II 14TERMS 01P - MVIILIMM I 2 O2 . * - Tantrum= Stamm In eablidnravomny Tw at" Moraine - by S. W. Awn at Tiro ps o r iper annum in Mynas. gradrernoing mall awn exchmto semi* tjll g 04161 .6 SP MOW nina4alat norm aims per me for Ord insertion. and Ms cam pee Upset orrqoent tromeaticnia. %out, NOTICES. as= Mee as reliable saiabin. Iv or/ mil a Une. ADvsitITOMENTS TM be inserted more* is t f aring tat& of rates inch I $1.601 IMO 16.001 /AO (10.001 $ 4.00 1 6A61 e. 00110.061 _ 0-7j-24 1 3.00 1 &ISO' 1410118.41811810° IWS i - e — o b a nin I LODI 11001 18.00 I 22.00 80.00-1415.011 20 . .00_ ! _30 : 00 f moo ago t fieTe 2(l°°°a rr3 .. I • i • I • I WOO I 11100 ISW administrator's and nem:toes pollee". al : Midi. ilea Koboes. al 50: Btudnais Card', the Ibis*. (pie y awl q additional lines $1 nob. v a n. advertisers areiantitirdto quartestretabges. Transient adverttsementunmst be paid tefor advaims. All iloamintlotts of Assadattous I Ocaramadadicasa a nd or indirldnalisdered , and notices ot wels and Deaths, esoesding fin li nes, are changed ,r cart per line. The Tinnuerts Wing • larger circulation this ell 0 , r are - ri,in the county ocmabined. niaba ft th• boa o,4tioine medium in 'Northern Perraulytvalds. TOR DRUMM of every kind. in I.labs and Piney tro:(111, done with neatness and dispatch. handbills. vin ts. rant'. Pamphleta,lllMteads ilistalients, km o r ece 1 variety' and style. printed at has aborted em.. Prom REPOVIIEII °Moe is well "applied with power Po'. a good assortment of new tips. and .terythina in the manner Una can be executed in h . „,,,,,,a artiste manner and at the_ lowest rates. yr.IIIISILNYARIPLY CASH. - =lnns cAsaxa., WALLACE REELER, ese.,sicN A D Tram, 'unarm Tirga I as. Belt. IS, 1870-yr D AY, H 9 DELL & SANDERSON Monis; and Shippers of the SrL:LITAN ANTIIRACITE 00AL, mar:l•7l Towanda. Pa. iI9rM:H. MORGAN, dealer-in Real v tater. lots term $lOO upwards. Chllee:arer the late s. Den k Co.'s Banking House. T DThilliOCIT, Dealer in . all f a kinari of Rooting Slates. Towanda. Pa.` An r.70.c.71. hooting promptly attomded to. Particular :tottiop siren to Cottage and 'French Roofing. TAlT,ortEss. —Try Mrs. FR -1 pries work and prices. Shop !n first yellow "DP lidween Ward Ronan and Dakery, oppoelto rast-00. - Towanda Oct 22. IBTI.-6msiV R 1 ; FOWLER. REAL ESTATE s "DEALER. 10. 215 Scutt' Watef Street, Chi. en", nrinota Seal Estate purchased and sold. In vponcr,ts madeancl 7 Sloner Loaned. May SAIITTEL,POwhirL,' SON k. CO. hasi , lewd the Barber Stop one door 'rest of lb, ibm se, and re6iw.,:tully ask It share Of nblic p4tronsgo. raar.2ol2 TURN O. AUCTIONEER, N dilcber.rrnilnattand'all sales of ma estate • zta p01i9 , n51 property. MI ceders by mail or other. _ cc^ %nil b. promptly' attended to in any part of the m-ztri Post , ffic. address, Standing Stone end l!y, rAitr:. Bradford CAnuty. Pa. mar.23'72 COI,ORD BROS., General' Tire id Life inrinvic , Agency. Policies covering ICAF •11 dr.lllBZe esnced by liettning. In Wyoming. 7714 otlipr reliallecontranies. wit.bont Addnal r!ZTPPer TI. GAYLORD, tryaltAin2, !Jay S. C. GAYLORD. PNRNDITNTE:q, BLACKSMITH, I , II ' NIIO'ETON. PA.. pay* particular attentiorito Ironin,Puccies. Wacons, Slci g he. ke. 'Tire set and repairic done on short notice. Work and charges c narsnteea astisfackery. 12:15,119. 3iOS PENNYPACKER, HAS Bain established hinnaelt In the TAILOItING • I - SINESS. Shop over Rodtwell's Store. Work of Ivry descriptfon done in the latest styles. Towsnds. Aprll,2l, IS7o.—tf RAYSVILLE 'WOOLEN NrrT,T, EN .ndprsigned would respectfully announce to .lie that be keeps constantly on band Woolen If'scsitnercs. flannels. Yarns. and all kinds at 1e and retail. • HAIGH k BROADLET; Proprietor._ • the Von pr . wb•or,. Arr. INTON HOUSE, S. P. THOMPSON, Propr. the Depot free for tile Etcmse. 46 . 1572-Cm S. .RUSSELL'S . GENEP.AL CRANCE AGENCY, ,6—tt - TOWANDA. PA. UM ( ,1 11..* 1 CM MEI CMS 0 UNDERSIGNED ARCHI TECT AND IItiELDEB, wishes to inform the Icl Towanda end vicinity. that be will give attention to drawing plane. designs and lions for ail—mann* of bialldingsi„private Superintendence given for reasonable ation. Office at residence N: E. corner,of etwo,ta. J. E. rumurNa. Box all. Towanda. Pa. I t.Ze LIS and pub C.1"11:0,0 &coal a MEM RE 4' PARLOR OF FASHION. SIIAVINCI, ~ 2.,1 , 11.1'031.14 i G, and lIAIR DYEING ni the lat'cst Style. Also particular pains l':ratting Ladies' and Cidldren's flair, Sham ilurling and Frizzing. 40APSAIVAT tc. LINCIICOME," over ttie Main Street, Towanda, Pa. c. 1572. - P • ol LO , n In nn_ CM BEIM 13223 121 KINGSBURY, ESL ESTATE, LIFE. FIDE, icF:3ISENT [(TRANCE AGENCY ~ • Oct', corner of 31.dn and State Streets, - 113, 1972. TOWANDA, rA EMI MEI 1H ; 1 D AND BLINDS. , • 11 , prcpared to furnish Kiln-dried Dome, Raab .kl, of any style, size, or thickness. on short Illand in your orders ten days before yon iise the articles. and be sure that you will ralthat will not shrink or swell. Terms cash ' IT. ?a. Tnly 19. 1871. GEO. P. CAM. ''I'ON ,t•'B BOTHER, Dealers In I, HIDES, PELTS; CALF suss% FURS, 8 - . C., , ~ .4i, the highest malt price Is paid still times. ..e M I d. E. Rosenfield's Store, Itain-st.i„ - e. a.p.k1201:, a. a. KiArroN.l n0v.14.'70 TOWANDA, PA. MI ;n113.16 r tr ttant to t thori on delta Towai a WOO Fr- v,. q (dce WI THE, UNDERSIGNED HAVE otA34' eds Bauktnx House In Towanda, under the tame oil I. F. MASON & CO. They !tie prepared to draw Bills of Exchange. and take eo , *tions in New York. Philadelphia. and all pertunor Of the United States, as also England. Ger soil France. To loan money, receive deposits, tat 0.00 a general 11 , eting business. - G. F. laeon was one of the late firm orLaporte, M4fon , of Towanda , Pa., and his knowledge of h. bus:nese men of Bradford and adjoining counties aui having Ixen In the banking business for about if teen Coup., mike this house a desirable one through which ti make collections. 0. F. MASON. Towaida, Oct 1. 1866. A. G. 'MASON. . 11 11! N,F;T GOODS, LOW PRICES! AT, MONLOETO:I, PA. TRICY & HoLLoN, healers In Groceries and Proelaions, Drags Iterossne Oil, Lampe, ' ChlmneTla Dye titntrn. Pants, Oile,Varialslulankes No. ebacco, Cigars and Snug. Tare Wines and %Ct.. 1„, , t M Otte! t 'Lluo d:)" Ir, of the lu,et quality. for medicinal . purpoiles All Goods sold at the Tory lowed prices. Pre .tf ma-jolly compounded at all hour. of the ra7,tt Give ue • call. TRACY & lIOLLON Ds , ton, Juno 21, 1562—1 y. ~ I PASSAGE FROM OR TO IEI ELIND OR ENGLAND. a co.'s LINE - OP 51:ZAMSHIPS !BOY 011 TO QUZESITtYWN.OR urar.Poot.. Iras Mack Star Line" of Ltv. , k eta, every week. • -tall Line of rackets from or to London, wice a month. Lances to Eneancl. Irelantl'end ScoUAnd pay deimuind. iiribtr particulars, apply to Williams & Onion, Now York, or . . - G. F. 11.4.50 N Banker,. ,1&;c. . Towanda, Pa. ~;b..i lulu! tRLES F. DAYTON, Successor to Efttrupbrey Eros., RE • lINESS MAKER, Over lloc;dre !lame, X"Pa on hand a fall assortment of DOUBLE and tINGLI: RUNES'S; and an other goods in his lino ikl , airiag and manufacturing dome to order. Tomas, Attgrad 23 . / et • ID JACQBS, litts removed hia TEMPLE 'OF FASHION El raiton'e Block, Mein street, second door - above, Bridge street, ~! can 'thesis be founds complete stock of 'S AND 110YS' CLOTHING, •\D ATS AND CAPS. " oransavd, and void Vtlb• lowevt,rsios. • .AZAV'CIZJI)i, VOLUME PIII3I2IIIOIAL OMB. _AWSWOOD, Amnia* AND Ovasanuat i.e • " II 54 : • ' A' $ : lA' . IP y t . 411 : 14 rAw. oft. via mina' ONITII & MONTANUS, ,ATTO k 3 atm a Lot. _ Plies—eThr et ibis - Mos Strad% morns raft% ten Sem - DR: - 'WESTON, Oacie ta More !fitaik. avet Osten Pritumill Cheakel Moe. • „ W 1111. T. B. JOHNSON, Pxtrinaux JL! *moms. Mice over Dr. 11. O. POLICE OM & Co.'s ress Store. DB. C. K. LADD, PHYSICIAN J./ and !Imam Towanda. Ps. 011os ow door north, of Day. Huddell & flandaraon's cad *Soo. lanlBl2 ' - P. WELLIMON • L-1.4* £TZOUZT A,T LAW. TOWAXDA. South am al Marcues iffy Mock, up stabs: April 21410—a. MaKEAN, ATTORNEY H ARD ClocimaLos Av Lint; ► = We. Murtolar attention pad to team' ea Os Co. .11/411? WELLY & STANLEY, Diaritarg Me ever lirldibits - knock's Wm Tom. da. Ps Qu torwelh. ,w. B. KILLT. I ..20121c. n.eItUKCIT• : VH. CIABNOCHAN, ATTOR • ins •• Law Mend Attorney int lan& ford Monty), TtoL Pa. Odbetialmnadelliaiglr 5 , remitted. :r &D. C. Derwrrr,. Attorney*4l.: U .1.. Towanda. Ps.. having 'brand s cell& nonddp. tender their professional services to the public. %seta attention given to ZVI:BY MAST DEM of the buaineskat the county seat or she. where. J.I.OOIIDitVITT. D. =MN Dsl= Towannarta., Dee. 11, MO. JOHN N. OALIFF, ATTORNEY : as Law, Towanda, Pa. PartkolLe atieniton ev en to Orphans' Court bottom Conwrootog sat ( NgIedICCIL wir Office In Wood's new block mai of thallrit Rational Bank up stays. Feb. 1871. IL WARNER, • Physician - . add. C. Burgeon, LolloyevllleAlredflord Co.; PIL All eille attended to. Mee test door .oath of Letra le House. Sept. 15.1870.-71 , - • nnatTos .1; Emmum,. Arra"- etre as Lcor.Towtode. Ps., linvi2g *Mae& Into eopertnenthip. offer Sete prMi sent= to the ipuhlto. Itieetal ittentkei stem - to bedpan In the Orplan'a end Mel aeteefla Courts. eplllire s. memo, ze. N. 0.-11.1111=1; MERCUR & DAVE, AMR& .1.T.1- MIX AT Law, Towanda. Ps. Tbe itzelerolgoeff baring associated theordiehro together - to Otogreeticei of Law, offer Mete protesldeoal melon to U M 4 lILYBSEB-MEEOI7II. - W. T. DI II March 9.18T0. l o k r A. & B. M. pzors LAW v OFFICE. Haw cute opposite the Court House, Totrsode, Pa v' Oct. 27:70. A /L- REMY, COUNTY SU • Pk.nta szarizna. Towanda. Ps.. Mos whit B. N. Peck. second door below the Wartiinsa: inns at the ten the last Saturday otasattlecalb and at all other times when not ailed away on boa ness Connected with the Superttendency. All letters abonid hereafter be addressed as above. dac.1.70- DR. J.W. LYMAN, • Purim:tax AXD ficaosag. Office one door east of Reporter building Hest deuce, corner Pine and 2nd street. Towanda, June 22, 1871. JOHN W. MIX, ATTORNEY AT LAM, Towanda, Bradford Co.. Pa GMIEBAL =SUSAN= AGENT:' Particular attention peldtoCollactlrmsand Orphans' Courtbusinesa. Office--Xercurs New Block, north aide Public Square. aps 1, V. DOCTOR 0. LEWIS, A GRAM ate cethaeollege •Thritclans andl3l= New York city, Clan 184341, Om ezatusies to the practice of his profeation. Moe awdeeeldwnee on the eastern elope at Orwell EM. adjointaig Barry Bowe's. jun 14. 419. TAR. D. D. slant Dentist, - has garchaaed G. R. Wood's property, between Mermen Block and the *well Some, Thera he has located hie office. Teeth extracted without pin by flee of rag. Towanda, Oct. Ro,lB7o.—yr. FF?rmll DINING BOOMS IN CONNECTION WITH I= =EMT. - Near the Coact Bowie. We are prepared to feed the hungry at an Ware of ththeire day and evening. Oysters and Ice Orem In mesons March 80.1870. D. W. scow a 00. VLWELL HOUSE, TOWANDA, JL.:4 Pa. JOHN C. WILSON Having leased We Hone, is now aeavanno. dale the travelling public. No a evens* will be spired to give malefaction to those ho may give him a sill. • /Or North aide of the public square, east of Mar. cur's new block. RUMEELIFIXLD CREEK HO TEL PETER unarm= Ihretng pnrchased ma thoroughly refitted this old and wellAnworn Maud. formerly kept by Inane OW. fis, at the month of Ihromumfield Creek, is ready to give good amoraznalatlonsandualtatactorytreatenent to all who may favor him with a a& Dee. 23, 868—tf. / MEANS HOUSE, TOWA.NDA, q..,, am sin= am= The Horses. Harness. he. of all nods of Uds house, insurod against loss by Ploy withontany ed. ' Ira etorge. resew su ed. perior quality of O 1 Zordish Duo T. IL JORDAN, Ale, just Tonands, Jan. '2l.m. Proprietor. • BRADFORD HOTEL,. . • • 713 WANDA, rit. The subscriber -having Wreekand lately *bid ttp the above Hotel, lately hrpt Widen as a adobe and board!nllgg aortae, on the south side of MUDGE next to the raftwentl, is now eared to ententain the public itithgood aooomadabama on rea. soluble charges. No trontde or expense will bs spared to a:craw:lobar those calling on - him. His bar win* furnished with choice brands of agars, Liquors. aloe, Sc. Good Stabling attached. ' WK. HERBY. Towanda. June 1.1871.rt01 May 72 Proprietor. WARD 00IISE, rthWANDA; lIIMDEVIU) oOv ri P 23171%. This popnlsr house, recently leasef oxn ak e t Mews /a Evan Mum. and having been refitted, remodeled, and refturdshed. 111fibnill to public all the comforts and modern conveniences of a first. class Hotel chaste opposite the Put ow Main Street,it is eminent!) , convenient for persons t. ing Towanda, either for pleasure or business, scp67l SOON St =NS, Proprietors. MANSION HOUSE, 12.11AYEIVIIIE, PA. • W. W. BROWNING, Paossarma This Housels conducted in strictly Tempermace Principles. Every effort will be made to make guests comfortable. Good rooms and the table will always ) be supplied with the hest the market at: fords: Nov.l, UM. IVIERCURS BANK, TOWANDA, PA. (Successor to U. & Uuseell Co., Bankers.) llooeires Deposits, Loan; IlLonri. Yates Collo& Cons, and does a GENERAL BANICINGBUSINEEIS, aims as an Incorporated Bank. To persons desiring to send money to sag vim of the United Stites, Canada or Jhurope, this Bank Offers the hoist acilltLesand the lowest toms. PASSAGE TICKETS To and from ]fora Scotia, England. Ireland. Scot. land. or any part of Europe and the Orient. by rte CELEBRATED INMAN LINE Of Steamers shwa on band. Buys and sails Gold, Sliver, United Sages Hoods at market rates. Agent for the sale of lorttoos Paella t ilk Bonds. - Y.C. WWII; Presidia& WM. S. NTHCBST, Cashier. our li'R afr SUGAR, . ten Aar a; wain a um XIEidkIWOM II . Mon & SONS. ;lIPAOTIIBEES lot "Wes and = it ' in cersbloSig mita the Rich = sgy as =aloft thergo . libelbast IBM iften4usuruc HUCK WATIMPAILOB LTD umuxr mama V. nev i and Matsui d fu ant. d nod an. Boer ars am am e. Also s doles assortomni it TABLES, WARDROBES, DRESS. up (Lora 8TDIL•100A2C11. LEBILARY I Alp) 1100/40110IL Also a sawn* lino of TetasTalas. Honnins Earning. May and Wax Chairs. la' the grub* mist, pt stria Col plass. Also an mans Tads. V/ of I BZWIZADS„ tritgiarl3, CHAIN TAlmrsi, =BOW T i arss lZTHElt PILLOW% MA & SPRING LBED% Or torakuo a. sad ha tad uerythin g . • to to /bead ta a sun Class Punitur• Mans CHEAP= Truar Tire 'CHEAPEST 1 to ws • dmialbr Lumber, of vill tit* Lambg ter it etorY COFFINS • Ofmiry .illeeereptioa Oven the moat oosuzionia tie Anent Roerwood. always on Med. Ire are sole Wiz& ;or s XETALI 0 SMALL cam. !Web are now oineseded byaß pities to be bribe bestx7o., in um. Wo boo th is . FINEST HEARSE . Its thin, adios or soontry. and wilt famish any thing 14 the UNDERTAKEN° Doe AS LOW as the moo quality of good aus be got et AXE PLACE. either hi Touu, or ' elaewbera. abillent our DEP KCPERIZRON gad thorough arquatptabes oy w areseaith the butiosoi. see an we penman may on to which they m s. always -tabled ben dealing with inomapeteot pattie EITOSII 107 ItAl3 STIONT. it Do not forget the ph ice. Toetsidn. April 2, 1872 *.. W * * * * * *. * * ** * * * * * *P HOTO G RAPHY! * * ..a. * 4 ,- The undersigned would Inform the public . that Dmy have purchased the s. • * A GALLERY OF ART, *. o f , . I* nro k GUIVIIN. * nAuD * _ on lista street. drat door_ south of the First q` NatiOnal . Dank, and tnean.by strict attention 4. * to bOineili. sad by the WS= damn hn• * pecrrement In the Art ofk`hotogrepirr, to mite* the w ort of patronage. Dlr. Ounce * * is to with us. sad glee Ns whole ttme * and lion to the malts, of * . * * - I IVORYTYPEB, * * PAINTINGS IN OIL AND Wialat COLORS. * * • Ai well as PENGELING in Ilgia EDI, * * I * Particular attention given to the * of *norm, and to the AnialAg Or= * * of.wirrk. so as to name Us mans. and $1 ranch ems as possible gm to making * nves of amen children. • * * Mae venting pictures win please give us _ a trial. and we th ink that they win be 1111111a1. 4 ` * sad. i • * • GEO. IL WOOD k CO. * .12#11'1271 41116e k h * ******4*3ir * * * * * * * * AD tle1:1 AZ! 41 I A A bi= M. THING EMIPORIUM! CL lorPosrrz Tax SLUES HOUSE. (runway occupied by H. Jacobs.) \ rid groattrat Trweade requires the expea 1. •• • • sad the anderslipted, realizing this the ocataitusity In the Tba elan of want of Y MATE CLOTHING LINE Rae opened a new store eta Dddleman•s Block. (formerly oamded by H• Jinoba.) and is new pro- pared to offe old enetotners and the pnbtlo ipmerelty. a f r o tock of MEN"' AND BOYS' CLOTHING Than can be foul:din any other _i.stablialunent out. 'side thei calm My ethck hal all been purchased from the =nu tecturers this season. se that I herb no old stock to get rid of, bought at high Prices. I afa line or . GENTS' of theirtost quality and West styles. which I am Offerin *Um 11,0tres. REIM:BM! I bare IRO connection with the u4l stand. end triton Sou want anything in the clothing line. for yourself or boys, all on me to Beidlesnan's Block. Towanda. 'larch 78, 1877. pAZARTIS & MORRIS, OPTICIANS ANDXIDLIME. Narriona, Haan with a view to naltthe Incraaatng demand lba am thairL ak TED pasintern SPECTACLES appointed Y. A. Watch Makes and lerelor, dealer In Swiss and American Watches, TOWANDA, PA., Sole depot is tat: earstakes ce to Ors alneedful i Z Dm he the WOO Of WV agent to mama th: 3l V enesta a g a l destesoara. eppertnally_ to• thus to peace al WI Sawa. epsotaelas equalled ggi soe alitooli•alnir and Prei anatlon,Qm=sa. Itto aka& cannot aide if Unit Sapaelenity ogee the ordluery erns. Isom Then Ism dam. naming of ON meet, es, enema, Cr other unplomant seelatian. but en the oontniry, ft em the parent anutneetke of Ms lan. sae. theism soothing and pleasant. swing a set. laa of rad le the enter, - and • a Asir -mail set rides. IN 1s the esterdi /Win ase apeltaels that - pressers ma = aewelat the and are lbw dourest *NM Ilea best, e l+l4 ' LiMng many years without thaws be - Log necessary. W. A. • CAUTION Tow Arm. PA. SontArabi Towanda, Pa. /rare asaaday no paddiera, Moak Id. 1872. A 7 ,4 1, OR LINE STEAMERS Aili mums= Aito BAXUEDAY. Pasaiiiiiiboobeillie eel boss . ** Ailhoir ear ties alleipoll fa Omsk UM* Mama. "arm 110.114-Disswesiestargy. Pm" Bilassilk. Om sal at Mil Mak • In'LA*? ammin Atm- ornsclei so: sow Tait to GLASGOW: MI& POOL. 24111g1S1d:M_ar 42MONIMIMPI. Wi r UMILW, Was. mins numb was Aim Aiecsntt.. • Parlidpillag ikir, edriellids tulbe Odaus• by vs **is didadi robs.; - Pre Oa , OW • • IL; diejildlMlSlMunW Y. arty G, • d.Tdrill ""k .11? t • it tip lbws maids as or CHLICRZI SEM J. O. MOOT & BON& G GOODS! !MI . , ._ Veda festri. 4:1. flov 4A 1) AAI 4 Oo forth to the Battle of Lib, my bo7, "Go while it is called to ; • Foe the jean go out, and the years an is in, c Begatdlea•of those who may lose or win-. Of those who may work or play. - And the troops march steadily on, my bay, To the army gone beitwe ; Yon may bear the sound of their falling feet, Going down to the river where the two worlds meet ; • • - ,They go to return no more. There is room for Iva in the ranks, my boy, Amiduty. ton, imigned ; Step into the punt with a cheerful graoe—. Be quick, or another may take your phis, And you may be left behind. • There is work to 46 by the way, my boy,. That you nemr can tread stain; • Work for the loftiest, lowliest men— Work far the pkiw, adze, spindle and pen; Work for the hands and the brain. The Serpent Will feller your steps, my boy, To.lay for your feet s 'mire ; And Pleuure sit in her fsiry bowers, With garlands of poppies and lotus flowers Einwreathing her golden hair. • Temptations will wait by the way, my boy, Temptations without and within; And spirits of evil, in robes as fair As the holiest angels in begun weal-, Will luxe. you to deadly dn. Then, put on the armor of God, inj bOy, In tho beautiful days of youth; Put on the helmet, breast-plate and Adele', And the sword that.the feeblest arm may wield In tho cause of Hight,and Truth. etiweitzuttsms. (For the Threoznat.) COBVEPSATION; An Essay Read by Miss Enxi, M. Gras, bcfore the Bradford thutdy Teachers' Association, at East Smitlyrteld, Feb. 9. , It need not be said' how deficient we are, as a people, in the habit and power of conversation. Let us come directly to this subject, conversation: its elements, itsresonrces, its results. The first element of good conversa tion is simplicity of manner. Many excellent people nettle us like poison by their pedantry, their stilted_pre tense, or lisping affectation. They must either bme us with unmeaning details, or starch up a set of empty words into what they would call po- . lite or scholarly language; or try to convince us of their accomplishments by their mincing or_ their draw. Follies like these are often indulg e d, but they spoil conversation; and we judge such persons as either too bashful to be natural, or as playing a false part and aiming to pass for more than they are. The second ele ment of good conversation goes with the first, and it is common sense. You never saws person who brought this quality into the drawing-room, that was not respected by realladies and gentlemen, and heard with real interest and enjoyment. It is this which makes, the conversation of far mers and woodsmen relish so. well. They are unaffected. They are frank and earnest. Their:lse short words and terse expressions, and go right to the heart of a subject. If the words are homely and the grammar bad, you enjoy their solid thoughts, and crisp phrasm as you do roast beef and celery. The next elements of good conversation aro wit and hu mor. Those are indispensable. We often meet persons of great accom plishments who entertain us without the spice of wit and the flavor of hu mor, but the entertainment is not sufficing. There is a love and a de mand for these even in minds that cannot express them; and the person Who has most wit and humor gathers the largest. circle around him. Let us, then, if we wish to have lively conversation, cultivate wit and 1111- mar. They can be cultivated. and while we give no quarter to slang, or affected smartness, while wit and hu mor shall be confined to their just time and place, and we never joke or banter on sacred things, while each defers to others in refined and gentle courtesy, and no one interrupts an other, or talks more than his part, we shall have the elements .of true conversation; our good sense - will be strengthened'by mutual exchange of thoughts and feelings, our wit will be improved, and our humor made More genial and en, our sphere of life will be enlarged and enlightened, and we can give an influence to soci ety which will elevate and gladdsn. Secondly, the resources of conver sation. We need the best culture we can get. We should come together with the best thoughts and feelings, which will soon create their own bon gusge, and select the beat man. of utterance. We ought to know a tle of science and history. We ought to unite our hearts at least with the learned `associations of our countr . y, and treasure each new fact they give to the world. We ought to study our magnificent scenery. We ought to study our laws and institutions, and • talk intelligently about them. We. ought to converse about our schnila and rairinsi. These are some ef the resources of conversation. With a know ledge of these; and with our hearts in our knowledge, our minds wiltbeam with thoughts; and our thoughts will flow in our conver sation. What excuse has any one for not having these resources? - "I have a poor education," says one, " and I have not these resources." "I am bound to my business," Says another, " and I ca n not find time for study or reading." " I am waiting to get rich and retire," says another, "then'l will read and talk' We vimpathire with you all, but wi c a n.( not manse you from readinganamdf =dere. Arrange your tithe *if en imements in order. eve a littlttime to each, and be up -ind ._ng; and you can have goa Maks slid get fine culture. Lastly, its results. Ckemernation will not onlyinarease our stock of knowledge, but will improve our TOlol' 38 and our language. We shell get frankness and independent* We WWI acquire blare manly and tro• needy &meter. /We shall enjoyinsiae of-home,. pe e = more atAriethe the - social monism We shall find:more -*petty oornfert kW our grid, and more abundant To wn. tof tope - joy, We thall slla►aodas Or TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., APRIL 18,1872. rise and over the wait amid lieu entely set. sgsiEA us, oar neighbors will acd's" our Mu enae,„and we shall walk, world not hike eon minded unarm, aping lbw ' without • their - grim, josh:ol'of the. " ' • ' wittkQUi having eFkeban thdeim gng p dg in wo e, m b e u n t , thongids and caging gbui gone as we go. A siCk-room should have a pleas ant aspect. Lightioessential. Blinds and curtails may be provided to screen the eyes taco weak to. bear the full day, but what substitute makes up for the shoelace . of.: that . blessed sunshine without which life languish es ? The walls should be of a cheer ful tint; if panel% some sort of cnt, door glim — pee should be visible from the bed or chair where the invalid lies, if it is but the top of , a tree - and a bit of sky. Eyes which hive been traveling for long, dulidays . over the pattern of, the piper-hangings, till each bad and leaf aid quid is fatal liar —and hateful,— brighten with pleasure as the blind is raised. The mind, wearied of the grinding battle with * and self. finds unconscious nitres ent in the new interest. Ah, there is a bird's shadow flitting across the pane. - The tree-top sways and trembles with soft rustlings—s white cloud floats dreamily over the blue-.- and now, oh delight and wonder, the bird himself comes in eight and perches visibly on the bou&, drea mrth s few . s no fe tes i s of so tbera lin ng d t quiver he g iv k orld, then, is not lying in bed because we are, is not tired of its surroundings-- has not the back-ache ! What a re freshing thought! And though this glimme of another life, the fresh na tural life from which we are shut out —that life which has nothing to dc with pills and potions, tip-toe 'move ments, whispers, and doctor's boots creaking in the entry—may cause the hot tears to rush' suddenly into' our eyes, it does us good, and we begin to say with a certain tremulous thrill of hope : " When Igo .out again, I shall do "--so and so. Ah, if nurses, if-friends knew how irksome, how positively harmful, is the sameness -of a sick-roc arely. love and skill would dams e edies. If it were only bringing in i a blue flower to-day, and a pink one to morrow; banging a fresh picture to vary the monotony of 1 the wall, or even an old one in a j new'place— somethir' ig, anything—it is such in finite relief. Small things and single things suffice. ' To see many of his surroundings changed _at once con fuses an-invalid; to have one -little novelty at a time to vary the point of observation, stimulates and cheers. Give him that, and you do more and better than if you filled the apart ment with fresh objects. It is supposed by many that flow= ers should be carefully kept away from sick people—that they exhaust the air or communicate to it some harmful quality. This may, in a de gree, be true of such strong, fragrant' blossoms as lilacs -or garden lilies, but of the more - delicately-scented ones no such effect need be appre hended. A well aired room will never be made close or unwholesome by a nosegay of roses, mignonette, or vio lets, and the Batik cheer which they . bring with them is infinitely reviving to weary eyes and depre ssssed spirits.—From - Home and Society;' Serthner'efor Anoux a generation by-gone there flourished, in Western Michigan a certain Squire T—, whose stalwart sons now till the parental acres, in whose honesty the community had great confidence, but who had an un fortunate failing—drink He had been known to try causes when, he would have been more appropriately in bed. On one occasion an appeal was taken from a judgment rendered, and, it was alleged, " when the wine was in the wit was out." Underthe broad latitude taken in that day, full inquiry was gone into the trial of the appeal, as to t-e question of so briety of the justice, and there _was much contradictory testimony—the friends of the justice swearing one way, his enemies' directly contrary. At length a very candid . witness ap peared, who testified with great ap parent circumspection—so great, in deed, that on the direct examination abnciist nothing was elicited from him: Upon the cross-examination the lawyer conducting it made a very, common mistake, and, being unwill ing to "let well enough alone," kept dming away at the witness until he finally felt safe in putting the lead ing and dangerous question: "Did you not look upon the jas tiee,npon the trial of that case, as a perfectly sober man?" The witness hesitated, and the counsel pressed the interrogatory, still closer. The witness finally emit ted the following, with gieat difficul ty, as though it hadi been drawn from him ' / "I should have thought so only for one thing." ./ "Well," said the cross-examiner , "what is that ?"/ "I saw him- fill up his inlpitand with whisky, and fake a snifter out of the ink-bottle." The erosii-examination stopped at that point. ' A. STRING or PEARLS.—" When God'it flail of adversity is upon us, weihankl not be him the chaff which flies into the face of the tbreiher, but Me the precious &sin which:lies at his feet." - . "All the little paths and aisles to ward the light of the great Love; open into each other." "The cross of love is close beside the cross of sin. Jesus hung between the malefactors." " When the angels took up the Omits of Eden, and carried them sway to • •lant above, one little ficiwer dr). • - • upon the'earth,-'and - took root w • er there were pare end gentle hands to rear end keep it wee, white dower of wondrous sweetness; and-teen call it Love." "When our eyes are blinded with tears, we cannot tell how near God is to ne;. - the serf darkness in which we Mount may be but the shadow of Li s t wine" - 81a1C-11001 EIITIL Avis ast:eminfia. vnnunnm Here in something timely end ' de licious from Warner's " Beek-Leg Studies," in the April number: of /ibideseee "Perhaps the influence of tits few itte4 winds on'character is only a uPwi one; but it is evident ori bun perament, which is not altogether a matter of temperature, although the ROOd old deacon used to say, in his. Emma% ample way, that shill third' wife was a very good wornini bat her "temperature was very differerit tonal that of the other two." The north wind is 'full of mirage, and puts the stambia of endurance into a man, and it probably would into. a woman too if therewere a series of resolutions passed to that effect. The weal wind is ho peful ; it has promise and advent= in it, end except to Atlantic voyagers Unixica-bound, the best wind that ever blew. Um mug wind is peevishness; it is mental rheumatism and grumbling and curls one up in the chim' nereorner like a cat. And if the .47 ever smokes, it smokes when the wind sits in that quarter. The south wind is fall of longing and unrest, of effemi nate suggestions, of luxurious else, and perhaps we might say of modern poetry—at any rate, modern poetry needs a change of air. I anrnot sure but the south is the most powerful of the winds, because of its sweet persuasiveness. Nothing so stirs the blood in spring, when , it cornea up out of the - tropical latitude; it makes men " longen to gon on pidgin:nen* "I did intend to insert here &little poem (its it is quite,proper to do in an essay) on the south wind, com posed by The Young Lady Staying with Us, beginning : • 'Out of a drifting southern eland My End heard Um night-bird cry--' but it never got any 'further than this. The; Young Lady said it -was exceedingly difficult to write the next two lines, because not only rhyme but meaning had to be procured. And this is true; anybody. can write first lines, and that is probably the reason we have so many poems which seem to have been hegun in just this way, that is, with a south-wind-long sing without any thought in it, and it is veryfortunate when there is not wind enough to finish thorn. This emotional poem, if I may so call it, was begun after Herliert went away. I liked it, and thought it was what is called "suggestive ;" al s tlmh r did not understand it, e • y what the night-bird was; an d I am afraid I hurt the Young Lady's feelings by asking her if she meant Herbert' by the "night-bird," a very absurd sug gestion about two unsentimental people. She said, "Nonsense;" but she afterwards told The Mistress that there were emotions that one could never put into words without the clang& of being ridiculous a profound truth. And yet I should not las to say that there is not a tender lonesomeness in love that can get comfort out of a night-bird in a cloud, if there be such a thitig. Anal ysis is the death of sentiment." HOW ITAITREII ARE MADE. Deslarte, a gifted Frenchman, studied forty years to arrange a sys tem (that could be taught) by which any emotion of - the soul could be de picted in the face. Siddons, Telma and Bachael were among his pupils. Their power of expression proves the success of his endeavors. In Delarte's system, says :the car rent number of the Herald of .fleatih, the eye and the month monopolize the expression of the face) The month does this chiefly because of the forty muscles that make the face; twenty of them focalize at gib mouth, especially at its arigles. Of these twenty muscles, a majority of them pull up the corners of . the mouth. And yet any audience of people will ,show that vastly more mouths are turned down at the corners than are np at the corners. A distressing feature in the aged is the drawn-down corners of the mouth. Now and then one meets a face whose upward and inward month curve tells eloquently of a kindly dis position,and utter sweetness of char acter.. May there not be some recipe for securing ths upward curve to the mouth-angles? Let us see. Ex pression is the Outward sign of in ward life.Expt+ esri on is the feature in the making. Given a set of these outward signs for a sufficient term of months or years, and we have a set of features that indicate what is going on within, or rather what has been going on within. The whole tribe of depressing pas fretfullness, mel ancholy, fear, .ens 7, jealousy, grief, anger, hakW,revenge—foailize their language upon the muscles th at draw down the corners of the mouth. Bull. dogs, who are in a state of chronic hate and ferociousness, have mouth corners that gape and yawn cruelly, even to the bottoms of their chins. The wickeder the dog-nature is, the more this peculiarity is intensified. Coturnimp.—A bewildering defini- tion of the word "courtfthip " was given by witness in a n amusing breach-of-promise case recently in London. Mr. Chambers, counsel for the plidntilff, remonstrated with the witness for using the word.' "I am an old bachelor," said he, "and don't understand courtship. How -is it done? Whit ,is courtship?" The witness, who being a married lady might reasonably be expected to an swer by the light of her own experi ence, defined it thus: "Looking at each other, taking hold of each oth er's hands,and all that kind of thing." 7 • Mir. SANCTITY:O 0311.—An homes, unfortunately, are of hap .y; but all Homes are sacred to their then occupants, sacred against the interference of all outsiders, sacred against the prying eyes of curious scandal hunters, and sacred against the wicked tongue of tattlers. And yet there are many who dO - not re gard this sanctity, who love to see and know of evil, and love to hear and tell scandal. _ A 1121 sirapped his )tarse for ti wife. As old bachelor acqualataace said be'd bet there was some tldag wrong with-the horse or lea owner war "'add bate Anted it ping is 111111111111 lIIIIIMRIPIIIII4III VAIL= TO AIL 11 1 7111: • Never provelkbe to a friend, la lave sad bieradsbip be tree , - Never prove Mee to a Mend, toot as bees &MN to you. - nemaibe diitionett-4 - °lien? opinions ; bet thill •To fiat be it gismos§ sad Mod, -a, And ole Of the ooblert ohne*. any man free:fro& deb Lltfr All righteous and good in Ida ways? • - litres there woman so perfect on earth, That an be named hat to praise? • • Never Speak in of. a Mend, . To gossipeis keep closed your ear, - An excellent role in the Main, Is to credit onatenihehit you bear. Stand try s friend he distresi, • - Wilawyosi know IM Igif*Vi In need ; - What muter Waren be Thane Is honor for you to 'hit deed. That'one may dead* you, Yis in— - Then his, and not yours the diagram ; ' - Because we dud one man untrue, Shall we wrong a id distruea 'whole race? Camara a man foe his faults., atts Malmo? whoa tusookis due Itut mow prove fails to 'a Maud, So long as ha's While to you. TEE for 101 L I & C. Kindel} bays some very true and ' suggestive things about "The Boy John in the April number of &renter's. We quote air : John is young.' His tastes are un formed. Wm feelings are very from being refined. • In fact he IS a little gross in his sympathies. He *ants amusement. Every bone in his body aches for reaction, for play,fun,laugh ter. He does not care—he had never been ttnght to care--what the fun is, if only it will ilive relief to the fidget that stings him. Not at all re finedi he will go for what he wants, where others go. And going where others go, be finds the hunger of his nature coarsely met—jast as tainted meat will fill the hunger of a starving man—in tlie low revelry, vile stories, unclean mirth of drinking-cellars and saloons. The boy does nok discrimi nate vary closely, and to the longitkg of his crude ap pe tite the entertain ment-of these Pk.m- is infinitely bet ter than !any - hi ever could find in thatplace which he has been taught *peak of as home.. For eating and sleepin ,getting his clothes mended he feels that no place can be equal to a Christian home ; but for a . good time, for Rissing a dull, evening - hour, for learning something new, for words of cheer, for profes sions of sympathy, for those genial ways which a boy does have, and which any boy but a Urish Heep mast love. John walla the minis ter to his face that home is nothing to a street 'corner, or a billiard-room with the attachment of a beer-shop. • Well, by and by, just beforo the clock strikes ten, the father wakes from his doze, the spectacles falling and the paper sliding upon the floor, and,'looking-round with a bewilder ing, pre, asks, " Where is. John ? " Where is he? Why, for want of hetter inistniction, he is out practic mg our modern plan of train ing him self np in the way he likes to go . ,hav, rag no thought that when he is old he will care to dopert from it. But the father who has inquired for ai boy, rubs his eyes, and looks out in to the darkness, and listens -; but he hears him not. He wishes that his boy would not go out so of nights'; but then he does go out. He won ders that John cannot sit down at home like other boys. What other lboys? And then, with a very feeling remark that, "If John_eloes not do better and become steidy, he will make a miserable shirk of himself," tho father goes to bed. The mother waits till her boy . comes By and by he does come in,—his restlessness blown, off, the uneasy fidget of the earthly evening spent in relaxations which, of some kind, a' boy must hav!),-,und then at last the house is quiet. Sleep and rest prepare house hold for another day and evening ' like these. And when that other evening comes, out_goei the boy again ;, and the father again wonders, and,wishes that John would be steady ,and stay home, and very feelingly. predicts that, "If he does not change his course, he will very likely come to a miserable end." Bat, good lather, why should your boy spend his evening at home? What is there it home for him ? Whatpleasant recreation, . what happy plan for whiling away the hour, does he find inviting him there, or that would invite any boy there ? What hav c you done to make home and winsome to him as Joh* hOme ? He would like amuse ments/suited to his young, tintless, brimming nature ; how much real , thought and care did you ever give in schemes, devices, plans, efforts, ,With a view to meeting thin passion ate yearning of his mind ? How much do you play with him, tell sto ries with him, talk with him of what you have done and seeh,of what your father did and saw? What gaMes, what sportsothat efforts at skill with slate and pencil, with knife, saw, and gimlet, have von devised for him, while your loot and action were say ing, " My , boy, I want you to love your home more than any other spot of earth. ? - Harrz&Priovaeas.—The day that the little chicken' is pleased •Is the very day that the hawk takes hold of him. ought net .to dance with stones. - . . ' Boforo you speak turn your tongue over seven times. When ion go to the donkey's bonze don't ask if his ears are long. A little dog may have courage be fore his master's door. It's only the shOe that knows whether the . stocking has holes. Good soap maybe made in an old 111111013111133. The ()tick wears 'Titre, but; he is no horeemkn for all that. Pardon doee not heal the wound. A pig that has two owners is sure to die with "hunger. Very bad is not death. , Reproach is heavier thin a barrel of salt. . A vomise is, a debt. i:eze sught with crop; 00 -per 1441n1.111111 in -Advance.. DIRMILERISO.,- AND IHIDCWDDRIL Rev. Henry Wird Beecher, in one of.his sermons on the "Authority of Bight Over Wrong." presents, in a rio, forcible manner, and In his in, mutable and • style the fol lowing th to the right of sup pressing distilleries and grog-shops: I have a good deal of s'eartain sort of feeling for wicked men. lam sorry for them. Looking at thein in one 'way, I have sympathy with thine, I would serve them if I could. would do all in my power to make them better. But, on the other hand, • if. assume superiori i ver me, andtell tell me to hold my p ea c e, I have linty .mfm's 'spirit of indignation roused up in me. The idea that these very e men I know are (Wieling from Silva morasses a pestilential miasm which is poisoning , my children and My neighbor's children.-the idea that they should arrogate superiority over me, and tell me hold my peace, makes 'my blood. boil: , If a man should open a stye tinder the Heights, the signature of all the men , in the neighborhood would be obtained, de claring it a nuisance; ; ,and it would be shateii. quickly.' When it is some thing that smells in the. nose, men understand rights and duties; and they say, " No man has any business to create a nuisance in our_.: midst;" and they resort to measures for com pelling the offender. to remove that by whiCh he effendi', Let a man start a mill for grinding -arsenic, and let the air be filled with particles of this deadly poison, and let it be noticed that the people in the neighborhood are beginning to sneeze and grow pile, and - let it be discovered that, this mill is the cause, and do you - suppose that be would be allowed to go on grinding? No. Men would shut up his establishment at once. And, yet men open these more infernal mills utter destriction —distilleries, and wholesale and re tail dens for liquor; and you_ can mark the streams of damnation that flow out from them; and yet nobody meddles with them: Ono man ~is getting carbuncles; another man is becoming 'irritable, and losinglhis self-control; another man' is being ruined, both in body and mind; mul titudes of men begin Ito exhibit the signs of approaching destruction; and the cause of all this terrible de vastation may be traced to these ,places where intoxicating drinks are manufactured and sold. You would not let .a man grind amenic; but you would let a man make and sell liquor, though - arsenic, is a mercy compared with liquor. And I say . that you have no right.to suffer to exist in the -community these great centers of pestilential influence that reek and fill the moral atmosphere with their poison. In those section of the West where chills and fever prevails, coun ties combine and drain the swamps from which it comes. And in cities and thickly settled places, you have ' a right to suppress' distilleries and grog-shops. You have not only a right to do it, but, as you love ; your conntry, your city, your fellow men, your children and your own selves; it is your duty to do it. _ - How THE BOGUS TicIMOItiE BORE DEFEAT.—The bearing of the, defeat ed claimant to the Tichboime estate, when his case suddenly collapsed, was not the least remarkable thing in the extraordinary/career of this celebrated,adventurer. It appears that a meeting of his supporters was in progress at the Waterloo Hotel in London Justrit ' the. time when a climax. was approaching in his case. Tichborne entered the room in a very cool, very linperturable manner, at a slow, soft; steady gait, bearing a slip of paper in his hand. A lane was made,for him to pass, and then the auditorriformed a semicircle around him. He stood with his back to the fire-place, looked quietly, around and ,made a peculiar "pouch-month " movement, characteristic of the man, accompanied by rialight gasp or two, arid then, in a perfectly clear, calm Noice, remarked: "Gentlemen, I've some very startling news for you; my case seems to be 'stopped?' And in tones equally clear and calm, he read a copy of the rescript handed by the foreman of the jury to the court,saying that the tattoo evidence he'd satisfied them of the falsity. of the claim. When did you receive it ?" a dozen voices cried to the claim: ant, "About six minutesago," re red the person, taking in a little esh - air to his lungs, and then look ing blandly round, like an affable seal, with nothing whatever on his conscience. Says one who witnessed the SCOW, "I have studied .the Port and mein of many men ri under many trying circunistances. This . person urJerrayn street utterly failed and baffled me. -r could neither trace the bravado of a desperate villain, foiled and exposed,and doggedly determin ed to brazen matters out, nor the pardonable anguish of an innocent man unjustly branded with crime. Cranmer at the stake did not surpass him in firmness, - and Talleyrand might have envied him his compla cent impassibility of countenance." SWEAVIG. - What pleasure can there bo in profane' swearing? In all most an `other vices the devil lures with a bate ; but the profane swearer bites a naked hook. • Read the following It is no mark of a gentlenian -to swear. The most worthlesi and vile, the refuse of mankind, the drunk ard and the prostitute swear as well as the best cultivated gentlemen. The basest and meanest of mankind swear with as ragch tact and skill as the moat refined.;and he that wish es to degrade hi mself to the very low est. level of pollution and shame should become a common swearer: Any man haa talents enough.to learn to curse. God and imprecate perdi tion on fellow men. Profane swear ing never did any man any goad. No man is the richer, wiser or hap pier for it. It help's no man's eda cationar manners. - It is disguatite to the refined, abominable - to the good, degrading to the mind, =- profitable, needless'and injurious to gaiety. , Wantonly to profane His name, to , ealkHis vengeance is, Ter- Imps, of all offences; the mat -Mild ialie lied-9104 Mil I. _`-.. ~- NUMBER 4 •?,,, ‘4 , . — 4 4- o , l l l .rtliAirt;o4 - : -- - ' iiiii f riii6o - 11;iiii life has, we =Oaks for granted; an object in lifit r . go-. primps -- ray, 10) 41 .1! ---Iksee not knirar.wlMA it: is, and if vestioned will be aliiiirt :lir!. Ws to hit „upon. the, wrtnigAm; but' an objectle WM, -botaistmelnat once _is, not endmsble...witliont - this tramline. ' liiii .. . i c ifotAtinVof an object in life 14 - ,at viriimoa with this unktressalitrof the Ade. A few pasonsi - srerither - tlnd from the many by this vile character istic, that-thoy have a, m ark which they airitivith - one - 45M'Aii =a bating endeavor; that is, their object keeps its shape while, the object of most peopleurpratesn irilte eangee, • retaining,. however,. t h roughout the sane nature, and ix_44sliting the same biaS in the - Mind midi& dwells on it. Theobjeot iof seich,e'imifiito get on; but the Weaker -nature fluctuates as to' the means;` and. amuses ilia with - a variety of shadows; the strong will stand by its first choice.: . it is this tams that menmin i , quite emotively of the.. of the - i \vokrth _thing aimed at: The nbject.May . be go or bad, great or contemptible, reasonable or absurd; but if it ut pm sued with vehement uniligging ob stinacy, the puisuer is ennobled by his tenacity of purpose. The amount Of sacrifice 18 MCI • gauge of heroism. When great spirits hit upon an ob ject which, though above their prow' eat powers, is not above their rea- sortable hopes,'" and still their pur pose holds" against impediment s which . would discourage meaner men, wet see a man almost at his best —not quite, perhaps, for then self is lost sight of altogether; but, we see the temper which governs men, sub; dues the world both of matter tad mind, and leaves its mark for good on future generations. It pis compos ed of two things which are - equally powerful—keen appreciation of the object, and personal ambition. - :The philosopher loves truth; nud i ty:mit it for its own sake, but he de- sires to found a school. Dr. Living- - stone no doubt feels more strongly than others the importance to _the whole human family of explorintthe earth's unknown regions; but it is also the object of his life Ito be the successful explorer . ; It hattlong been settled that happiness 'is nobody's, or next to. nobody's object; but- if. not happiness, akleast amusement is the common object of mankind, .tho' ' they may. have very little perception of what will amuse,, and make the constant blunder of mistaking pttr. chased pain for pleasure. As a rule,_ nobody makes his business his object in life; it is only' hip means toward gaining it, his road to.his end. • This does net hinder business being the real - pleasure and happiness of etist l ence where not - painted by too cruet! anxieties; but the occupation of life cannot also be its -011 e -et, , against which it it often seemsAo inn counter. TEN HAND DOTT•ARI.,: Those people who are interested in hard money will perhaps be profit ed by reading the following story - from the Christic(n: Weekly, by Dr; ; Spanldity: • "My father was i a poor man. large andgrow* pendent on him for its daily bread. Corning hormone - Wintry evening from a week% toil in a neighboring town with. ten hard earned dollars in his pocket, he lost them in a light anew.tong and fruitless was the se - arch/ler them After . the snow was - g One, again and again was - the searebreneWed,with the same result; Th i e snow fell and melted again for a Whole generation, and still the story "of the lost dollars was fresh ig our _family cirele• ' for a silver dollar to a poor man in those days was - larger than moon. "About a mile away lived another father, of a family,in simlar circum stances. He,. too, knew -how munch u: dollar cost' dng out , of the heart of a rocky farm. At least once or often er every week for forty years he had occasion to pass our door, giving , and receiving the common neighborly salutations, and every time with _a weight increasingly heavy on his conscience But all ,Such 'pressure has its limit; and when that is reach ed the Crash is the greater for these verity of 'the strain. In this instance it'was as when an old oak - rends - its body - and breaks its limbs In fallihg. "One day, completely - broken_ down, he came to my father in tears, confessing:—'l found your _dolls= lost in-the snow some forty, years ago. They have been hard do lla rs_ to me, and I carry them no longer. I have come to return them', and,ask your forgiveness, and as soon as I can I will pay you the interest." - "The scene was like that when Jacob and Esan met over the - ford Jabbok. - • - "He did not live long enough to' pay the interest, bat quite - long enough to furnish - a practical com- ment on the text: 'The spirit -of a man will sustain his infirmity, -but a wounded spirit, who can bear?" Who.will say that consciencp, though slumbering_ in this life, will never awake to punish the offender iii the . life to come?" "If any man wants hard money, let him get it d'ishonestly,andlie will find it'the hardest money that he, or.: er saw—hard to keep, hard to think of, and hard to answer for iii 'the judgment day. _ COLD.-:-If a cold settles on jhe outer 'Covering of the lungs it be aomes pneumoniN inflammation of lungs, or lung fever, which in many cases; carries - the 'strongest man to his grave within a week. If a'cokl falls upon the inner covering of the lungs, it is pletirisy,'with its knife-klre, pains and its slow, ,very slow recover ies. Ha cold settles in the joints, there is rhelimafism ii Hi:various forms ; infbimmatorr rheumatism with its agonies of pun, and Aunt, matisni of the heat, which in an in stantsometimes snaps the chords of life with ,no friendly warning. It is of the • utmost practical importance, then, in the wintry weather, to know. not so much how to cure .3 cold as how to avoid it. Colds always conaa from one cause, some part or tho whole of the body being colder than nature for a time. If a man willkeep his feet warm always and never allow _ hiiself to be chilled, he will never take cold in. a lifetime , aid this can only be accomplished by due care in warm clothing and the - avoidance of drafts and undue exposure. While multitudes of cold ,come 'from , cold feet, perhaps the majority arise from persona cooling off too quickly after becoming a little warmer than is mit ural from - exereiso Work, or from confinement to a warm apartment:- - Wood's Household 3raganne. - • A Yorraiwz. novice in zieolFing Weed desthkr pale sad thie4lhi sem. "Oh; dearl " ha said, "there'sthit thetlktoskhC mo sick." "I bowl/hal itu.l4l,lV.°PruirreingilWvB7•llll.