Eleven hours - after they were impris oned, twenty three only of the one -- hundred and forty-six came out alive, • , and these /were in a highly putrid fever." , , ' , There/are many "black holes" like this used for sleeping•rooms,Says the' - tii London , Co-operator ; e 4ifference be- - t Teen them and the ne at Calcutta is , that they : are not " rammed quite so fall of,human beings. In a word; . ' then, we may say a sleeping apart ment:should be large, lofty and.airy. If - is a poor - economy for health to - have far p gv and' spacious parkin), and tuba% fir-ventilated bed-rooms: Fash . ion, however, -is regaining deity in: . this respect, and wiil,,.mi doubt,-con tinne to bear-sway notwithstanding our protest against- her dominion. . - You will scarcely drink after an eth er person frOm the same glass,yet you -will breathe over 'and over the Milne , air charged With filth and poison of a hundred huimin bodies around you. You cannot bear to touch a dead. body because it is so poisonmis and pollufing;, but- you can -take right into • your lungs, end consequently into your body; your system, those pois onous particles --and noxious elliala tiens wbielt the bodies around you. .have refused, and which have been cast ipto the atmosphere by their heigs, becuaso the health of their, bodies required thalu to- be thrown' ~.‘ of ~ f. NUMBER 10. • If the "thuirosity nice creatures. who can scarcely seta foot on the ground'," who are sq delicate that they run dis- -- traeted at the- crawling of -a worth,: - dying of a bat, ur squeakina, of a Mouse, could -see what they Creathe ' :at the midnight carousal,• the very - polite ball, end bright theatre, they would never be ; caught such corn- '• pally again. Nay, if they could see what they 'breathe in - their own dwell ings, after the - dears -add ',windows • - have •been closed a little while, they would soon keep.open houses. More sickness is' caused by vitiated air . than can be,natned. It is.-one of the -- most prominent ,causes of scrofula . , which is but another for half the diseases that attack the • himan. body. It vitiatesand- destroys -the why fountain of life—the blood.. In fhe sick room it often augruents- - .. the disease . or , renders it incurable. If the„physieiiin Climes in and. opens' a -Wlydow, the good nurse, of the ten- ' der mother, -oi the kind wife,-or-,the loving sister. Will fly up and close it' as though the life of the sick were at stake. All this is well meant kind ness, but really cruel: - • . If you Would' have 1, breathe fresh `air; - throw open stp r. windows every morning, and mufflers, during the day; leave off the from the chin. For twenty years-I. was ' toured fe never going out, without a I . handkerchief tied closely: around the mouth, and for nearly that period - hare reft,it „off. I have had- fewer , colds and suffered far less from Chang-. , es.of • climate than-previously. - Let air into your bed rooms; You cannot , - - have tt l inuch of it, provided it- does.: - not blow directly upon you. - • Many students are injured by villa ted air in their studies. These are small, and 'when the doors and win dows are closed, ; the'atsnosphere soon becomes loaded with noxious veers.. . The man is intent - upalis subject, he", scarcely knows whetherhe breathes or not, much less does `he think .of what,• - • he breathes.. Many, also, - are seri ously injured by- the manner of held, • • 'Mg their studies. 'All close stoves: . - should be' nvoided., The good, ] old- . fa.s.liidned, open, large cliiinneyrrivitlr. a fire place sufficiently capacious ;to ..6 C receive the wood with, but little chop- • ping/is much referable to the stove and , .grates and -p the paraphec s n?lia .of . indern fuel;Saving - What We Breathe. A DRUNKARD'S Come now with ma and look iipoit a Wad scene. Faintly glow the embers upon the hearth of ,a ruinedieottage. It is a cold winter's night and ' thn - pitiless blast shake§ the 'casement" • and 'drives Ahrongh many crevice, the falling-snow.' • 4. 'A feeble light'struggles a,,, ,, ainst the gloom of the apartment. By- the light, plying the busy iicedle upon a .* tattered _garmenC sits a woman shfv- . ering in the bitter frost. Hei film is pale and thin. In her looks. and - at= ; titude there is no hope. Often she, - sighs; as. the Sharp_pangs of a break ing heart rend her bosom. The moan of her hungry children in their sleep, comes to her ears and the - scalding tears overflow. She thinks , of the time when she was a light hearted girl, steed up a bride and _- heard the promise' spoken to love, cherish - and - pretect till death should dissolve the tie; whenin their bright sky, the first glass—the . little cloud like a man's-hand—gave token of a rising storm ;,,when the first shock Of . a drunken husband, reeling across the Ahreshohl, smote her heart. , Sad musings are thine, lonely wife, as thou pliest still the needloby the light in the desolate morn. But she .pauses in her work—a i'66f4v on the step—a hand. pushes the ridoer Oh, how unlike the fa&., the ,form, the step, the salutation to' those she remembers so, well I And she: is chained to this " body of, death." He rmay approach her and she cannot fl). He may silence her moaning children with blows and curses, _and she can only interpose her frailform. There s no release for her till death eothes. Mote than widowed, with' society to which the dreariest solitude were paradise. " Home, that dearest word in earth's.. 'dialect, to her another naine for all wretchedness, and no apfeal save to the chancery of heav en, uorest save in the:cold and iilent grave. ' • 31xxxl human friends only cling to us when the sun of prosperity shines upon us, and the waters in which we sail - are tranquil and bright, bqt Christ comes closer to - us the darker the storm gathers, ruand. us. When, all else is gone He is near, making himself known to-ns, and open:410o us the riches of His' grace. It is then we can hear His voice saying to as in soft, sweet accesits, "I will sever leave thee nor forsake thee.": HMI