TERMS OF PUBLIO/ITi 011 : Tos Ssavroan • intbtlibee'essay tiredly lgurning by B.llr. iILYOSO at pro Domes ~r aneu>a m adman gr miverttioug in all aims fainters Or anbactigi.. lea to the Paper- SPECIAL N(,TICES Inserted at ismors =leper int for drat tusertitaa. and Fars oaorza.per , line. for • nbeequent ales:nous. - matter. us:al. NOTICES, same style as reading • ENT! U UUS. be ADVESTISEMENTS-10 Weeded annordtoll to • he following table of rites: 1. I fns I on I . ern 1 6.1 n 1 tyr. tech I 111.601 Lan 6.051 e.ootto.oolglui 001 1.00 tato 116.001 20.00 9 i nches I 2.50 1 TANI I 111.00 1 IBMS 1 %Lao{ 110.0$ tiches I 3.001 atso 114 00 1 1b.25 1 25.001 55.00 ~•o l urun 1 5.00 1 ltral I 13.00122.00 1 30.001 45.00 o••Intuo I 10.0111 20.00 130.00 140.00 156.00 143.01 __ • I TUN it( .if I MAID l atfto $1 twin - - k-,limnistrattire and Executor's Notions. $2; Audi- NoVnes, $2 ISO ; Redness Cards. rive lines. Mew additional lines $1 -tach„ V -Arty advertiser* aiM entitled to quarterly changes. anstent advertieemeato must he paid farina/kcal:a. t.....alotictie of keisoolistions ; , Oommotileatitne led or , wit v dr tat mterest. and activate or Mar i ; , : mi .nct Deaths, exosedinu beelines, are charged f•E , TE per line. , rhe REP , .a.Trai having a larger Cirri:dation than all • t r. c' l 'ots It the connti - exmihlnewl. makes It the beat A a% i:rti*ing medinm to Northern Pennsylvania. PRINTING of every kind. in Plato and Fancy done with OPMEMIII , and Ale-patch fiand'hills. Cards. Pamphlets. rtillb.sda. Rtatemente. o. e. crY variety and . to the' conditions which 'he. saw imposed upon him, and his life w i ns spied during ten years. In this, period of :extreme ill health, caused by exten sive 'prganic disease, he-l'addreSsed himself to literaryOlabor which had ' wide usefulness .and popniarity - . -He issued volume after volume in which he made inpoitarit, knowledge intel ligible to almost every order of mind. His long experience- as an ;invalid was useful to ninny invalids on whom, he urged the 'necessity of , modera, tion and Self _discipline. Nt;ith his weakness,- there were hardly any. healthy man who lived so active and beneficial a life. A. writer .Speaks of that tall spare figure, with its mild, hright and benignant -eye, and- man !;er modest, yet firm 'and self con ,trolled—a wan .who struck the ob s.rv,er at once as above-the- ordinary stamp. The l _eiptession of .his face, to a casual observer, showed that,he bore what he had -to endure. with manly fortitude. .There was no , querulousness, .no discOntent, no peevishness, no disappointment in he lines - of that face. He was in .a region above complaint, - He used the talents which had.been entrusted to him, and with, abundant rreivard." .Leisure HOP', - - NUMBER 39. For tbo ItzporrEn.) PLAGUES. SELF DISCIELINEJ ALIENATION • •• _ - *itei ms = Piasies"Magiritte - dis- - gum& very ably the above subject; especially, with reference.to farailise, Ia spelkiTig of the self denying ef forts of parents to educate' that childien, and the alienation which the superior education causes, he re marks : • Think of - change in social " f lats, and the change in the relation o pea' ' pie which it makes. When: one has known of a poor cottager and his wife, pinching themselves clue to send their clever - boy to a Scotch university and push him forward in• to the Church, it was sad to think -of the estrangement which was "sure, to follow the success of all their baxd_, toils and schemes. Even when thi son is a worthy fellow, what a sever ance that -dear bought edneatitrn mustmake ; and when he gets a ing, and finds himself among a new set ot associates, and perhaps makes - a respeevable Marriage, 'the ohl Pa rents will seldom see 'him ; and. it - will be a vague, black sense of disap pointment when they do. Then he may not be a worthy fellovi, Lent a heartless humbug, who designedly draws off from the poor old pair who did everything for him, and bid 4 his Mother not recognize him when she meets him in the street _with ~ti ny of his genteel friends. I hate the word genteel; but it is thnright word here. I have known such an animal, com ing home for 'a few days' visit, up- • braid his poor old mother for not sufficiently polishing. - his boots, and superciliously smile at her ignorance • of his meaning when he bade her take away Ws clothes and brush them • I den 4 see whose fault it was, or whether It was anybody's fault, but it always grated' on one painfully to hear of old John Mcf,iver working for his , eighteen pence a day;;an old man, • when . his son, not Seen. by him for- Many a •day and year, MIS" known to fame as Sir Cohn Camp bell and then as Lord Clyde. That.' eminent man was unlucky lin the matter of -names. To the . ndmi) of Campbell he had no more right than I hate ; and histitle,was taken from the name of a river with which he had nothino , earthly to do. Perhaps it would have been so a.kviard for the Field-Marshal to have walked in to the loborer's cottage, iserhapS fa ther and . son would have .found so little in 'common, that it inay - have beau wise in the peer, instead of go-- iog Ree ltis,father, to' ,send a little money now and then to the parish ministry to add to or increase his com forts. No" doubt Berkeley Square, and - the =little island in. the - Hebrides, wer