Issismir inaktrolit.ion. . Ta. Itimmon, :Emma 1 • pub isua evely nim.a* mortar, b 7 g 'lli Wasp et Two Dollars per annum, Is sitessee.. - arat i dertlelnif In all mess eitinslsS sabaseti. tine to t f. paper. :;SPF LICOTICES Inserted M swims aims Sr line for Or' insertion. aid lams' carts per Una far suro.eoMmt I:mentions: L oci+ soncEd, same Style as rending Misr, err *n orsrs llne. - ADvESTIRIMENTI3 aria bar inserted wording IS the follbulns table of rates: . fcr i ch i I $1.50 1 LOO 1 5.00 1 Lomas° is is - _ a I n dies . I, 2.00 I Lao 1 8.001 lass 1 ism 1 scies ---_. 5 inches', 1 2.50 1 7.00 I 10.00 1 13.09 1 20.001 &LOD i inches 1 1, 3.00 I 8.50 1 14410 1 1825 195.001 85.00 _ ...—_ _ i,C colllnoo I 3.00 112.00 1'13.00 1 22.00 1 30.00 1 45.00 i.irolnmnitil.oo-126061110.004 so.on j 65.00 1 78.00 I Calm** 1 20.00 I 40.00 1 60.00 1 80.00 I 11100 1 8100 -ailminlstrstnr's anitExacittor'elgottere: 81; Mat. t.r.a Natters. $,2 ant timidness Carda„ll7B time, (per ..I SI vidltlonal tines 51 each. f , ' • - -. 4;. , ' ' Yearly trimness are e titled to quarterly ebanes. .14 Trsoyfen advertisernen ronatbe paid Tarim ad e re. kit Re olotinos of 4. 01111 I' nominiTilleirtinue of I,l 4 tes en. Wllvltin 'ntprrott. an /1 notfoea of Mar rs 7 q, qn I lieqthe, tisreeding five lines, • are charged ,„ r,r.:- . -1, per lane. - r,„ Rrponrralptvine a lamer elrenlatton than MI th. „,r.., tr. the (lona'''. combined. make., It tb• beat ..o ...p r ti..ne in tqltnm in Northern Pentwytesnia. Jill: r INTTN'tlnf ever? kind. 1n Inatir and Pane, rpm.. ,1 nn witirnestnesa anti Aterieteh• Illantnalts. l o , n k.. arAP. Pamphlets. Ailtl essla. fitateraente. he. of ~prq variety and ~tote. printed at the shortest ~.;,.. 1? Thermion (Mew la Wen sortfilkst an pp ,. , I sews a eon(' aasortment nt new tyre. and gqq-ethi ein the Priatias line can be execnte4l in the ,neAt ,•ti!atie manner awl at the Unrest .rates T relp: A,11.7 A TIT *jay n.4,e17, BUSINESS C=S. L TING LEY, Lieensted AuP ,,er. Rome. Pa. All cells promptly 'Atm,- 111•31.;$370 C:1. 'WALLACE Sp, SIGN AND FR.KATO rAINTER. As. IR7O-yr EEC , TITTDDELL & S ANDERSON LE end Shlpperts of the ANTIIITACIT 4 E COAL. 1111 Towanda. grrl mr.r; VIWIP2s7I I . INSITR ANTI` N - r ..._efnee formerly neemolo.l by Merenr .. one ion; eV/nth of Vfani Tfnniw. C ~!~-r. marl M•7O W. 1)11111Me1, D6nlPr in all • ri ,l o‘ Tincelne -AP nr Ttnnttne nrnmptly attnnfleii tn. Plirtiertlar PiVt.:l tn Cottage and French Roofing. A 71 Ti• . 1 r , ••• at* ' lIE FOWLER. REAL 'ESTATE T. 171:. 'No. Inn Waphirkon Strout hp 4zlll. and Well. Strist.tm:cydottroAlltnnt. it. rolrol..rod :Ind sold. tnrePtmento mail. , pv T.9anc..l. ?iTav _R. t,orn T Ps 1 an %RS - NRIVG, 1111 AND rrrrsn in all s faßhinnnhlr ahnrt nntie.n. -RflflM in Mornr's Nor en-at.over Rater Trne MRS., H. E. nArtv.rs. na. Pa.. April 11. IR7O. tvlra n B 1 k, ESE I - WORN? OF ALT, RtsllS eh HP FWITMITIR, eITItT.S.II,7I , ITT4I. TIM , e., ina , lo in thr hoot mannor anahttf.i.tvh. rpr. - 1 Tr. , 11 , P 'ilnrhor nap. Terms ream:Table 41A, P, , .. T. I‘C4. ' . TT ‘. iTTC. tl do T,OTID RROS.. GonProl Fir i d T.; fr Inwroncp .4gprev. rnvorciir liubt ,, inn in Arrnrnin7 r cenlpanloa. withmN Tio , A;Vnn , ' 17. Tt (lIVTAPTI, S. C. GATLnitp. _ rffl 1 ..... ar n• 1 rti et ,- . W% 07 m=i ll iii l iim t)TfN E BLA rws.irrTn, 'N'Ttorrnl.: PA.. paro nartlenlar attrnfinn tr Ifincgieq, Waunna. Strirha. kr_ Tins lark and donieon Abort notice. 'Wort and - rharszra f.r.l f.at'Ffart,`r.v. '12.15,4119. n' •I ironing I rpnnirin guarant. - 11' , i A „, 'OS _ PF,'..7sTYP ACKER. HAS ,0-o,lkbo him.Pll in the. vat,rint'sYs (1;1 overrneltwoll'in -Rthre. Wort or I,P,riptinn a f lno. in Ow Ilteßt t 1 tyl 4. 11. 1 , 470 —lf • I .A.TSVILLE IV6OLEN MILE Br TN f•crrc Eca DI n•ler;:.",cur,l would requrrtfully annnonce to tir that br r‘Thatantly on hard Wonleri Fl.Annpla. Varna. and all kinds at and r.-fail. BRO4DI,F.T. Tl the n •i rd... S. • C• S. "PT'S r, -14 L G=RAL C E AGEArC Y rsz EMI' TAILOR SHOP lig H. SPACLLIN9 1,1 a tailn: sbnp over rellnrn k rket. formerly.oceupied by .1. H. Cary. Tai 11 At M or. 11,ni lone exper;enecc lie feel. confident he Ile ;:ivf full .11i.fletion Cutti g done at alt Unite. : T, A. and., 'July 10,'71.-3ro ,11. SPAULDING. --- WY TON k BROTHER, J)e.lers In 'L, HIDES. PELTS, CALF SEINS, Frits. EON thr- c 3.11 prire In paid st all -Una it0",:.1.,!1'6 Store, Malu-at., F rwi Of` 1. , t1 - TOn. vroN, TOWANDA . PA UNDERSIGNED HAVE I.lf , I a Banking Ihinse is Towanda, under the •; F. IT.xsos & co. are pr,mared to draw Bite of Exchange. and p,tion s in Now York. Philadelphia. and all of the T'r4ied States, as also Eagland. Ger aud l'cancr. To loan money. receive deposits. t do a general Banking business. . Niason .Vas 0n0.:,.f the late firm of Laporte. 0),ot Towanda. Pa.. and his knowledge of nim of Bradford and adjoining counties an: baNlinq ',en in the- banking business for about !it nrFi tnak.. - this house ade Airahle one throughl, make collections: G. F. 14 tSON. :,v1,3 L, ( 1. rat - A. 'A. G. MASON. liii NT 4 :IV F . IT:M ! ' 11' GOODS, LOW P.T:ICE,,, . AT masr.or.Tos, FA TRACY & HOLLON, N.L.1, - .T.1 in 'dr.:Tries and Provisions, Drnga and Vi.dicalcs, I...rf.,tir oil. Lamps. Chimueyg, Dv rdnifT. Pun,;... this. Varnigh. Yankee No. C...•az, and 3 , nlift. Pure Wines mid toe purposcit i1;1 +:nixie ~1 , 1 at the !neat priers. Pre virefully at, all hours of the and Lied. Cove nn a esti. TRACT & ROLLO'S. J•l7 - .. , 24. 114(19—:Iv. ( 1 14:.!11) PASSAGE FRON OR TO OtELA.I) OR ENGLASIS: S'): OF SITANMITP4 FLOM OR ZO OR LIVERPOOL. .t old •• Black Srta Liuo" of Liv re '1 wok et's. ail.nn.everr' week. ' , wallow-tan Lir, of P,.,cliuta from or to London. tv:we a Inonth. ~11Fes to England. IralanJ and Scotland pay et'lJ ertl.• r parikealar4. apply R"iMama k. Onion, 4 1"••....vay New Yore. or 0. F. MASON & liankfira, - ToNianda, Pa, =ME .111 ETERS'BURG _MILLS xnEvr, nyt, AND UTCKWIWAT F Li 0 (CORN :TEAL, AND FEED , r-tar.t:7 tan,: ami for bale cluf . 3p fir C'ra(M. WOltif WAP.I4NTEI) 1 • ta.n.l qtlaDtity cf GROUND CAYerGA from Old longer Beds W— al. Cozo and tiat.i taken in exchange for P .-r xi STEAM FLOURING ILL IN SYIESiIEQUIN, , 4 no , duslres 'give noncl that Igo new SE .‘: . :11 'FLOURING lIILL 1,,: op-ratton. and Ailed. be ifl pra: In Ltno ou abort notice. - - (11:1:CLIN , .; 'OJNE ON Ti1t.1...11P. _PAY IT IS ItECEIVED uaeaabeat a!ht Rye klour, Coru Meal, I:4'e. Ltr,J, always ou baud and for sale at NOTlCE.—Person, livinge on the i• riser deoiring to patronize my mill, !! 1 ! • ' I, , ryane paid both ware, when they -! , rtni haehein and uP'frards• F. S. AYERS. A thig place Au/ Dr. C. M. Elias -1-1-1 i,:rme.l a eopartueoolup for the r;t .N.EW FIRM 1 , 1-Nrtsrl...• -Is ALL irs ultAscliEs + ''i , i ,4 1. , f0 , 111,1z.t Ilie °Mee of . De. prepared over i A -I.lr n A: tila,:a'n stort in Towatria. prepared at ,-. t , tr,it patient" Lti a tirist-ilara manner. rk warrantet as rt-F..q....nt , 1. 4 ettr,Via wdh , int p.tio, by 'the nee of. :in—:in 1 ii Oznle Owl. ' z. bt . ../ I.ey iriil be et Ida o: h•._ to Xilterna on Sa n:Uri-nit Alondaya =Au farther notice. Aut. 30,71.4 f E.ELLY tic brAXLEY. S.- 'W. 4.I4 4 VCAR.JD' t 1:0E!Lbli VOLUME XXXII. Paon=NAL .OLIEDI 1 - lUM WOOD. A.Tromonr: Am) eN Comm:mos AT Law. Towanda.. Pa. . ENRY PEET, ATTORNEY AT . TAir. Towanda. AL. Jaw ST. IL - 191711. FOYLE, ATTORNEY AT v • LAM. Towanti, Whim with num= ilimitiOtputh side Norm's Bloch. April 14, Li M ITH k MONTAME, ATTO wrrs Le Law. OSles—ixeser of Zits 101 l Pine Streets, opposite Posteee Dmi Sloes. ter ` lT B. KELLY, DENTIST. OF I • Ace OM IWickham Tonooo,,Po. May 94.'70. ,- N nlt. FL WESTON, DENTIST.-: ,DR In Podia's Block. over Gores Drug_ _sad Pin is. P. . WILLISTON' L - • ATTOILVEY AT LAW. TOWANDA. South side of Mercer's New Block. up stairs. Aptil9l.lo—K:' ELER. B. 31 o ICE AN, ATTORNEY 11. AND COIDNOCLZ•OI AT Lew, Towanda. Pa PAD Mola t. r attention • 4 to losainor In the Orph ' ism' r`onr July X. t 4. I v H. C • • OMAN, A.TTOR• • WIT AT W rtriCCAttOTIMI tot Brad ford ComitT). Toy. Pa. Beef:lois made *ad prompt, , y remitted. fats U. 1119—tL T &D. C. DEwl.l.l, Attorneyx-d -• I tem. Towanda. PA., having formed • co-part nership; tender their professional services to the nubile. Special attention given to EVERY DERLET VEIZT of the business, at the county seat or else where. ' . JACOB DIMITY, • D. CLINTON MATES • Towarni, Pa., Dec. 12,18'!0. , • TOM S ' N. CAUFF, ATTORNEY • AT LOAF. T01111413a14 PS. Plllslo2llll* attention gts. sat to Orphans' Court business, Cutnsoobtit r . ollertioss. ;fir Mrs ID Wood's new r wk. south of the First National Bank. up stairs. • Feb. 1. Mt PATTV.RN H. WARNER,' Phyaician and C. a ttend ed toe, Bradford Co.. Pa. An , alla promptly n . Mon Mit door Krafft of Len:Lyn-file House. Sept. 15, 1570.-yr .. nvERTON & ELSBREE, Arron vf sty.. LT Low, Tovrszela, Pa., having entered nto copartnership. offer their professional services to the public. Special attention given to business in the Orphan's and Ilegister's Courts. tip' W7O C. OVERTON, /V. N. c.. cuteuzz. tJERCUR & DAVIT'S, ATTOR wars AT LAW. Towanda, Pa. The undersigned haring associated themselves together in the practice of Law. offer their professional services to the public. lILYRSES MEB.CI7II. W. T. DANTES. March 9. 1870. xv A. B: M. PECKS LAW v • OFFICE Main street, opposite the Court Mouse, Tdwands, Pa. Oct. 27.•10 A. KEENEY, COUNTY SU • PEEINtENDEINIT, Tairanda. Pa. Ottleswlth R. M. Perk. seemad door below the Ward House. Will be et the °Mee the last Saturday of each month and at all other times when not called sway on.brod ness connected With the Stweritendency. An letters should hereafter be addressed as above. dec..1.111 ,BEN. MOODY, M.D.., . YHYSICIIN AND SMIGEON. Offers his professional services to the people of Wy ainsinc and vicinity. Of and residence at A. J Lloyd's, Church street. - Al:m.10.10 Proprietnr. DR. J. W. LYMAN, . Pirrstrum LID Arnomm. • Office one dent eat or Reporter building Res Bence. cnrner Pine and 2nd street. Towanda. June 22. 1871. TOWANDA,-PA TOFUW. MIIY, ATTORNEY AT PJ Raw. Towanda. Bradford Co.. Pa. GENERAL' INSURANCE AGENT. Particular attention paid to Collections and Orphans' Celle: 'business. Otßce--Ifercur's New Block, north side Public Square. apr. 1. T\OCTOR 0. LEwiS, A GRlDEr ate of the College of -Physicians and Burgeons," New Volt city. Class 1143-4. gives exclusive attention to the practice of his profession. Office and residence en the eastern slope of Orwell 11111. adjoining Henry Howe's. Jan 14.19. DR. D. D. S3IITH, Dentist, has purchased . 0. N. Wood'. property. between itereur's Block and the Elwell tionse. where he has 10 , Ated hie office. Teeth extracted without pale by use of Fail.' Towand Oct. 20. Ift7o.—y[. • DINING ROOMS IN CONNECTION WITH THE BLICERY. Near the Court House. We are prepared to feed the hungry at all limos of the day and evening. Oysters and : Ice Cream In their Reasons: Jarch 30. Drlo. D. W. scorr co.- • E LWELL HOUSE, TOWAIsTDA, rA. JOHN C. wriscis V•aFt.d this House, is now ready to lecoratno. rint, th e travelling public. Not:mins norerpenee will ..pared to give Faintraction to those who may give him a cad. Wg-tiortb side of the public square, east of 31er• cues new block. P IMIXIERFMT CRERR _LI)HO TEL. PETER LAND3ItS ' SEn, flayim , ' purchased mad tharonghly refitted this old Ind well-known stand. formerly kept by Sheriff °rif fle, at the mouth of liummerfield Creek, Is ready to give good accommodations and satisfactory treatment to all who may favor him with a call. Dec. 23. BGB—tf. %JEANS HOUSE, TOWANDA, ILL Pa., CCM. XL= )—str. Inman art/arra. The Horses, Harness.- kc of all gueits of this house, insured against loss by fire, without any ea. tra charge. A superior quality of Old Ea4lish Hass Ale, just received. JORDA3, Towanda, Jan. 24.'71. Proprietor: B RADFORD HOTEL, TOWANDA, PA. . The subsriber having leased and lately fitted up the above Hotel. lately kept by him as a saloon - arid boarding house, on the sonth aide of BRIDO2 sTREET, next to the rail-road, la now ;prepared to entendin the public with good accontuslationa on rea sonable charges. No trouble or expense will he spared to arommodate those calling on him. His bur will be furnished with.choico'branda of Cigars, Liquors. Ales, &c. Go .d Stabling attached. WM. HENRY. Towanda, Juno 1,1871.•tol May 72 Proprietor. WARD HOUSE, • • TOWANDA, • ' BRADFORD COUNTY, PENN'A. This pnotilar .honse, recently leased by Messrs. Koos & MEANS. and having been completely refitted, remodeled. and refurnished: affords to the pnblio all the comforts and modern conveniences of a first :gags lintel. Situate opposite the Park on Main Street. it is eminently convenlenttfor persona risit ing yourands, either-for pleasure o business. , septil SOON k MEANS, Proprietors. R. 1 MI LOSSES LIBERALLY ADJUST ed and promptly paid. Insure In the GERHAN OSURARCE COM:PANT, or ERIE. PA. Authorized Capital $5 O OOOO Cash Capital 1200.000 SCHLAPDECSER. Pres. P. A. BECKER. Treas. BREVIT tIER Vice Pres. D. H. KUHR Sep.! J. A. RECORD. Agent. Towanda. Pay IL IL alma. auc2'7l CHARLES F. DAYTON, • r successor to Humphrey Bros., HARNESS MAKER, Over Moody's Store,. K.cps on hand a full assortment of DOUBLE and EINOLE HARNESS: and all other goods in his htie 'Repairing and manufacturing done to order. • Towanda, August 23. 1871. \TEW FIRM THOS. MUlat & Co Respectfully saanounce Ito the public In general, the they have opened a large and choice stock of GROCERIES AND PROVLSIONS, In the store formerly occupied, by John Meridatti, corner Lein and Franklin streets, Towanda, which they will E.Ol as cheap as the cheapest for - CASH ! Mimi will always find Tow Mizniarrn there, Just as happy as ever, to wait upon all old customers and as many new ones as will favor them with a call. TSAR. at m. T£loB. Mtlltt & co. . 21103. MLILIDLTIL Oct. IS, 1811. TRY 011 R TEAS AND COFFEE, COWELL lITAL Hotels. AND NEW GOODS; LEM itluteb Inky. VERSION OP CASABIASCA. f i The stood_on.the burning deck Aea peanuts by the peek, ' Thees that lit that battle wreck ' Just inged his hair a li ttle speck. "Fa er 1" he cried, in accents wild. "Oo e and eat peanuts with your child l", Htit of a ward his fattier paid, ' ' Beca , you see, his " dad was dead' i Thewas the flames grew hot and hotter, He ought of-taking to the water; Bat be couldn't bear to go, L Beca be loved the peanuts so. A that childlike voice he raises, - He outs aloud, he yells like biases ; 4 "Fat er, if you don't come to me, ru tick your peanuts in the sea I" No irer greets his =ions ear, Alon 1 in all his glory there, Mid or sea-gulls and wild ducks, rankling flames and peanut shucks. little boy, how sad thy fate 1 to for peanuts, oh how great, tory sinks down in my heart, - ' lly the peanut ,part. Kid I Poor Tby Thy Espoi 'Tis t us great poets make great names— It little boy-es in the flames, I The' readers sigh, "Poor little dears !"' And odly melt await to tears. Takl Yoiing'Amexiea from school— Nokly, sentimental fool— Pla him in Casabiarica's stead, Theihm 'oa fire,lis father dead, - 1 • ,D'yo s'poso he'd stand and yell and hailer, ,En • he burst his paper collar, And hen not knosi enough to go Unl a soineb&ly told him so ?, iir; ho wouldn't make that blunder, He'd let the pesky ship go under ; Instoul of sticking to his post, You'd see him steering for the coast. !Two l uld spoil the romance of the sto s ry, Two l uld take away the hero's glory, And ! ,, oet's heroes can't dispense With glory just for common sense. ballmteous. [For the REPORTZZA DAYS AMONG THE DERRICKS. No. IL TWO n Arvoan : So we are here,/ at lin, a city of about six thbas 'habitants, and the county at nango county. Most of the s and other buildings her; are Fran; and of V! bons! paint •d a dark brown, and' those no pain •d so, are so colored by the cin ders itnd smoke from the soft coa which is burned here almost tmicer sally. It produces a thick,., smoke; which is affectionately inclin ed to clean shirts, and embraces eve ry opportnnity to display its regards. Here we have a new, large, fine hotel! called the " Exchange " ; and now that we have got a good night's rest, and a good " square " breakfast, running through a long bill of fare, we will " exchange " our greenbacks for the value received and take a tour of observation around the city. Here we are in-the midst of the "heavy " or " lubricating" oil field. There are no wells of importance here in the city, nor indeed on the flats at •all, but the derricks that spot the hillside, and loom up from the hill top, show that this oleaginous fluid is being " called from the vasty deep,' iu the ituhiediate vicinity. Right across from the town, • over vainst the steep hillside, see the walking beams, playing ever with their slow measured stroke like the beaM of a steamboat. The hill is so steep here that one cannot ride a horse up - without " shearing" around by the artificially dog roads, and yet platforms are lev elled off from the side hill, and der- ricks set up almost on the top of each other. The bores here are very small, and oil is almost sure in mod erate quantities, but not to exceed fifty or sixty barrels per day, and most of them not doing more than five. Away over the forest covered hill. to the north, we can see an Occasion al derrick and a. column of smoke curling up above the trees. " Here we are now across the river and down below the c.ty, so we will take a general view of the country and return to the city. And now we are at Wilkes Booth's tract: Gut there is nothing hero of interest, except the name of the infamous owner, and in this, a great deal of the " bluster " of other places of resort iis not unlike A beautiful Court House adorns the city, and ai fine pavement eight or ten feet wi)e of broad flag-stones taken from he adjacent hillside, serves as a sidewalk throughout the city. Franklin shall not sink— the foot pavement shall save it, for it would do honor to any city in the lat.d. Now it is time to depart for Titus ville, and we will take the " Jimtown road." At last wq arrive at Oil City again, passing thzbugh a tunnel at the point of the mountain near the city, as dark as erebus. Now don't tremble so, my dear sir, on approach ing Oil City. lam afraid what I said induces you to distrust humanity, and especially our fellow citizens of Oil City. Here is the usual immense crowd, and here come the hotel porters, each putting forward his peculiar claim to the patronage of the public. Some are dusky sons of Ethiopia, &nee are the pure Caucasians, but frOm the whole company, "good Lord, deliver us." I look at the sun right 'Va. the tops of their heads, thea look at my watch, and when one of them sidles up to me and looking into my face with a seductive smile, offers to take charge of my person and estate, and relieve me from care during my natural life, I take tLe breath out of him by simply inquir ing how soon we can get to Titus ville, and whether it would help mat ters an 7 by taking it on foot'at once. But Oil City is a busy place, and for business men not excelled, per hapii, by any point in western Penn sylvania. A very. fine new Baptist church edifice, sits pleasantly and in vitingly on the sidehill, and other churches of good proportions are scattered through the city. There is a public libriCry, open to all the good pile of the town, with a good se lectiOn of books, and I am tolkwell patronized. A polite and agreeable young lady waits on the wants of the public as "librarian," and I see no reason why the rising generation - voTt fOWaVA:, fiRADFOiD COUNTY; PA., .DECEMBER 14,18714 shouldirow up hi:nomes*" tits tom”."Biograpby " or "TanreL" But here; aa I said foruji*, is the oil business -carried to Its 'limits. Wells are aettuilly in the dooryards of residences, whistles: from the ' en gines are blowing off in the flower garden; and there is a general air:, panne" of--grease'/ 'throughout all' the lower portion of the city. Updn the high ground we find many fine houses, and indeed in many instances the city on the' heights wears'n de gree of comfort almost bordering on elegance. But we are now on board the. ears en route for Ilitzumile, and so we have occasion to pass through the small but lively towns of Bouseville, Tarr- Farm, Reyn-Farm, Petroleum, Center etc. It is almost a continuous city from Oil City all the way up the creek. It is gCod oil territory almost the whole distance, and the production since 1862-3 must hare been immense. Petroleum Qenter is the liveliest of the towns along the route, and has the reputation of being. the moat abandoned to 'vice and disorder of any town in the oil regions : indeed,- for a time it was thought that all the gamblers, thieves and burglars had ' met there in convention; but this was only transient, for they at last found similar difficulties . to encoun ter that they bad met eliewhere, to wit : policemen. I suppose there are nearly three thousand inhabitants in the town. And after passing through these intermediate points, and while we are discussing the country, we turns sharp curve in the railroad and come whirling into Titusville. Here are a number of oil refineries, situated on the lower lines of the city, and they send out such an aro ma as only can come from a refinery, and to one who is accustomed to it the fact is patent to hia olfactory senses that oil refining is the chief business industry in the vicinity. An eastern farmer would have become disgusted with the course of nature long before this, in this country, as the country from Oil City; to this point presents a surface adapted to anything but farming. The valley of Oil Creek is narrow and tortuous, with bluffs and uneven expanses of woods and stumps. The creek flows with a shiggish motion, covered at all times with a slimy and odorifer ous. refits° of distillery : waste and crude oil. Now allow me, dear sir, to intro duce to you the finest city in the oil regions, Titusville. . It has nine thous and inhabitants. It lies on a low, level plain a mile or mile and a half wide by say two miles long, present ing a situation really delightful. There is one view of the matter that strikes the eye of a staanger as really anomalous. Here is a city with its surging multitudes and vast material interests, but lying on a stream of water which a boy might wade al most, at any season of the year. 'The adjl ' adjoining hills are covered with a gro th of pine, oak and other Aim be , and presents on some sides a vie of unbroken forest. B t this is a little deceptive, for the are out at least two roads from , the ity fine farm lands. • C•ming into the main thorough fare: from the beautiful and substan tial epot buildings, we see the city is b • "It mostly of brick, and the shop win .1 ows fairly blazing with splendor and wealth, discover i at once to the tra eler that here is the monetary cen , er of this district ; some dry goo s stores carry from sixty to one hun , d thousand dollars worth of stoeN, and I was credibly informed tha . the sales of one house for private and individual use, in anticipation of a .. • 'n wedding, were ten thous and E at all this is of no consequence, lFFpt as it serves to illustrate the urces of the country. No sensi rSon cares a fig how much mo lora 3,lcFlitasey spends .to get I.e.s mething to wear," or how many dressed idiots there are in soci or how much or how fast the ig nt beggar of yesterday rides his today-; still the statistics of evelopment and all dependent 1 , it, are and must be of interest very thinking mind, as it certain becoming one of the most im ant interests of the State. exc res. We nev ile I write this, cargoes of ro il od are being unloaded in them Africa and Eastern Asia. fin -, So .1 I promised to give you a brie ske hof society in my last, but must re " ark thatdo be known well it must be seen. YS - ti must first be inform ed that not one person in twenty-five has a residence of five years' stand ingl in any locality here. They are, people who have tome from the four quarters of the globefrom Europe, Canada, and all tile States, east, weiit, north - and south. Many of them, it is true, adventurers from the_rebel and union armies, but moat of them simply energetic business men, called here bythat restless spir it of enterprise that Who very nerve- We i atour civilization; and like the residents of the Pacific States, you seldom meet a man that doesn't cab some other place "home." Yet here we find many magnificent residences, furnished inside and finished outside in all the completeness that taste and wealth can conceive or execute. Some have been erected during the last year ara cost of not less than thirty-five thousand dollars. The dwellings are all tastily designed and pleasantly situated. • I have never seen anything outside of the sea-board cities equal in "style" to 1 the "turn-outs" on the street where the "fast " driving is done,' and you may Wan say that there is a goo' d deal of it done. I speak now of 1 pleasure driving. The serviee ma koz is an institution of itself—the wagon used - univerially here for rid ing, or business, over the hills and` through the valleys, is a peculiar ; thing, called a " buck-board ? ' *etc: ally with iron axletrees and ii; set of, say tenor twelve half-springs or lhalf elipses of steel, resting each end on the axletree, an d "th the convex sidemp supportin the seat. It is impossible to tip on over, and no' live mannr beast ciin break one. They are sometimes made with high cushioned seats, and/tops, and look very elegant: in stiCh cases coining frotti :One _innuir9d and twenty' to two hfindred dollars. ' But the great 1 gliftit6.l4l ea' inawrourtoit 7101 r mix (mimes. institution of s onryancil here thro'• out the whole country (if we may ex cept Thus i le and TidiOute partially, *here proPartiocitely more.wagons Pre used), is the saddle-horse. • The first thing a man does when be gets a." etas." is to buys saddle horse, and with the regular army saddle, (and you see none other) his rubber coat or blanket strapped in a roll behind, he dashes along, present ing quite a martiaLappearance. A great excibmuint was caused heree in Titusville recently by the falling of a superb five story brick blOck. It fell at'eleveli o'clock P M., `knocking a hole in the side of the Tarshall Opera House._ large enough to drive a sma ll load okhay through, crushing in a wood &l(ding, and killing one person. There was some kimi of theatrical performance in the :Opera House at the tune, but, no panic occurred. I will remark here, by the way, that there is a first class opera house and hotel combined in lone block, built by a citizen of Tidi mute as a speculation, at a cost of one hundied and twenty thousand dollars. There is now in process of con struction a network of railroads with Titusville as a center, which will ma terially affect and alter the railroad map of the preseht. A line will run through from Tidionte to Erie, also a branch for branches passing off to connect ' with the Pithole road at that place, and also to Petroleum Center, connecting with the " Jinitown " road direct for Cleielaled, by way of Oil City and Franklin. But I beg to guard you fro fall ing into the general (or at l est too general) notion that " everything is lovely," and that in this country !a laboring man or a-capitalist has only to stay one night and return home fabulously rich. I am doubtfull if there is a place anywhere, where there is so little a percentage of hopes realized ! and that is equivalent to saying that there is a. vast deal of baffled endeavors, blasted hopes, and crushed aspira tions in the matter of fertile hunting. Neither is it a role that the million aires pf to-day were the beggars of yesterday; on the contrary, in a large majority of cases, those who possess the wealth are those who have toiled and worked night and day for years, gaining step by step, (long " steps " may be) until they could command as well as comprehend a good thing in a business way. Speaking of the falling of the building just now, re minds me that it is owned by the proprietor of the patent right for the making and use of the " nitro-glycer ine tornedws." Those-are terrible little things thirty times as powerful as the same balk of rifle powder—a little case like the half of a dinner horn, filled with glycerine run down by a wire to the bottom of the well; a little weight silently slid down af ter it, striking a cap, a bullet is dis charged, which enters the can of gly cerine, precisely as if it were shot from a gun; this etplodes it : a low, rumbling sound, the water shoots up sometimes a hundred feet out of the ,well—the rock has been shattered away down, down, maybe six or eight hundred feet ; the machinery is set to work again, and the torpedo which cost, say ninety' dollars, has increased the flow of oil from thirty to forty barrels per day. That is why people will continue to ' kill themselves and each other with ni tro-glycerine. I must not forgot to mention that since I wrote you my last, a new strike has been made on old territo ry at Pithole, where a well - has flow ed as high as a thousand barrels per day, which eclipies neighing of the kind daring the last five years at at least. Pithole was at one time consider ed the best prOducing oil field in the district, brit it ran down .to a mere wreck. I would dare to say that the very land upon which this new well is, might have been bought for one hundred . dollars per acre within one year; now the single well is sold for over .seventy thousand dollars. I simply state facts; let those spec ulate and theorize on the rise or de cline of the oil interests who have talent and taste for the effort. But I must cut my letter off. I find I am "carrying the thing too far." I will *rite yon the rest at some future time. And now imagin-, ing for the nitment that you have been with maall the • time and seen' all that , ' have seen, I will 'ask yon, of the oil regions, as the Yankee ask ed Brigham Young, of matrimony, " How do you like it as far as eQU hare goner D. D: F. kirs4ipssAo:4s4:l:(elij:ll No* that so many families are set tling down in their homes for the so ber and serious work of the year, we would like to make a suggestion in the interest of the little ones. Why not, in their behalf, set apart an hour each day, to be definitely known as " The Children's Hour,' and to be made as pleasant and as .useful to them as the combined resources of a _Christian household will permit ? The very best houriorsuch a pur pose will be that immediately follow ing an early tea, or (better still) a late dinner. Then the whole family will be together; and the older mem bers will need rest and recreation, which they will best see re by giving themselves—body, mind and soul— for an'hour or so to little ones who make borne happy for them. 'Owing to the rush and whin of business, many chillAtn grow up now-a-days in prac tietdlignoisace of the father whom thpy are bound to love and obey, while the father is equally ignorant /of the childish natures which he tis bawd, to train, govern and develop. The older brothers and sisters in a family, too, with their own studies, their own business or their own plea -tures to engross their attention—get in the way of practically absolving , themselves from all but the most im perative responsibility for the irelfare and happrpiness of the little ones of the household. On the patient, over burdened, much enduring mother, pretty Finch all the-work of guiding, governing and amusing thelambs of the tlpcir depends: Why should father settle down, as soon as he has batted his supper, to "! r I= his' ewspaper or his bank ecoount, Joh; to his book, and Hary and Benny to their plans for.to-morrow's party ? Haven't they some reepon 7 sibility for the welfare of yaw() and Charlie and Susie? And shouldn't they feel and manifest some practical interest int those little 1 4 * prattlers Wouldn't they do two hours' work between seven and eight, fore good romp -between six and seven ? Do not the clamors and bickerings of the ntirslings -- who have exhausted, hours ago, their slender stock of pa tience and their scanty moans of amusement—plead for some better ...inder than "Do stop yournoise?" " .7 stop their nose for the M—f ather and mother, brother and sisters —by giving the little ones it right good time before they lay their early heads on their pillows ? Yon won't mind their noise, you know, when von are making twice as much your *selves. -There are a great many things. which may be done to make the Children's Hour a season of joy to the childish heart. We don't object ourselves to a good round game of " Blind.Man'Er Buff," or "Puss in the Corner;" but if mamma thinks that is too exhilarating for the hour just before bed-time, there is still 'enong,h to be done-to make the time -pass pleasantly. - The Practical mechanism of the ifamily can bring joy to many a little , heart by repairing the day's mishaps among the playthings, -and setting things to rights for another vigorous' campaign. The embryo novelist of the family can gather a a little group about her to listen to some simple story. The musicians _of the family will naturally cluster about the piano, and take it out in singing. And if father is excluded from either group, bow can he be bet ter employed than in adjusting child ish grievances or removing childish, difficulties, whether they spring up within the home circle or line the rough and, thorny road to school? .Enongh to do, dear friends, if you have only the mind and heart to do it; and something that will richly pay to do, as a month's experience will demonstrate. Your -little ones will grow up profoundly impressed with the fact that "there is no place like home;" and that- impression is the surest safeguard against moral pollu tion that can be found outside the religion of Jesus-Christ. Indeed,we should think the Children's Hour practically a l failure if it did ,not serve, at least indirectly, to interest the little ones in Hun who dearly loved them. The story of the Cross is the most interesting of stories;and 'why might not the hour end iro childish hymn and a childish prayer ? We can conceive , of a Children's Hour which should be as bright as the 'sunshine, as cheery' as the breeze, and yet seem to demand somb recog nition of the Giver of all Good at its close. At that juncture little Tom my might be brought in (who—in stead of being thrashed or shut up in a dark closet, for being naughty— had been simply debarred from all part and lot in Children's Hour,) and we warrant you, by that time Tom my would be truly penitent and firm ly. resolved not to do so any more. Thus the Children's Hour might be made a 'means of discipline in more senses than -one:=Examiner and ' Chronicle. _TIRE AND RAIN. The atmosphere surrounding the earth contains; as everybody knows, a certain quantity of humidity or wa tery vapor,supplied from evaporation tram the ocean;,.which is either held in invisible soltfiion in the upper air, or collected visibly in cloud's when it descends in cold weather in le shape of hail or snow, or in warm weather as rain. When a wide column of air (such, for instance, as a column, of air co-extensive with the circumfer ence of a large city,) is from any cause more greatly heated than the circumambient atmosphere, it begins, iu consequence of the diminution of its specific gravity, to ascend into space. The colder air immediately rrisbei in from all points of the com rise to fill up the vacuum, and com ing in contact with the heat below, precipitates the moisture which it previously held in solution. Thus the winds, that blew so furiously over the unhappy city of Chicago, and the rain that fell in such copious torrents were alike produced by the immensi ty of the conflagration. It has often been remarked by historians and phi losophers that great battles by sea and land are invariably followed or interrupted by heavy _rains. It was not so in ancient times when men fought hand to hand with Sword and spear, and armies discharged their arrows at each other; - but when vast quantities of 'gunpowder are explod ed, either at sea or on shore, and great heat generated over a large space occupied by the combatants, the rain descends with the certainty of ,cause add effect. In like manner, and fdr a similar reason, rain in such great and popu lous cities as London, great_ and Glasgow, is always moreirequent and more copions than in the rural districts twenty or 'thirty' miles be yond. The .thousands and - tens of thousands of chimneys of dwelling houses—and the taller chimneys of factories—that pour not only smoke but heat into the atmosphere, pro duce the rain, 'from which the "more sparsely peopled villages and town!, beyond the reach of the too abund ant caloric, are comparatilvely free. The tall chimneys, of cotton-mills, foundries, and other factories with which most of our largest cities abound, act' on a smaller scale the part played by mountains in the ecou - 'omy of nature. The 'mountain tops receive and discharge electricity, and the electricity • precipitates from the cloud the moisture 'which they con the Year Round. • -41 - JoanNes : every man thniiis he eau keep a itoiet, ..0 can—which accounts for ~t he great nuelber of "cussed mean ones m the country.* Turrn, theysay, lies in a welt; bat we cannot see that truth lies at,sll. WHY is a loaf of bread like a cater pillar? Because tue grab thst mikes the butter-By! _ HOPE - is the heavenly .angel who light our pathway through the gloomy valo of athersit4r. I , k, THE OONDITOTOWB THAIBIEGIVINA STORY. BY UEU:CC/k ILULDINOI DAV;& , Good arable ?- Yes, sir;- and if yorilook at it in the way of scenery,it's as pretty a' bit of land as you'll find in - Kent County. That stretch 'now ahead. By the way, there 'was a queer thing happened on the track there, three years ago come Thanks giving—as queer asever came in my way 'since I've been railroading. It occurred in this way: 11l have time to tell it, I . reckon.. We - have - .to switch off for the express at the neat station,' and lay by a while. This tiranch road, you see, was builtu for the local peaCh business. I was-put on as conductor of the first train that was rill. - By_,Gporge I tow the • engine woke the country up ? The DelaWareaus - are -genuine south erners---lazy and 'hospitable.. They were hospitable to the very train in a way commercial people couldn'ttui derstatid, It wasn't a. matter of busi ness; it was a home Affair 'to them, like. their church, .or -their darkies; something to chuckle and gossip over and boast about. The stations used to ho crowded with yoting fel lows with flashy neckties, arid their sweethearts, nice, modest little girls, loaded with cheap finery, who had made up parties and come down from the interior to see the train go by. Every old farmer on the route thought he owned the engine (the Getieral Jackson it was,) end knew each seperate car as well as he did his . own bulls and sheep. They'd treat their wives to few miles ride, as you town . ..people would run oVer to Europe with yourn. - .s. Of course. sir, I was at home here on the road in two weeks. ?EVery body ailed me Dick. Ther were scores of places where I could drop in for an odd' meal. I began to doubt whether they • wore my uncles- and cousins or not. Besides, a man here, after fifty, has no other business than loafing. All the old fellows got free passes over the road, and forsook ' that. corners -by the tavern-fire for the baggage car. There they smok ed day after day, and told queer stone. ear neighbor's families for the nefit of anybody that chose to b ,.l] listen. knew all. the gossip by . heart ' ectly. It was just when the peaches were in bloom, too, when I went on . the road, and I goon was punching open the buds with my thumb-nail, and talking• learnedly of Early Blush and Morris Whites with the rest. Its a curious sight to . see that pink.flnsh,above, the early spring mud, from one en - of:the State to the other, and to think that crop is the one , matter of life and death to the people. ' The peaches had come and gone. though, when one day . , about a month before Thanksgiving, an old fellow came on board with his, family, who had: a pass for two down to St. George'e. __l saw at a glance he was none of my usual deadhead squad. A thin, laity old man, white-headed,but as active as a boy of sixteen,and with the Delawaraen knack of finding friends and showing himself friendly. He was a reporter on some Philadel phia penny-paper, and had his note book out every minute, pumping me about the Washington whipping post, Sloan's fish-breeding experi ment, and the condition of the free negr, oes. . ' • " Makes items,, makes item s!" he said. "Pushes the paper.wonderfully into local circulation. " He had been a doctor or a lawyer, I fctrg,et which, in - New York, and was starved out, he told me, so,took up j mrnalizing. He did not impress me as a man of ability, and besides, the poor old fellow was worn out. It was high time for hlin to lie by and loaf with others in the baggage car. . ".Newspaper work," he said, "pays handsomely, compared to my own profession. We get on comfortably on illy salary; quite comfortably." I noticed, however, that both he and his women folks Were thinly and shabily dressed. I did not pay much attention to the women, but there was a boy, Dan, the old man's grand son—a little chap of four that I took an odd fancy to from the first. He Mid an ugly face, but I think one of the most honest and, loveable I ever saw. Tanner—that was the old` man's name—told me-that he hag brought his4ife and daughter down to keep Thankigiving in this village, where they had lived before. "We were all younger and cheerfuller then- than now," he said, " and I thought may be, with the old place would come' bad some - of the old feeling. There are other ways of keeping the feasts. than stuffing the stomach, you know." = I thought to myself it would be as well if the stomach had its share of the rejoicing. Tanner, cheerful and chirupy as he was, looked meag er and hunger-bitten. Four people could not grow fat on .eight dollars a week, which I found was his salary. Ile hired a Vacant house foi a month. There it is=that - one beyond the hill. The family went to hOusekeep ing in some sort of way in it, and he used to run down Friday evenings to stay with them over Srturdays,which is the newspaper metes . Sunday, as you know. We grew to be very friendly. I fell into the habit of watching with hiin for Dan, who 'al ways came out on the porch to wait for him, his mother lidding him by the hand. I used to wonder the poor little widow ever let go her hold of the child day or night, and once . I remember thinking what she would do' if, the child should 'die. One has those queer, idle fancies you knoW. But Dan's mother was of th Ise wo men who seem to have no life ant side of the' one or .two perr.,4e they love. Well! Tb: :),,„Lving . eve came,and Tanner bits. aboard going home, but I had no time to talk to him, as the train was crowded with people who had been_up in Vilmiogton.laying iz. snpplys for -the holiday. Even 'the passenger-cars were heaped. with baskets and` bundles. Tanner had his little package, too—something for Dan. I saw him peeping into it with his eyes twinkling once or twice. I I remember how pleased he was when I brought him A monster tur- $2 per A.13411111.131 - in AdArpzate. NMI keylor Mrs. Tanner. The old lady, although she had: only seen me on tke tram as it whisked by, bad taken an anxious interest ins-ore throat I had, and sent me a bottle of myrrh tea by the old gentleman. I don't know whether it was be cause I bad corns from - a part of the country where they don't keep Thanksgiving, or because of the hor ror that followed, but I remember that afternoon as one ol the brightest and chheerfulest -The air . was cold and crisp. : There mum red mist over the hills; the cars and at the stations there was niithing but good humor and friendly good wish es. I don't think much of serious things, yet it seemed to me that •day that the people came with one accord nearer to Clod because of Thanksgiv ing.-, One old gentleman 04 board bad ;the same Vet 1 suppose; for a, I sat . down behuul him to count ray change, I saw hiar watching the pas: fingers and houses we passed with an amused smile, and turning to his 'companion he said: ' "There's something . very whole some in. the effeet-ortheSe holidays, Colonel • sense of dependence and gratitude,as a 'ear's sermon cannot do." • The other was so long in replying that I looked up s at him. „ " When a man has, a ^ home or home ties to give thanks fof,the boll day is useful, no doubt. It was. so queer and cold an answer that I felt o cariosity about the man., He went back to his newspaper (which was an English one, notic ed,) and began to talk immediately about the duties on silks and linens I• soon found that he was largely in terested ill both; had .traveled over a good part of the world, traded in 'China and Japan, •and, as I guessed, successfully. He had the air of a man accustomed to commaid, and to a life of ease. He was a middle-aged, stoutly-built man,with a clean shaved, powerful face, mid shrewd, plessar.t eyes. I noticed that through all. his conversation he tried to avoid seeing the -happy groupes of people who were incesantly getting on or off the train; =and once, when a child in p . m: sing pulled at hie cane, he.turned his back roughly on it. Yet I fancy—, I don't know why—that the people and Thanksgiving mattered more to him than any of us. His friend said to _him presently, " You're not well, Colonel ?" . Never was better. But the truth is, Venn, this country is all familiar to me, and everything which recalls old times makes me nervous and ir ritable. It's , a weakness which I will outgrow probably. If you'll"ezcuse me I'll go forward." • He saw mejust then, and,"tonch ing his, hat,, asked leave to ride on the engine,in ordtkr to see the scenery Now the rules of the road were slip-shod enough, but that was a thing never had- allowed. How ever, I had taken a curious interest in the man, so I nodded and went before him through the baggage car and over the tender to see hitnisafely. acrOss,. To my surprise Joe Fenton, our engineer, met him as an aid ac quaintance. Joe had been a private in hisrement during the war. They shook hands again and again; and Fenton-was in "Mich a hurry to tell him that .he was married and the father of twins, that he stammered.. The Colofiel laughed and looked as pleased as Joe. He was a different man from the one I had seen in the car. I waited a moment to point out Brock's farm to him, when Joe said:; " You used to come down to these' parts for fishing often, I remember, Colonel !" • " Yes." • ", Where is your good lady , now, sir? And the 'child? He was as pat a yoUngster as; ever knovied." The gentleman replied but by a creature with his hand. - "What, both?" gasped Joe. "Both?' The Colonel did not speak for a minute, and then he said quietly: - "Hy wife was-with me in China. She sailed with the child for home .on the Petrel. , I was to follow six months later, The Petrel went down, There was no one saved." Joe said nothing; but presently he put out his hand and smoothed the other man's sleeve. It was just such a thing as a woman would do. The Colonel added hastily, as if afraid he would betray any- emotion: " on my way West now, in search of my father, who has left New Eng land.. People are easily lost sight of .in America.' " That's. a fact, sir," said Joe, and then he and I began to talk about the engine, glad to get back to' her. We had no right to meddle with a grief like that. I went back on the cant again, _nil: til we came to that hill, half mile beyond Tanner's house, when I step ped back to the engine. I had _an uneasy feeling Somehow about leav ing the man there. We had lost time, and were going at, full speed, . - when Joe gave a horrible oath; and at the same moment something flat tered down on the track from the bank, not twenty yardi ahead. The next, I saw that it was - a child, that it'was Dan,' laughing, and running, with both hands out, to meet -us. ou know, sir, - how long a minute like that. lasts. I had_timo to hear Joe's mad , wild., whistle fOr down brakes shrieking out through the hills, and to think it was like the Yell of a devil, and to thank God that Tanner - was in the back of the train and could not see what •we would have to see, and yet it was all but a breath of time. - It was too. late. The-engine did hot slacken, and the child was hurry ing toward it. Then I saw its moth er above the bank, running down the field. She, had missed Dan, '- and would bein sight before-- I remember Joe's -lips were white. Yet he said as cool as could be, "It would be death, I reckon; but—if a man could swing himself &t‘ n from the cow-catcher-- • - I cashed forward, but the . Colonel lied me back. - " I've nothing to lose," he said,and as swift as a cat he passed round the ledge, and threw' himself headlong down on the track: in front. shut my eyes. , The 'engkte and the-whole train thhndered on, slack ened at last, arid stopped. I remem- iffi ME EEL EMI NUMBER 29, They awaken men to a- barium skarly. I climber down ' and loolait'orer to - a field. - - I did not know what I would tread into °lithe track or Roe. . _ - The people poured out of the train. in the clay lay - the Colonel like one dead=-clear of the track, sir. He held the child alivaand unhtutAill clutch ed in both hands. life-wassnly stun fled,* and. mune to in ~a minute, and stood up; but he did not Seem to see the train or the crowd of men about him; nothing but theboy, over whose face he was passing -his hand. " God Almighty I' he cried, " It's my Dan!" - Then I saw the child's innther down , on the ground with both arias about - her husband's knees, and poor. Tan ner, pale as a ghost, pulling at his sleeve, and crying, "Jack! Jack !" I saw how it was in a flash; and motioned to Joe to whistle warning, and shouted, " All aboard, gentlemen. Ten minutes late!" Though I'd have given the world just to wring the old man's hand. It was no rejoicing for us to take part in. Though I've got no better friends" than the Colonel and his father, Joe and I go there by invitationes often as Thanksgiving comes. round. - No one ever speaks of that day; butit is never out of remembrance. Yonder is the house—stone—beyond the bridge. Want- to- see Joe, eh ? He's on the engine, sir. Passengers not allowed on the engine. St,' George's! Tickets! THE YOUNG IN GREAT 7EB - world learns its lessons'slowly. LL . Much of the world does-not learn its _ lessons at all. The young are every where growing up amid the ruins of otherlives, apparently without en quiring or caring for the reasons , of the disasters to life, fortune and rep utation_ that are . happening, or have happened, everywhere around them, One man, with great trusts of money in his hands, betrays the confidence- . of the publicAecoruesa hopeless de- • fanner, and blows his brains out.— Another, led on by the love of power and place, is degraded at last to a .. poor demagogue, without character or influence. &loth& throng,h --- a surrender of himself to sensnality t, becomes a disguiting beast, with heart and _brain more foul than the nests of unclean birds. Another, by tasting, and tasting, and tasting of the wine-cup, becomes a drunkard at last, and dies in horrible delirium; or ' lives tobe- a curse to wife, children, and friOnds., There is an 'army of , these poor wretches in every large - city in the land dying daily, and ' ly re , enforced. A young gkrl, loving " noewisely, but too well yields her self to a Sedneer who ruins and then - forsakes her to a life of shame and a 1, death of despair. Not one girl, but ' thOusands of - girls . yearly, so that, though a great company of those . , whose robes are soiled beyond cleans ing hide themselves in the gram_e-ev ery twelvemonth, another great com pany of the pure drop to their places • and keen filled to repletion -the ranks of prostitution. Again and again,iu • ' instances beyond counting, are these ..tragedies repeated in' the fell pros- . - ence of the rising generation, and yet - it seems-to - grow no wiser. Noth ing lias been more fully demonstrated than that the first steps of folly and sin are fraught with peril. Nothing • -has been better proved than that - temperate drinking is always'. danger- ons, and that: excessiv_e drinking is ' always ruinous. Nothing is better known-than that a man cannot con sort with lewd- women for-an hour . without receiving a taint that .a whole life of repentance cannot wholly erad icate. Since time began have; women been led astray by the saMejpromises, the same pledges, the same empty rewards If young -men and young _ . • women could, possibly learn wisdom, , it would seem - as if they might win in a single day, by simply using their, . eyes and thinking upon what they . see. Yet in this great city of New York, and. in all the _great cities of the country, young men and -young women are all the time repeating.the . mistakes of those around them who are wrecked in character and fortune. The young man keeps his wine bet- - tle, and seeks resorts where deceived and ruined women lie in wait for prey, knowing perfectly well 'if he knows anything, 'or has ever used . fairly the reason with which Heaven has endowed him, that he is in the brow:timid to perditionthat there is before him a life of disgust and a , death yf horror. , _ - • When the resultsuf certain courses of conduct, and certain indulgences - are so well known as thOse to which we allude, it seems strange than any can enter upon them. Every , young; man knows that if he never tastes a glass of alcoholic drinks, he can nev er become, or stand in - danger of be- - coming, a drunkard. Every young man knows that if he preserves a chaste youth, and shuns the society - of the lewd,lie can carry to the wo- -- man whom he loves a pelf-respect i c - which is invaluable, - a past freely opened to her questioning gaze, and the pure physical vitality which shall be the wealth of kinother generations- He knows that this rewards of cheat- ity are ten thousand ti'mes greater than those of criminal indulgence. He knows that nothing -is lost and , everything is gained by life of man ly sobriety and selVdeniaL He , knows all•this, if he has had his eyes , open, and has exercised his reason even a small degree; and yet he joins the infatuated multitude and goes straight to the deviL We blow that - we do not exaggerate when we sav that New. York has. thousands it. young men, with good mothersand pure sisters, who, if their lives should • j be uncovered, could never look, those mothers and sisters in the face again. They are full of fears of exposure, and conscious of irreparable lose.— Their lives are masked in a thousand ways. They.live - a daily lie. They are the victims - and - slaves of vices which are just as certain to cripple _ or kill them, unless once and for ever forsaken, as they live. There thousands of others .who, now pure and good, will follow evil example un warned by what they see, and within . a year will be walking in the road lhat leads evermore downward. • One tires of talking to fools,.tuicl falls back in sorrow that hell and des traction are never full—in, sorrow that men_ cannot or will not leant that there is but one path to an hon orable, peaceful, prosp_erous..and stic eessful life, and that all others lea more or less directly to ruin.—Scril,- er for December. W . • linura hag an . orbit of its own; if w it moved 'rough the hit of common-place livesit w ould not be genial, but common-place. ...., • • ti , IIAT a record'of hnman folly, sit peiatition, and ignorance a paper would be that should contain all the contributions sent to the editor. Truepiety is not -a morose, but a cheerful thing; whilst it makes me joyful it de livers me from frivolity; yet it causes me to be pleasant and glad. • Mast persons think themselves per fectiv virtuous because being . well-fed they don't disthignisti betiven virtue =I Vietuall. ' . II MI