VULICATIUN. .TER r11 , 1 . :,`.ed "er4223 - 1 . 5%. rvo 8 El cacz. !iuLgz.:%. at , ,t - l'n - r t :rq7i , rare rcr • • :, niftttor, j):^. r. , 7 , rd'ng t,) 1-41131 j Wt. MEI 5 I , ll' SW•OI9.PO $ 15 10.Ut ILOJ 1 9.0.01 MEM= 114-(n) ; /,'3..2:.. ; 25.^,1.) ; 115.651 1 liit.f, : !l : 1 ., 4)1 TOO - i 4 ti.i4 1 s' , So I 4...01 I r. 5.00 ; 7. - ,.(!i) t;.,•.1..0 ; skt.fiJ I t, ~ .)...1 As, ii.,:"....V _ -cnltur's '...;, , 1icf..3. ';',':.,; Alll MN t., plart c: , 'n.tl,-.4,1 1 fit- atiorm Col.•nrini,:mt,•mq errfst. s Ma, hat; fly , Sr' I.lnake3 it tll,l-1-1 rn l'ennrylvapjp. . _ 1.11:n .;;.• .• is ‘‘ , .... - =',171 , n .pn at tl , ‘ 1-,,,•••••-t•_rat• CARDS. ". Y, 1",; , ri7::•' , ?. -:.11s .1-.1 rtls •Itt .gt, lii EE L Ell , NDETZSON ill.(•rm P. A C 1 T , ,NT:TNTSITIZ I\ CE ,t. by . :%Tt:reur ;1-'7O ==Mil la, T . 3, AI! :.tt,n,1,1 I , :trtifullr n - rieFrer.ell 'Roofing.. EST,Y,TE t , . t rut. in :dr r , r 1: T- -1: 1!ZMI UM El • ; zr q ;, :..1 ('ll'~.- y IL r )1) ME -) .1 f, '‘,T,T" EIN/LI ( ;NEI) •Ir.tVi lIMEIMIME Inil tirnl. 4,f Lanwt '. 7,l);Lp ."'I• ock- I 1) U.IF.,LERFIELD CREEK HO ; • PETER LAND3LESSER. t• awl thoronghly refitted thin old fornierly kept by Shull:I-Gra d th :Louth of I:ammo:field Creek. ix ready to •, !•- .4: •:rrnrurindatinnY andgatinfai:tory treatutout • t• 411 . 0 r lam with a call: MEE Ell ISE .i I N I. =I ME FR 1• , • IRS 1 --, MIME 1 14. - $ . 4 _ »:.141y IMEMIIMiI =I - T ;1" 0:11 ..; '-•. ASSOItirAIENT . OII I) i i i Fna na waw ruvrrs, at 1.0..1.1 HYLit. arrh 11. 5G9. LOUti Si KEELER S. .A..1 - 4Nr()14,1C), Ptiblisher. VOLU 3.lE_ .XXX 11. . 1 . 1-IGPIZSIONAL CARS. W 00.1), ATTOUNEI, AND T....vnr. , 1a, Pa. F.:l - 11 - PET: r, 4 ."iTT ORNEY AT Juno •Gc..! 1 TIi.FOYEF., ATTORNEY AT L\* Towall.la• " 0P;c,..• «ith Elhnintt • - - - - li;• •,..eitli r , •'..• 'l-I,tcur'relf.locl.:. April 14, 70 : - - , 1" - AITTEil .c.:. IxIONTANYE, ATTO '- .7. , 1-'l'S AT I. tw. Oftleefe--:rururr- of 711 , 04 and I in- ;:trr.c.t.. opporit , l'. , rtor'F Drui Storr. iv B. KELLY, DENTIST: OF * • 8,•0 r & Mack's,. Towanda, ra. TAR.. H. 'WESTON, 'DENTIST.- Onire In Pr..tton'a , Mock. vvcr Gorr's Drrigk, and. al tit , r,. ja.n 1. 'C.S. P. VaLLISTON. AI"fORNIA,AT LAW, TOWANDA. 0. .lo of 'll, - ,reni;d lies 'hock, np-stalrs r:i 21, i c B. - XI 6KEA N, ATTORNEY T .....• AND (:OLIMMLOP. AT LAT:, Tnwanda, Pa- Par ti. nlar paid to betainias lit t)m,; Orphans' Luc July 24;1113. • W IL CARNOCHAN, ATTOR, • AT LAW (District Attorney for Drell. co,lntyi. Troy, P, , Concetioas wade foul prompt ly reurlttfd. • [chip, °A9—tt. T &D. C. DENViTr, Attorneys-at t..- • Law, Towsnds, Pa., beving formed a co-part nPrßhip, tender their prefesitiottal servkr► to :the pubile. Npeeial attention given to EVERY'DEPArtV MF.NT of the business, et the 'county scat or rlso- laa.e. JACOB DEWITT, D. CLINTON DEWITT TOWANI , .t. Pa., Dec. 12, 1870. • TORN N. CALIFE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Towanda, Pa. Particular attention giv ka to Orphans' Court business,- Conveyancing and I .'rsnerti'mrs• • 'IIV - Oillre in Wood's new block. Oath of the 111-Ft Natioxral Dank, up stairs. . . Ti. WARNER, Physician and '• Prmitord Co., Ps. An ntt, , ,,,icd to. Of',leo fir't door.sonth t.i yr ( \ ELSI3I.ZER, ATTOR barin;Y, ; ..^.tetet.l •;:er 1 -, 1% - r•n to bit‘inr.ss • :' • • . !:••...!..t. I's 0 , 11:I.% 51'114'70 N. C. 71 7 .1*. .IXTEc. ATTQIZ . .1.. • v.,- ;.,•.-. l'a. 1... ‘'. t'.. atn.% t'.•-r t •- Sc -,; :',Pg in tiff 7:!: -; T. DAVIES. 7 - 1 1 4 - ..; ) 1. l'i'",eicS • _\ - A:I\ITV - •r; 1:1::TIINT;I:N :. T0!...a,1;‘, (;;?1 , ••• with i'• •••••• ,•:1 u ,,,. r I. -low C.,. \Vara 11.n5% 11 : fh; la•t P tm...!:ty of t.rh Lio , :111 - ,!. • ''.• ! av - avi•e; ••••••.• !• ! :; •'lirr ri'• .111 1 .• lt , rs r.:1•!r;•-f , •:•1•,;; ;!. lii I.)Y ..ST• ST: Po ;EoN /:‘ 1 • • 111 Vc. ..,•••;11S1 - :ir:Lon. 1,1111.1111,4 Wm' , :I. • T 22. I'l7l l'..n 1: 77c-'711...N0T: AGL7:7 T o I.1 2 ,\VI , !. (1:1-ZA1)(7- El 11111 =II il 4 • =Er . .1,1 : . il', P. F...u- :, w1..r.: b, La.:: . T - L „ .:ta - , - , •.I ':tilts, pain by 2 ,1'..., - -7,, , 11.j) , -• '2l). 1 A7'l. -Vr. . • ."..,, "I.e o o s '`; ; I NI.: - :TIoN WITH TIM BAKERY, I r, d t L• •1 tto at all fintofi of . al.:, 1,- ,. Cc: 4111. in LI.VE, LL I [OUSE, TOWANDA., .1; WiL.rlS this lionse; : iit now ready to aeronuno i pane: nor enpr nPe will ; to g.lO satiNfaction to nowt , wie.n ! ay give gplo of the public moan., cut of Mer 74 FEANS TOAVANDA, yvv AND rxrlK:r. STitEETA. lEEE t v.ll.lttnlt 111111 ef;tint • MIME =I OM . • .-• , . / !••iAVED,. I. -iN' 'iU N IL\ U)W.VIZE LT.111:3 1 . • :". f.)r naz, l'A - t t j 1 ;.W1 ::i F. .LAYTON lIM Su • • .r y '‘. 11 '.:; E :,:S J ani all m hal but, r. ;._ ~.,. 1;•=I _ tt-r 1, r; , ot..h IP , T, •y, ELIA Cra.l,;,•:, at 11JME TABLE OF THE VAN k. ERIE RAILROAD.—T-' 111Titl.-.y, Jan. 23, 1871. sta. - ma'am). • P ,II - :3b I 8:001 TOWANDA '2:40,1 8:10 1 BARCLAY JUNCTION 3:00 I 8:30 1 11.07cROE - 3.13 1 0:051 ‘94,1430X19:1..1, 3":13 1 3:551 ' NEW ALBANY. :•13 I 9:25 1 .... _MILLERS.. 4:30I 9:501 DUS/.1011E: al. A. M. 3 -.?./ '25.'71 NEW ROUTE, TO PHILADEL \ NORTH PENNSYLVANIA lUJLEOAD Shortert and most dlroct halo to rhaatelptda, timore, Waslitrit,ton, and the Konth. Passengers by this route. take Pennsylvania it New York Railroad train. passing Tewanda at 7:15 make dose oowiiection at Lethlebeni press train of North Penteallarlroad, and arrive in Philiuleffhis at 5:05 P. Li.,. in time to take night trains either for the South or West. City pasnenger cars aro at tho Depot on arriral of a 1 tral Convey passen gem to the various Depots t an p rte of the rItS: Leave North Penn's ilailroad Depot, coiner Berk" and American stra-t.' Plffladclphia, at 7:55 L. M.. arriving at Towanda ' CD P. M., same evening. Mann's Baggage E:rpr 'collects and delivers bag gage, oface' No. 105 Soot 111th street, Phlladclphin , ITSICTIrt scoolOtonarrons. Freight received at Front and Noble streets, Phil& delphla, and forwarded br Daily Fast Freight train to Towanda, and all giants to Susquehanna Tilley with quick dispatch. IELLIS MABEE, , Gen. Agt. N. P. R. 8., Front and Willow 13bi. Nov. 21, 1870. • Philadelphia. pA. & N.Y. CANAL &- R.R. CO.- ARRANGEMENT OF PASSENGER TEAMS, To take effect Monthly; May 1 5 ,1871. • 7 BOLTEMAII.D. I NOILITIAAMD. rILISCWAL . No.I No. No. No. No.INo. 35. 0. STATIONS . 34. 2. 36.. 21 AY •It • rY ragirst ..... 5 35.9 45 5 00,9 00 4 31,8 60 420815, 335 , 720 37j7 00 3 00;11 gs so 2 43'1F ss, .... 3'30 . 1'2 40 1 8 30 Waverly 'll 45 3 40 12 48 ,1 8 40' __Athens, .. 1 11 35 4 20: 1 20! 9 251... ...Towanda :10 48 1C 2 00;10 .., rA) 5 051 3 '27'10 35i 9 31 C 02.: 2 57'11 00' I , lleshoppen.... 9OR 1; 00 11 07.... Mehoopany.... 900 40• 3 .11 35 ...Tuttlaisfluock...: 8 1:.5 7 n 0:" 4 27, 12 r 7 85 17, 4 45' 1 151....Wi1kes ;- 710 . 17.• 4 10 ...14.:ouvli s 15 : kllentOwn • 11 ,4 2r, r• 770 i 6 2!", • A It avt s Touttn,la st 7 10; Athens, 7 54; Wa• arr;ve at Eanini at V 10 A. 11, 31 1...1w0-Elmira at 5'30; Waverly. 6 30; 'AUL ,. 1 , ,; :1.1.1s at Tt•wantla -at 725 I% ,att Tralra &lc at 'W.ll:to haven. L'p Traits 1.11 - ::1 , at Pittatun. .. a .. ,~.._. SIM TICOni to urn] from New Tort aud , vitl,,,zt change of earl. train connertn at Allentown with Through Ilarri.tburg; ritteburg and the West. It. A. PACKER, Superintendent. • Miscalrancotts. C R S BAN K, of WT n r, at A. J L. , ceivcs DEporit.R. Loans Motu, Makes Collec tams, wad does a - GENERAL BANKLNG BUSINESS; El To „persons desiring to fend money to ANT Nair of • Collo,' 'States, Canada or Europe. this Dank Ulu lest facilitiet, and the lowest termt,. , raid ff,;:n Neva Stella, England, Ireland, Sett gr any 'part nt Euroisj and the Orient, by the 1 i • ' Ilt r CELEBRATED INMAN LINE 1?.• /. nita F..‘ll,l(ical, Sitter. ruited Etatcn Ronde I:10A rat•:.. 1, boll en EEO WM. S. VINCENT, Cashier p i ffEU MAT I ELTtALGLI to any person prodneing,any Medicine showing, half as many living, permanent cures as Dr. FITEML . I3 Vs.,ErAnin ltur.l:m.vne I:r.ur_Dv. Cscd itivraral oni:;. A Pleasant 3ledlcina, free from injorlo: arng.J. Warranted. under oath, to have Lerman. t ly earet.l!77, in every 100 patients treated in the iist 1-n yearis. .(Soo Vatimor.yl. It is the scienti9 pre scription of Prot. Jos. I'. flitler, M. 11., a era , late of the thliviqrsity of PeunsylVania, - *.A. D., 1 4,,-now one of Philadelphia's oldest regular physi vs. and Professor'of Chemistry, and Toxicology woo has made Neurizla, Chronic and Inflamato Rheuma tism the specialty of his entire profe ional life—a fact voncheil for by the signatures cenaparrying each bottle, - and other testimonials many promi nent renowned physiciansl and cle en. To pro tect sufferers from poisonfins q it nostrinr.s and n•: Mess expenditure of money. ,legal signed guar• antes, stating exact nom Atr o ottles warranted to core, will be forwarded . to any sufferer send ing by letter slat deseepti.n of affiction. _ln caste of failure to cure, alai:runt d positively refunded. MN licirie sent anywhere y eqireas, collect on de livery. ~ A ffilicted in write for advice; all_ in- Sormatinn and medic advice sent by letter gratis, Address Dr. J. P. Fl LER, 29 South Fourth street. Plilladelphia. Pa. 1 , •o Remedy Is sold or obtained by Druaaists. • EIE!MISIIMICH I_3 AT HE N.' • TblFl rtock horse will eery° the prr.ont rzla on, from April 1, th Aug. 1. at tit' stablo .f KlWC:FillttrtY S SotoatoN, Towanda, 3'a., ?In :lay noon to Saturday morrdmr and at .tin, l'a.. at the farm of 1,, S. KlNGs7..truy, . F-itnr.tay and Monday forenoon.. Ifoney due at Vane -i:it• to inbur: rtir ,re, and .51,70 for two o , k‘Ttl.ti b:Ant," r , r ,, n. Money due aa ~, o n as I'.. t - .till, foal._ Any pert.on . 1 . 1,.! 1 , ,rt1n7 with It , : `-,fire •:,• • :•1 ti'•. Vi I;.' ACt . .111:i::11!?•1 , r the • I 't-r•lat•tltst Vitt r-C1114,.. at .ttt•lt , ll A :lot Cita, a'..l tl , t./. M. rttl Ai ; •:1. by CA . , ~ry Clay. I. Attar , tr lit , .1 t‘b ,law 'Y. ,C an gnelq.:.; of thIA 1 r rtr ' • t MIME 7 / . . . yT.o7,l's cELEERATED OIL !•,. ,• rhonl,l kont cr.,, t!..tt r tattle T r 1 1.1v..ry Siald” ar'.• r It it will • ,• r. ; lot 0.::•1 y1 . 17.1•n all oth.r L'l, 01- , 1 . ,• 110, 3. 'dud:,le' • •:•.: rtf.a. it. is unpuryat.recl for . • :.: I qua r. nvi,t,=rnttlis F:11 , 11111 p it : it n 119.• an I f•. - .:* the!r customer:4 f as qualA :t for t.i.r.d..r 1'.••• •.ry t,ody rtuferit...g . from pain anti htmeness of any ento, wounda or any ernf,tion, ot the ii any thaease requiring an outward application should certainly keep this cele -1,,ate.1 medicine. Every bottle warranted to give eit.stact.., , n. For sal: , I,y Dr. If. C. Porter Son k Co. l' , •rter A:l , .lrl•y and F. l'a. And by every .Drriggiat and dealer in Brad. 1 . • , r 1 atid adjoining counties. Ifolloway and Cowderi, wholesale Patent Nledwir..• Itelr d. Fn. 602 Arch street Pliiladepllita,Pa., N',1,•1?Fal•• A t;entr - . If. DIt()WNI(1 julsl9 . 7o.er Prol , rietor, Lellayaville, Pa., ERE =EIS • t • t t.,.• wat. , r I•nwer. •-:).:;1 VC art• I to •n ",,T ?:0:iW01:111 NM NOTICE TO CARPENTERS ! • miler fined have mach arrangements to in t-are Carpcitter's CHESTS Or TOOLS, covering wi•Enurrx TIIET, YAIT m. All desiring pith inn-Irance ar• rcspectlially invited to give ns a coll. C4311' k VINCENT, l7vn. Insurance Agts., Towanda, Pa. L, =NM =SO • !.•. 11. S, rp 1 - 11."..1:D A., lit. 3IXK1;?I, NV. A. I:,)CKWELL'a. =IN • • • 31 .M' 11. A, if .8.... •v\ 1 i tl 1. 41 i's' 1 , IS e ...‘ . i I . • ' r\. 2 3ail-BoAd& 1 ==! uP.ri 6ca7 Piero 14 ,, raW4.1‘dtt b (11 45 I"9rk. ! r 1.• I TOWANDA, PA Successor to B. 6. Russell & Co.. 'tinkers.) F.lnie as an Incorporated: Bank P.ISSAGE TICKETS Of SLamors on hand f.: the 1 - 11 , . 'ti , rthern Pac:3c i 3-10 M. - C. MED.CUR.Pr,,itleat. $3OO WILT. BE PAID; =ERE MIMI - 7 C 0 K Ei The reort DESIRABLE. and meat eIdICAL FUEL for culinal7 purposes duritig rum r. .For &tie Ly the • - TOWANDA . OAS COMPANY. Tnlve coots per In:shel at Ma Gait Renee. vr CS livered. 1:n.730,1870. fiIIYSTALINE, DE FRXXCE. 1.._) 'new and beautiful Pert 11131 0 i= ten tones than any othor perfume ever bronebt lore. the public. It is made fr,•;11 French Crystals. Al , o Pow(' celebrated Cocoanut Oil. an elegant p:ep.,ratien for the hair. For sale by C. 11. lILS. !MEE, dealer is general -„merles and provisions, Ulster. Pi.; fioltli A fiIIEGOTtY, sherh,Lnin; FLA- Athf ns; WE:FE lillO'l3, Frlnklin• dale. LAKI• TROUT, some very fine n 1 a Vt+Fr low pries, 1,7 Jnne 15, 1.41. fOX & mr:nct-r. AATOOL !-50,000 lbs. wauted by \ S NV. A. - 11ocawr.L.L., tho I.4zhert price will in 2.. Qti ((AR OF ALL KINDS RF,ITAIL tug at who:onto prim. at F117: 4, 1: 311:FICUIV9, VAMIERS, bring yoiir producd 4: and sell to FOX k 111=1;Tt. Jaz 19, 471. IMII2 =1 geletteb Poetry. 111 E TILE SMALL 10RDS• APPEAL 1140 12:10 7 11:50 6 11:15 6 .11:06 10:55 6 1040. 6 All dip we flit actrfte your view, Brown, black, 'or criurson-Lreasto4l, Yellow or blue, or sixellecl htie, Pralile Cr goldeA-crestecl. We do our, best to plCsso your eye, With colors brightly blending, With fairy motion gliding by, 'Or nngol-lilic ascending. Eas ME .All day we girlie to charm your oar With' concert of sweet singing ; Anil oven when the stare appear ¶o keep the copies ringing. At times we waken in your host A thrill of soft emotion, And into world-worn spiritedart .An impulse of devotion. Faithful ire stay the winter'through, Although the , snow btorms bluster, And trusting you, since we are true, AAround your bc;mes w ! ) cluster. Or Uwe ily the north wind's tray, Soon as the Spring is blooming, Back o'er tLo sea wp wing our way - Wa know our time of coming, We warblo forth our music sweet, Wo twitter, chirp and chatter, - T Or ono poor nolo sit day repeat ' It is our best, no matter! Or if wo cease onr,p4s, to do The duties life imposes, Insects from flowers we clear for, you, ;The canker from the rodeo. We guard the growth of tree and wood, Or Soon their grace would wither; Seeking our-food ou leaf and bud,. Still flitting hither, thither. (rare our useful, happy life— c voice and form which charm yon ; And wage not an unnatural strife With birds tint cannot harm you. 00 I 4 45 I 1 420 10 4r. Zinn Mil I have ;1 great 'notion, Mr. .I.tlcto.l - , to -tell you and your readers, a fIA story, or rather a st , !ry ul,out f. l is and I beticve I So,'l.lren, tniviy - yeas ago, and nlc,ite, I was living ju the county of Chenaugo, ei State of New lurk. In the neighborhood where I was then living, thei-ci was : - L• bc--utiftil lit tle.lahe or sheet of watcr, covering •out. a Luz dreg! act c.-=. Iu this lake or pr . .. , .1 wcix. sorts, of fish, 'except pickerel. nag/ cats, shiners, dace and sunfish c9r . be caught by thousand-!. It was rare-sport, for boys E self, at that fjme, to go wits and line or a bunch of worr a bob, and haul cut in the two Or three hours, near half a bushel Of the kiml which I lihre been sj backs and arms wol .. with the loads we ' said it made us p 7 pOrpoisn, or a mv has uheavylor - d my hook :A•: called of ..i or quite a `of fish .of .caking. Our o a fairly ache h d to carry honie, •A and blow like a ~t :o horse when ho A to-draw up hill. the fun, • and many time since when I have upon those fleeting, hap gone, alas I to return no would I not give of all I ;ince' acqn:red, of wisdom, hon , - ealth - or love, fur one more sail tp An .the summer sea of my child ood days. Bnt I am wandering from the sto ry I began to tell. I said there - were no pickerel in this pond, where we 'used to have . such rare' sport at fishing.. Pickerel were plenty in all the other tionds or lakes about us, and why not in ,this one? But we tikc;, has been the looked bac7 py houra. more. mar.ls'7l Wli hare or, The reason given by. some was, that the water had' a blackish tinge, and was of such a nature that picker d could not live there. But this ex planation did not satisfy everybody, for some one caught 100 pickerel in another pond and put them in this ; turned then loose to take care of themselves, and as the sequel will show, they did thus übly. Well, though everybody knew that pickerel hod been put. in the pond,. nobody thought of fishing for them— the black -water had killed thein—and so three years and more had passed away, when all:at once, it was found out that somethinir b unusual had been going on. Small fish near the shore had all disappeared ; not r , iie wag to he seen where hundreds and thousands had been seen but three years or so be fore ; and fish wit in deep water, too, w;, , re getting scare, and .what we did net, had all at o'.ec wonderfully. ..1 ; f.olovtitnes, too, \,. hztal y t ti,;.; , ',Vltat 1 . I ':;1111 ,;; ; ;lit the v• - c):1: of the.w.:Htrzrtles, which -theye v. - ere poi ;1 ; spmci .s-.lld it '.l' o; -t. the tuiltctl anti 11;,..1 (Airing othfT • And 5,,, a. fact. thy had, and the pickett.l were tin. cannibals. Instead of dying. a , all ,•f us supposed they bad, they had fol,inA the binclr, Sty gian Water a cuitgenial habitation, and had been tin iving ;Ind fattening on the dace and shinors ; even at eight inch mud-cat, horns and all, did not alarm .theta in thejeast; they took him, as Nasby does his liquor-- straight. , It was really a pleasing sight any day to. go along the margin of the pond and see the great, fat fellows jump up out of the water, turn a summersault in the air, shake their tails, and almost ask one to put theta in his basket and take them‘ home for supper. And we took them at their word ; poor fellows ! how little did they im agine, while kicking up their heels and shaking their tails for very wan tonne:-,.s how soon so_ many of their kindred ' would be roasting on 'the - griddle ; but so indeed it was. • -Those were halcyon Jays for every one who could bait a hook and han dle a fishing rod. At- eile time I counted, mores_ _titan sixty different person-nll in sight at once,- fishing iu that pond. • And this sport continued every day for ninny weeks. Among those who thus made war j .n. 71..tf • ~., a ,i ~.i. Ilr TO-WANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA . SEPTEMBER "4 1871 i •• • ; lIY !nc - rfi N. iiliscritaneons. ay - II:or tiro Iturouji:u.] THAT BIG PICKEREL: •••-; ISM UEGABOUIiOW D=I7CIiTION MOM ANT quarm= upon the pickerel at that time, 14k1 little bantam sort of a fellow by the nano of Smith. He was as queer a specimen of the genus home, as one often comes' across. Small in mind and small in body, yet as vain- and conceited as a turkey gobbler. Every thing he did was done a • little better than anybody else could do the same thing. Ho always stopped along with a slow and measured tread, ,and seemed•to be'efigaged in meditation too profound for common mortals. I often used to wonder how he could condescend to breathe our air, but finally ,came to the conclusion, that it was because he could not help himself —he had no other air to breathe. It, often seemed to pinch , him sorely to do so ; .4 made him writhe and scowl tremendously, but ho had to go it. , Well, this man, one day, Canghl .a monstrous pickerel larger by far, than any which had been caught in the,pond before, one of the old set tlers, perhaps, the first put in the pond, three years bet , re.. Oh, how grand, how good i wade Smith feel. ' I don't suppose, to speak compar atively, that he took more than two steps in the course of - a mile. Small as ho was in stature, his shallow pup py head went knocking About among the stars. How he managed to get• home among us, mortals with his monster fish, I cannot tell. But home, at any rate, he came, and what:a splurge he made. You would have thought to see him drive about that Surely the mountains were in labor, and he was bossing thifjob ; or that an earthquake 'Willi on its march, and that j;Le had a the manage ment of the whole con7ern on his hands. Down he came to the place where I was living told Of his great success, and wantea me to go tip and see the fish. He had indeed caught , ble fell. - z was nearly broad, wide with »mouth have swallow ' old. gad been fiev stretchel to I all , ev.,llitt- of rt",,lxtving iL I was so disgmiteci with the Icd- ow's trleannt , . - z? . ,;IT.t I told him to kwe l , his hock, I , e sure and:take good care of it, and that I.would go alone and catch a bigger tish than he did, and would make him so muchasham -4.4 before night, that he would not v where to hide himself. Off I w'ent to the pond, thinking all the way of the, mighty 'fish, and hoping that I might 'be enabled in some way to shame the fellow, Smith, into com mon decency—rob him of his pea eock.plumes and make him acknowl edge that for once in his life h . a ~tins fairly.m , cd up. How well I succeed ed you will sae in the end. When I reached the pond, I went directly t? the same place, where Smith caught lii' fish, stood on the Fame log and as near as possible Where he stood 'and threw out my hook. I kept it moving gently on the surface of the water, imitating as well as possible the motions of a liv- ME I had not trolled or . skated long, before I saw a monster pickerel mak ing for the bait. Ho moved slowly and leisurly along as if ho did not care whether ho took hold or not. Ho did not come as pickerel often do, with a rush and a bound, fairly jumping opt of the water in their eagerness to get the bait ; this fellow took it easy—he .ware too dignified. to burry to his breakfast. How fine, how noble he looked ; I was so anxious to get hold of • so krand a prize that to make sure of it, I was almost ready to jump into the water, or to do wmiclhing . that would - make the fellow hurry up_ But if the chap was slow, lie was-also - sure. • What he lacked in veloCity ho made up in power. On he came, and opening his enor mous jaws, he closed them on the. bait with a loud snap. As he turn ed to inn, I pulled. upon him and hooked him fast. As I - was too far from shore to throw• him out, I . kept him taut, as the sailors say, and drag ged him to the land. ' 'What a noble prize ! I sat down and. looked at him. Did shiner steaks or mudeat baeoneyer plea:qi him as he 1,1 e: ,e 4.1 ? Never ! I cheered and liollow.c•:1 till I made the eel': aLswev. Smith 6;Lv IIUSC I===io= ME thong:lt then and Y tilink to still af kr !non• than thirty :i-c:pts havi:C• pass el aw - ny., k I fisht,.l afoltril awhile, and caught ser:?ral others of good size, but : small in comparison with the* first. On ;.he way home Came acru..:s two boy 2 ~f my uequaintaucc., who. Lad also been fishing at the same.pond. • I showed ,them my big fish, of clurs.c.s, told theni of Smith's p'erform, ante, and that I was bound to heat hitil and make him hide his head for shame. I 'was confident ,mitte was the larger fish, but to Make assuranco doubly - sure, I scraped up a handful of gravelsbz . tnes and maize the big fel low swallow them till he' could hold no more. Thus, prepared, I hung him-on the top of the string, the boys promising meanwhile not to peach upon me, and went ( forward to encounter Smith, calculatingto have some rare fun when we came r.cress . him, and so we did. We saw him out, with . arms folded, -and head up as usual a m ong the stars, long before we g,; - ;t, to his house. Ho waa'thinking; no doubt, of his moniter pickerel, but little did ho iffia,gine how soon all his rising glo ries would fade away, and his won- Ster fish! dwindle down and be 'for gotten. As we drew near, .he eyed us sharply; but before he , had a chance to nialte tiny inquiries in re gard to 'mit success, I hailed him " Ha 1 Smith, I have beaten you, and told you I . would. Ho brought Out his 'steelyards, and my fish, gray- O. r!, 1 elstones and all, outweighed his just three ounces. But, he. was beaten; and you never 'ship a poor/ fellow more crest-fallen in your life. 'He hung his head, and came down again at once to the "specio„standard,': or in other words descended to common life, and bragged no more about his nionstet; fish. . • ; The enact weight of the fish I caught I do not now remember, but his length was 27 inches by the square, and ho was large in -prOpcir tion. Now, boys, was not that a fish worth catching? `"l~'e~uux, I'n IntempCrance, yes,, my friends, in temperance -is raging throughout this land, and sweeping thousands doWn to,tho grave in drunkenness and in- Tamp, leaving fatherlesS children to next find their homes in the county house, and to be taken down by the demon's drink, and to there end their days with, the delirium . tremens. Look at the great railroad disasters that have happened throughout' the country for the past few years. liobk at the great Hamburg disasieri for instance ; twenty lives - being cruished into instant death, —together with thousands of dollar's being :lost' Look at the great railroad diaastcr th4t happened at Carlton two years ago; three men being killed,, two trains of cars burnt, also ,the depot ; all on account of ono man being a little tipsy. And there are other ac cident& throughout the country too numerous to mention. Look at our saloons and grog shops, constantly overwhelmed with victims whom miseducafion Las doomed to idleness and want let to crime. 'llen let us unitedly resolve. that upon the elo:zo of thil contary, if not sooner, I,very Anleliettu ithall be so trainect and that he cannot be driven into infatay t hy. tii fact that he was newt. (irtall;lA to earn an honest living. Is thi.; not an exatn pie tb the sonsicf Anitrica who have respect for thcru: , :elvc; and honor for their fellow men, turn theircourse MEE the s trc.ther Ln.l as we hart fr,lnr infamy, 'into • which they are fast plunging. • A number \ of f% - eari3 ago, a body' of outlaws rebelled wlcn the Goyeni- Ltween us; hut ho might tye •,vas no v.tsn.v laid tt license on whisky, ant ncitht - r Iva.; the rehellion put , iloWn until the Cloveruniont called out the iuiiitia ; and now they .had ought to call oat the militia, ac.l drive -it from the aco7niitions of America—drit•e it r..s.the white man has driven the Ear .cga Nrce,t, west, to the pnaifie, and hero plunge it into the billowy-deep, never .to return, We eau trace 'it through all fbrmer ages. We can lol)k back to the day 3. of .Nortb, and here we behold him under the birtnchea 'of a fig tree, drunken p with wine, and his ions, , Sheen and Ham, laughed at-him in!mockery aria thee - Lord cursed them. He sent Sheen to Asia,` and from him de ,,cetal.l the chinese and the Arabs, that, to-adv roam over those vast des- erts and rugged mountains, -where nothing -hut the lion and the . elephant abound ; and where now on the coast {if the Medcterancau lie the smoul derinernins of. Tyre, and there to day, the fishermen are' spreading their nets, and bright waves rollover' its marble columns. In the empty halls i of Edom the fox makes his den; and the dust of the desert ie; sifted over the forsaken ruins of Palmyra, .and the wind heaps ,the dust "above the seven churches of Asia. There, too, we. behold 1 / 4 thc Dead Sea, and under its unfathomable . depths lies the wicked cities of Sodom and Go morrah—a mark of God on the Mt inan race. And there, to-day, stand the remains of Lot'sk wife, tho pillar of salt, to show man that there is an eternity beyond the grave. My' friends, to-day, I believe, if we should be taken down by the demon's' drink in wickedness and infamy, as the cities of. SOdom. turd Gomorrah were; the Lord would scourge us from the land. — Shall nothing be doge to diminish this mountain of misery and save the , millions of dollars that are annually spent for the demon's drink. . Awake, my -friends, awake, the devil is lurking near. • And - the Loid sent Ham to Africa ; and froin him descended the negroes', that now roam over that fruitless continent ; living on mules' carcasses, and reptiles —there to Tannin in the . depths of ignorance and superstition, neves! to : rise up and have their names remembered in the annals of history, so long uncivilized race. In. 161.1., twenty sold fo the United-SL:tc:; by the great East ,India tca c.,inpo!iy; from thence commenced .:;11.-..4ry, and. oarri ,, d on q - ntil I !:11. the effects of ski-tryr.:-freat rebellion iroke out, and 'which lenikti• iu th final overthrow of the Sent:nem States., and the glorious victory - of the North. The South, of course, gaintd nothing by Lilo 'rob Alio/4; her causo was lost.. The North gained dr,minion t,vcr the , South, a namo-and•ft place among the nations of the globe. The victory was indeed a great - boon ; but the war brought on. with i,t, °Teat train of evils. La- Fayette' C. B t aker, of Va., who wrote the history of the'rebellion soon after it's occurrence, says as follows: • " On the )vhole, the literary and political talents of the United States have Leer; improved by the rebellion, ,but the moral character of the people is irllrior to what it was before the, war. So great Was the change for the worse, that the friends of goodi, order were hardly called upon to ex ert their utmost ability to extirpate those - various prindiples which_ had taken. deep,- root during the rebel.: _ • Voltair had Said long before this time : " Put together all the vices of the ages, and they will not come up ' to the rais4hiel and enormities of a single campaign?! If this is true of a single campaign (and, who will 'doubt it), how much more truly must it be of a series of campaigns, like thal of the great rebellion. Thomas raine's- "Common Sense", BA been read, and paved the _way for his subsequent work, the: .! Age of Reason,' which contained a bitter- , I \ a‘ .., • h • • - OLD FISUE3I3I4ti. ' For the It k eroarp.] INTEMPERANCE. zolilain 'an I said ingenious attack upon Christian ity. than Allen, whosq name is henorlably connected with our Revo lutioiary history, also publisbed a book `n. which he formally attacked the Christian ,religion, and did his best to destroy it; But thank GOd, those poor infidels have been dead nearly century, and the ' Christian reli”iOn has gone on its way rejoicing:. To ta truly philosophic mind, it pmvep that life is prolonged and health is promoted for such Virposes asidevoid') all our powers, instea4 of 'reinaining in the depths Of ignorance -and pursuing a career of selfishhiess and listnessness. My friends, aro, there not men amon us that are willing to lend a belpii g hand to drive this demon's drink{ froth off the land. Have 'wa not gotmen like Sohn Hancock aid John Adams, who' .saerificed their lives in defense of their liberty against Great Britain , . and who spilt their bloodlandbrams on the ftelils of bat tle tolshake off oppression and Lave free rights among nations of the universe. Such were the founders of this great republic, andlong are tha to be .emembered in the . annals / of history. I say the longer intemperance con, tieuee, the deeper root' it gets.. So it was with slavery, ,which cansed the rebellion. It had been carried on ever since the first settlement of Atnerfca, and the longerlit remained the at.er power it Aitioli to over thr et, and the rebellion it engen dered: . But we at last •found a man that Was made to z ertish it, and he did , honl to the UniVid States. In so doing*; right `will prevail throughout the land: Cannot • we , relect President of the United States that will drive this intoxicating liquor from I the4and. ' People • would look back bnithe former ages and behold, 'when' the demon's drink was, saying, that 'thousands went down to the in dinnhenne'ss and debauch: lo end their days on the gallows. nothing he .done to satin - the ry from that awflit epidenfie? friends because, Of the er'F: :rf:fail snare and to-day ;;_e ro_;:ii that would take this in I and - put it down, "would lfing •,Lseniherect as one of the greatest actors of the . hninan r ~ace ~ The )f the empire, 'glorions as the Cr , g,7 MIS d )0 ,•t, sicar ,pf'tethlehem',' illnmes our own fair. 'land.. Glorions - was the day when George Wa.Shington: formed this great Republic; and which to- . day its the centre of attraction of 'all the nations of • the earth; and the great West is the Eden. of America. The ipeople have - been gOing west since the - first • settlement 6f .James town; in 1 (30/,. going .west from -.:Eu ropeito, America, :',from Maine, New York, Ohio, and: Tennessee,and these: are ii gain sending on pioneers to , N:ebraska, Nc , cad.a, and Oregon, drift ,inn towards the •':setting sun West i west, to the 'Pacific, and there •to meet the return of, emig?ation. . Coin (.ling ast, and corning from the over peop ed empires of China - and-Japan,: to th.? golden shotes - of :the Eureka State, and spreading all over the land like itn army 'of locusts.. What will be the result? i How shall we direst thcs^ eleMents of greatness and, do-: ininiOn; how, f unless-, we 'scatter books 44, their pathway;and open an avenne through which daylight . may reach their brain. Anierica ,holds , the leadership of the nations, - andif: .we iiialle.properclase - of the means ! within reach 3 .we. shall control the: destiny, of . mankind for centuries yet to come. - ._tiOITN. E. CArirss. - 1 , COAT, .t7IT ON FIRE Wig 100 Yurt. 4.—! The ILondon •- News says:' One of the most- curious phenomena in Conj,. riecgon with coal mining is exXbited at the Bank Colliery, near Bother ham, the property of Earl Fitzwilliam; ice This; pit caught_ fi re 100 y aril ago ; and all the - efforts of wor en at the time, and `subsequently , •. ave. been quite ineffectual to extiti • hit. A, short time ago it was stained that ithe flames were app aching the bottom of the shaft, and it Was - then resoliredi-if possible,: to stay ' their progress, so that they might not ex, tend to other parts of the. workings: At length the ,Superintendent of the collerie s ,s Mr. T. CoPdr, conceived the idea - of building a wall to shut in the' fire, and 'in order to ascertain the best side for this, wall several of the ffi ocmls crept on their hands and knees, through . the dense stifling smoke as far as possible into the workings. "Their efforts were snc cessful, and a wall is now completed neail i ly. 1,000 yards in length and vaF ' rying from 9 inches to 5-feet.iiithick r nee:. At distances varyin , 4 from - 30 t...) .7p yards, inel .1 pipes have- been inserted In this wall which are se cardly pingged at the end,. so-that at any • time, by re.rao , ,ino• the- plugs, the !state of the air on the side of the tiro,ilind even the position 'of tim:fire itatlf, can be ascertained. So intense is t le heat arising from this,fire - that tyco ile possbssing gardens above , tli!e• collidy d eclare 'that the growth of plants-is mateltially-affected and, that they arc enabled to obtain .two . and ,three crops - eveq. year. „ 1 T .I -salllllE isTEatuntor Tull E.011'11.--.-INio pose that Prof.-David Forbe*--bf E4,land, knows as-much. , about the in4rior of the earth as any man liV ingl In a late lecture ho insisted that all the objections brought by geology, mathematics, or astronomy, - against the old theory that theearth is a molten ' mass surrounded by a crest about fifty miles thick;are quite untenable. He whould - have us be,- hove, while the outer layer of melled matter, just below the earth's emit, y .,a\ii maybe a kind of glass slag', that, ilpt far below this layer, salaman der bent on diScovery woul find the pure molten .metals, of which the heaviest —gold, platinum,ete..—.would. beat the earth's centre. Very likely th mass of the earth is molten iron; an,kl this view is quite corroborated' by the fact that the broken fragments of some disrupted world, which, inl the form of rerolites, are continually lallin% from the sky, arc often metal ic iron. • But what -a - tantalizing thought it is, that just under our feet are countless ,thus of the' precious metals only waiting for John Whop per to let.us know the route by which lie passed through to CiOlit...---SC6b-. nr's for. May. $2 per A.nntarn. in Advan'ce. A GUESS FOR LIFE. A volume could,be filled the strange _delusions . entertilined'hy madmen—the remarkable - pertinacity and cunning they display in carrying ~ nt the whinis of their disordered mind& In their wild freaks, , acs frequently evince a method in their planning, fan adroitness - and Coolnes& that Would - do credit, to the shrewdest sane person. We 6 ive be low a thrilling, incident which actual ly occurred as - .related, one of the 'parties to it having been a prominent inerin,army surgeon: When niy regiment wasdi..:tband - cd, I bade adied, to my old co - tut - tides and to/the army,, and commenced . buSi-, pegs in the .flourishing — town of. . •', Asi was starting for the the table, on the evening of the third day, After toy ' arrival, the door-bell rang violently, and soon the. boy came in tintisaidlhat a man wanted to: see the • doctor. The visitor ' Was_ standing by the fire when I entered. He was a tall, powerful man—a per. feet giant compared' to my "five le_ six" and •his great and bushy ' bla ': lair andivhaern were well fitted to the menstrouLforro. ' , t e le "If fon . at liberty, doctor," said he, "0o come With me. 'nit is but a ' few s , ps;: and you will not need a'ciirriage, .' - • -.. • . ' Iptit On•m-y hat and coat Aiid. fel lowed him. It was my first . call` in L- -.,.nnd I fondly hoped it was the forerunner, of many others. ! _ • . The man strode on ahead of me all the , •-fivne, notwithstanding my en deavor b 'to keep at his side, and .spoke . not.a, word, not even. ansvier int niy questions: Stopping before a substantial-I/0k:- linc , - residencein one of the - principal !° 'streets, he applied the latch-kezi'.nrid !and let me into a pleasant little.room !on the second floor (a study I thought pit), hung'abent with ‘goOd Taintings , and. elegant •eliromos; and lined With books'of every Aescription. : : Take a • seat,- doetbr,"• said- the man; ",I Will step Ont. a ,moment. :Take this chair by the fire; it's a bit ter cold night:" . ' . ! . The chair was a, great: trawiekly thing, but': exceedingly comfortable. I threw my feet upon, the fender,•and 'leaned back-'upon ,the cushion, well satisfied to, warm myself a little befOre seeing the '-patient. z - • ~ I. heard . the- man appioacii - - the door, which. was directly back of where I sat, and heard the door open and close again. I supposed he had gone'ent, but did not look around to ! see. Indeed, I had no time, for: : a stout cord`was thrown over -inT wrists and across my Vreast-, and a handkerchiedbound over my mouth .o quickly that I could not preventit. When I' vas p.Mectly secure, • mv condUctor stepped in.front of me anal looked - withrauch interest at my vain atteMpf4 to free myself. ',• . , " Good stouoCord,, isn't it?" he asked. "It has neter been' broken, and many a stouter' man than ! you! has,triedit.„ There now, be quiet -a while,' and - Iwill ..tell vciu what I v. vnt." -He went to a cabinet . that stood in• the. corner of the room, and taking a long knife from one of the drawer,-, ran his thninb over the.edge, and felt the point, all the white talking in the most Com oriplace manner imagina ble. - • "I have for years' studied the art of guessing," said holt "I can guess anything; that is my guessing chair th;# you are sitting in now; and I take great pleasure in imparting 'my knowledge to others. This is what I want of-you to-night. I did not intend Co make you guess that—but I have thought of something better." He hard become satisfied with the edge and point of his knife, and was pacing up and down the room, •,giving me a full history of the world, interspersed• with facts relative talhe art of guessing, at which times heul, ways stopped fn front-of me. - •'' Did you ever study it, - Doctor?' .ho asked. "I blow yon haven't. I am the only one that ever reduced it to a science. Since I left my veter anal have devoted my whole time to it, and now I am about to, initiate yen into its mysteries, if you are worthy." was standing before me, so very .enlm - that I did not think he in tended to harm me; but when I look ed intdrhis eyes, burning with the fire of insanity,..l felt that my situa tion was desperate, indeed. • "I must: test yin," he said. I must see whether you are' naturally gifted or not-before I waste much time with you' I remove the handkerchief, will 'ylkitx answer my qnestionsr • I. nodded an a.ffirmative, and he re moved it. "Now, my dear doctor, •you are an entire' stranger 'to me. Without doubt. you have often heard of me, but it *ill boa hard task to distal gnish'ray name from all other great men of the time. You may guess it,- doctor. What is-it?" - • Ho, had brciught his face so' near to mine that I could feel his hot breath, and 'I fancied I could feel the heat in those terrible 'eyes. The long, keen blade 'he Was holding over me—fo; what?, To take my' life if-I failed. , - ;, . • "Guess! Guess!" he screamed. " If you fail, it will be your last guess in this world." I dared not to cry out—the knife, was too - near. I could not escape,' for the strong cords bound me to that chair. I could not lift; , and .I could not lie there and Jose my life. 'What could I do? "It is a hard guess," he said, "and I will give you three minutes to Fns.-`` wer it. I summoned all my courage, which had sever yet failed me, even in the awful- hour of battler and looking. him steadily in the :eye saiL • "I know• you,' sir; so whek is the use of guessing?, I have seen yon on the battlefield; marshalling your men to victory; ll3ave seen you cut down a. score of men with "your, 4 own 'single arm. I' have seen you put -to flight a whole battalion. I .know . you; your name is in my mouth."! I remembered what.ho- had said about leading his veterans, , and had tried this harangue to 4ivert at tention,. 'I paused to mark the ef fect. • . 2 , "Yes, yes, 'doctor. But 7rytt i s it?" he exclaimed again. seixinds!" Great heavens! - What. would I not have given for aclue' to -that madman's, fancy! Thirty' seconds, and, how short a second is! The knife was iaised higher that it might fain momentum by :the distal - ed.: His body Was bziiced for the stroke, aryllais eye upotr the mark. Ton' seconds; More!" ha. cried. " What is it ?" , There was only one hope ifor me, and that warrto guess. 1 fejt that ho considered himself..some great 'man—as he had spoken of veterans some great, military chieftain. I thought of our own heroes, a l nd the names of many of the - in were -- on lips, bat I dared not utter Ahem. It waii - the greatest chance game that I had, ever played--,iny life depended on the guessing of ii.na,me. I thought of all the 'European generals; but cast them Aside again, and came back to our own side of the watei-, ".Two seconds!" screachcd the. lunatic. • NUMBER 1,5 - Without a .thonght, almost with out Volition, I spoke a name,..lireath.; inn a prayer that it Arnight....be• the right one. "Napoleon Bonaparte!" ."11,ight 1" said the madman, throw ing"aside his knife, and undoing the cords-hat held me.' "I was , maistalr-_ en ircyou; doctor. Yon :nail) true genius; this is your first lesson; Come at this hot= every themng, and I:Wll i teach you the beautiful art—the way to immortal fame." • • AB I arose from the chair, weak and trembling, the door opened soft, ly, and four strong men entered. and secured the -maniac. I started for home, well pleased that I had got through with my first guessing lesson, and fervently hoping that I should neyea be called upon to take another.- . fiHE. BEST WOMAN. I think old women—l don't quite like the .word "lady" .. — because it doesn't mean anything, pow-a-daysare_ the - , most beautiful andloCeable - things in hdivorld. :They are so near Heaven that they catch the glol and bright ness'whiCh ritcliate from the pearly gates - and illuminate - their faces. When the hair begins to—silver, and the embers in the fire grow - cold,. and.the sun has - got so far aronnd life's horizon that the present makes no shadbw, While the past. stretches down the hillside-to a little mound of earth Where we will rest for a season —a little Mound not big eneugh tO' hold our - corner lots, 'and 'marble - fiontii, and safes which we' shall have to leave' on the other side of the hill; but: big enough,- I gist, to hold . our - memories mid . fancieS, oar air castlea and secretsAind when the . journusy is nearly.. done'l and the night is:set ting in, and the... darkness beg-ins to • gather around us without any_sta*— and - thepirds, sing low in the- trots, ,• and die; and . the music we L ar comes- froM afar strangely sweet; like sounds cora.ibg over the water andlike little children lite 'live within enrselv'ecs, and the • world gradnallyeedcs from us-then , I should *like to be an - old wo-: - Man, full of blessed meniollies and, peaceatkanticii,ation,S.- - I think I know the - best ivoian in the world, iind I think the Sone I know has the kindest heart, and tWilear: r e i st face, and the most - caressing, liand,and the inost undying defotion among all women, Her eyes were once to fiver the boundaries of . the world.: and' were the; first thing; ever looked into. Xiid I think the best woman every other- man knows has ^li these qindities in the same degree., And I think there is not one of ps who has strayed so, far from, that wOnaan—the best of allT, women —not —not one of us so calloused 'with the ,; 7; i l l t.: , 11 . df life; not one of train tile midst of. difficulty and .idanger, who 'does not feel the'invisible arms arourA him to . shield him ; and who doernot long to,go back .to the arms and _loye - of that, woman, and . to rest s as We .rested before our feet'got. into tho,ffinty roads,. upon 'the breast of ouK, mother. - • , : In a time •of famine a rich man sent for the poorest children in • the town, and said to them: "There is a basket 'fullo k of . bread;- you may each come cvery day and take a loaf , until it pleases God to send 'better. times?: , THE LITTLE LOAF. - The Children attacked the basket, and Aisputed as to which 'should have the largest loaf, and then, went away without once thanking their bene faCtOr • . • Only Fraros, a very poOr brit cleanly girl; modestly remained be hind, and had the smallest loaf which was left in the basket.; She gratefully - returned thanks and went home qui etly.. ‘, One day tho children behaved very badly indeed, and poor Frances received a loaf very much tivnallee • than the rest; but, when she took it ".!.. home, and her mother• spLi i t open, a number of pieces of . silveiell on the floor. • The poor :woman .was. astonisheir...- and said: . . • "Go andiet urn this money intnedt- , ately; it must. have • beeil put - in the bread by mistake.", !Frances went directly 'with' it to the gentleman, who.said:: • - ...."Midear child, it nets no- Mistake. had the money put into-the loaf to reirard you.. - Remain 'alw,ays:_as ' 'peaceable- and contented: 'Tliose'Who • are satisfied with a little always bring - blessings upon' themselves and fami ly, and paSs happily throu;:li the world. Do not thank me, but thank God, who 'put into your heart the treasure of,t‘ contented and -, greatfal spirit,-and who has given rue the will and opportunity to be Useful to those who are in need of assistance." , • SAvisGs Or Josu Busasos.--I don't think that Fortune got enny. -fa iOrites: She was born - blind; and I notis them who win the oftenest go it -blind, too. - ThG heart iz wife of the head,. and we (who have-tried it) all knoviloW purswnsiv the wife iz,espeshilly when she *ants siunthing. • . T. • I konsider a Weak Man more_ clan= gerotis than-a malishus.one;rinalish ns.ineu have stun karaeter, but weak ones don't have any. • I have .notised one thing, that the inost .iirtewous and diskreet folks we °' havo among US are I those who laiNe either no - pashnns 'at all, or very tame ones; it iz a great deal .easier tew.be. a . good dove than a decent . serpent: • Hunting after heulth l is like hunt- mg fillet-fleas, the more Sou hunt them the more they Tdke. the selfishness;, oat of this world, and there, would bo mere hap pito:is than we should know *bat to do with. A D.IIIi.EY 'who prefeiied being till -4;tl in a railroad smash-up- than in a steamboat explosion, gave his reasons is follows: "If you is run ober by . do cars and ltilledoey--dare you is ; bat if you is blowod up in 49 'whaf ar your a Thirty