TERNS OB PUBLICATION. TEI - temp= Emus= is published men 'Thursday Morning by & W. £i eons at Tun Dollies per en to advises. sap Adeerusindin au ogee eenellisive tailbserip ion to the peper. SPECIAL 3 6W.M A Inserted at TERI= =raw [us for ant insertian. and Fir* ours per Una for uriment INOTICIE nsert:lam • • . isniestile weeding testier, m. 10, 1••• core ttas: — ll win be ingested seconding to 'rates: AD • 4: 1_1.4 14, • .1 t • . 1w I lOw ach I $1.50 118.00 I 6.001 1.001 104 I I 2 inches' i 2.001 s p o q -SAX $lO.OOl 16.001110.00 Indies 2.691 ;in 0.00 I =COI 20.00 180.00 1 lnche s, 1 5.001 &50 14.001 1545 1 25.00 1 &SAO g col= 1 5.001 14.00 1 15.00 22.00 1 50.00 1 45.00 column { 10.00 20.00 110.00) 66.00 175.00180.00 1 column 20.00 f 10,001 00.00 f 80.00111001 $l5O Administrator's end Rzecutar's Bottom, $1; Mal t or's Notices. $2 50 ; Business Cards, Ave Bask Cm 3' ear) $5, Idditionallinei $1 each. Pearlyadrertisers are entitlolto quarterlychanges. Transientadrertisenientenstfatbesaid for is - advance. All Resolutions of ASsoclathans ; Communications • o f limited or Mditap-al Interest, and notices of Kar r ages and Deaths, al:ceding Avenues, . are charged TEN cern Der line. I • ' JOB PROITCSO of overy Una, In Plain and Fancy colors, done with neatness anddbills itc.h. Han, Blanks, Cards , Paraptilete, Bißhes Statemants, &c. of , MPery :variety and Style, printed at the shortest notice. The Ram= Office" ts well supplied with Power Peewee, a good assortment of new type, and everything in the Printing line csn be esecated in the most artiado manner and at the lowest rates. TERMS INS SRIABLT CASH. 3U DTESS C=S. JOHN DUMB, BLACKSMITH, MOBBOIMON, PM Partially latent/6m to roning Buggies, Wagons. Sleighs, kc. Tire set and repairing done on short notice. Work and charges guaranteed satlatactory. . ' 12,15,69. • A BIOS •PENTNYPACKER, HAS A again established himself In the mu:6mm 'UST:NESS. Shop over Rockwell's Store. Work of .vet y description "done In the latest, styles. Towanda, April 21, fB7o.—tf ' C . S. RII3ELL'S GMII2II.&L ADEN mny23'7o-tt . , ..., -- z 1 - I ' - , 4 .- A i • .4 I ,_ .4 .., F 3 • .... I:),t w -,,, --, ' -1 ' • GI , , • - - 0 - 7"-;' .-7 1I . z ... 4 . , • E-4 71 . .:, p-4 "... , 4. _ .-.. , . i- , i 4 ~ , ,:c E-1 '' g „, 1 • ' ....4 ' T'' ..4 c'. :.... ..opp i 1...„ ..... C '4 • . 1 1 — l --- MtTE UNDERSIGNED A:11QIII— id TECT AND DIIILDEB, wishes to inform the citizens of Towanda and vicinity. that he will give particalar-attention to drawing plans,) designs . and a porificaticins for .all [manner of buildings.. private and 'MUM - Superintendence given for reasonable compensation. Office' at residence N.E. center of Second.and Elizabth I streets. k i . • J. E. FLEMMING, ___,- ' Box 511, Towanda, Pa. octs'7l MT_ W. Kt GSBURY, • f ° REAL ESTATE, LIFE, FIRE, k ACCID INSIIR.ANICE AGENCY. • i ... Office, cctrrier of Main and State Street March:l3, 1972. - - . SASH, DOORS, AND BLINDS. lam prepared to.furnish Kiln-dried Do I ra, Sass arid Blinds of any style, size, or thickness, on short -- notice. Hand in 'yotir !orders ten days.be-ccire you want to use the articles, and be sure that ytu will ~ ;e1 doors that will.not slaiink or swell. Tertas cash oh 'delivery. Towanda, July .19,1571. GEO. P. ASH INSURANCE.—The following. reli able,`"and E,-.. 'F.IR - g, TRIED 1 1 , :apanies n r.e prenti4. 1 -c LANCAiHIRE. 1 ' • i,., 110111 , .., I . . i 1 tz. l'i:v. HE 4 1 ijg • . Has estatilished his blisiness. of . .anufactnt,g and Repsicing, all kinds of EDGE TOOLS, *ILE PICKS, MADE AND DRESSED He also makes the beist STRAW Cu i-i.ER now in use. All orders filled promptly, at 1., MEARS, ROCKWELL k. CO., TOWANDA., PA Jan 11,'74-3m. - i !kflr la '7l-t! . - i TO 'OUR 11.A.TROS. ; , i GEO. 11.'11VOOD &CO., . j. 3 IIOTOGRAPICERS, • TO*ANDA, PA. Grateful for the generous patronage of the pant year, would inform ',all wanting Pictures thaj b we aro arestill adVng, to our establishment NEW ANp.IIIPitOVED INSTECIIENTS, • . I 'r And adopting tried and approved modes of 'printing and retouching in order to securO PINEI:PIIOTOGRI.PIiSTHAN IIEttETOFO/E' • slide [iut ido of tile cities, and that we make it a specialty to en IF-1- all kinds of Pictures to • an size desired, an anish in Water Colors, India Ink, or in •.he . • I I • IN . ) ‘'ili - LY LOW rnibEs.. .T% - e also endeavor : sake all the time p the in making:chil4rens pictures, so as t. cure the best results. ' We are constantly adding, to our stock o E All nee pattnms and tasteful styles, ausl wish them at a small advance from cost .114:: 14, 1573. - I MI spsurEHA. i • di LLEGIATE . . , , . . The 'Fall term *of dile twentieth year of thit talon will open AtTIUST 21, 1574, with the! .ng Int of instruCtorsr• , - EEWIN F., QUINLAN, Prasetra , ‘,l 1n..-icut. Languages and Normal Ilranchl • 1 F. L.sinuas. /La e.. :,:n... rvial, Mathematical and Scientille. lira ' i Cnnn,criial and Mathematical Branu,m . , • Ml.zs MARY E. 31E1:BILL. Pace r.rrr.ni •• Common ab,d Higher English. Mademoletcllo J. LL - QUIN, . Fr , nch LangusgC, Drawing, and Patin Mrs. Li A. BALDWIN, . `"peal Music. laitramental Music Class 4 ill be ciganizeil at coral Jo • ..1 ti.o term. The Principal condlwt the .--ce I:4 this clase chiefly, and aid all tea 'l-Prts s , ;'- prove th , :mselvee worthy and competent 'Se curing positions. Effart will be made by deNotaig, more time and using the increased facilifiet; of ap pakatus, to make the instruction , in this Clare more profitable than ever before. , •At a considerable additional explnse, InstrucUon in Drawing and Vocal MuSic has hien made free to memb !I's of the school. These two studies,l it paid for as extras, as is usually the case, woulitnearly coca the Cost of tuition.. ProrisiOn is als4 made for individual instruction in vocal music, Mrs. Dahlw.in's Ability to 'teach vocal music is tOo well known to need comMent. A new laboratory is being fitted up and the Collec tion of PhilosophiCal apparatus enlarged. The grounds are being graded, fine croquet grounds are prepared and effort jmade to meet the physical as well as the intellectual wants of ,the students. Tuition from' $4 to $lO per term. Board; Includ ing furnished jroami lights, washing, /cc., j $4 per, week. Rxpenses per year in a English studies, $192 classical; $204. For circular or further Information, address the Principal, E. E. QUINLAN', Towanda, Pa. MIT-I%TM FOX, jPreet Board Trustees. BEE GO TO JACOBS' I TEIIPLE - OF FASUIFON• 5141:1 STREET, FOIL LATEST STYLES IN SPRING .0 7 0 SIMMER CLOTHING; GOODS DECEIVED JYYZEY DAY .r.,u.ad•- April 3, 11•77!.. STAMPING j DONE AT MRS., • HENRY KIIsIGSBURY'S DRESS— MAKING 1.101.1 S No. 9 AItdXDE BLOCK, , 1 • . wirillii. 1),:. 17' 1k72. - F°R.v SALE.{-' A, Farm containing 1,4 r.. % 6 itlia}" id liar imp., P.ral G I , rd Co., 1, acres nmier imp cement ; - frarn-,d .11one, and Barn, young rireLar of 1.7) tress, besides Cherries: re‘ches,, Pears, aml ellofee Grapevines :)/ereon. Unimproved land, tlmbered will! rine, 0::',4 Chest nut and Tjemlek Tie . _ .tins $25 per acre. For further . particnlara call on 4: , madames :., I 1 •1 - V. 0. WOOSTEr.. 1.143.11ri;210, Jia tic' 2;,-2 la* - • !‘ • I sza I am I ism 1 nyr. VV. AL.VORD, Publisher. VOLUME XXXV. 0,1111721 k BIONTANIT, • MOB NJ NETS `AT Liz. COILOO-4=1B! of /WI and Pine Streets, opposite Porter's Drag Store.' , DB. T. B. JOIENSON, AND St*GroN. Office over Dr. U. 0. Pimtes Bon & Co.'s Drag Store. 1)R 0 . M. STANLEY, riirrisT, , guccpssor to Dr. Weston. Office a l l. %ttan's Block; up stairs. Mao 'Street. Tow= 4,.t Ps. Ali kinds plate work a specialty. 16'711 S.M. WOODBURN, Ph' and Surgeon, Office over Wickham Crockery store. • Towanda, May 1.1872..1y FOYLE McPHERSON, *MOlL rizsuliT-I,,tv, Towanda, Pi. Win gITO prompt attention to all matters entrusted to their ottaz e. Orpluirui',Oonrt Wainer:as ipecialty. w. tons. 1=721'731 1. seruzatuiri. ior MoHEA N, ATTORNEY 11. AED Ootriaszums r T La*. Towanda, Pa. Par. tientar attention paid to bulimia in the I Orphans' Coart. AWL ior Vi t:. PATRICK; Armllaczy-AT • Taw. Office, •Mercur's Block, net- door to he Express Office, Towanda, Pa. t Jn1y174873. C Y, TOW/LYDA,' - • • Vr . AEr• CARNOCILIN, ATTOR- V 414117 AT LAW (District Attorney for Brad ford County). Troy. Pa. Oollectlons made and prompt ly remitted : . febll4'69—tf. JAMES I'OOD. [may 27] mai F. SANDERSON. lAT B. KELLY, DininErr.--' Office v v • pver • Wickham & Mere, ToWanda, Pa. Teeth !agreed on Gold, Silver, Rubber, and Alum inum blunt. Teeth extracted without phi. 0c23.79 MADILL & CALIFF, ATTPRITEYB- is-14 AV, 'Amanda, Pa. MApILL. J. N. CAIIIT. Office in Wood's Block. first door south Of First National Bank, up stairs. Jau.S.73-17 0 ETON Ac'ELSBREE, Arros- NEri AT Liw, Towanda, Pa., having entered into copartnership, offer their professional services to the public. Special attention given to business In the Orphan's and Register's Courts. spll4'7o E. ovsnroff,..vn. , x. c. =mom ' JOHN. W. MIX, 4.7.712RNEY-AT-,L.A•W, TOWANDA. PA. • Spec al ' attention given tc olsinis against Insur ance Companies, Office, :Nor% Ewe of Publio Square. fro IWIL itirmD. •L. DODSON, OuneTivE s AND MECHANICAL Darrrwr. North Maine-at, opposite Episcopal Church, Towanda. Pa. All den tal operations a speciality, Jan 14. NI pEcK & STREETER, LAW OFFICE, TOWiNDA, PA, NV. A. pros. (Jan. 15149 H. STILEETER 13ZI TONVAND E . C., GRIDLEY, DOC' OR 0. LEWIS, A GRLDIT ate of the College of 4, PhysicianAnd Surgeons," New York city, Class 18134. gives exclusive attention to the pra . ctice of his profession. Office and rerldence on the eastern slope of Orwell Hill, adjoining Henry How o's. jan H. '69. DR'l3''D. SMITH, Dentist, has purchaseda. H. Wood's property, between Mercur's Hloch and the Elwell House, where he has located his office. Teeth extracted without pain by use of . cas.l Towanda, 20, 1870.—yr. MEIICLIAN . TSI PLTV & DAVIES, tATTOLLNEYS-AT _ Livto O ; A. BIiACK AttRCIIR'S BLOCK, Apr y . Towanda. HATA & PATTON, AGMCTS FOR CONNECTICUT - MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. 0fi1ee'7 , .70. - fi Griffith S Patton's Block, Bridge Street, March VI. 187 t. A; QUICK, D., GRADUATE P• ErstvEr.strz or Ift:Framo, N, PEEYSICIAN AND SURGEON, - ' ~;, - SUGAR RUN, PA. Office at Store of J. STOWELL. March ift, 1874-3m*-. . L. • Hotels. Di -T ' II.NG : ROOM IN CONNECTION WITH THE BAYETtY, Near the Court House. We are prepared to feed the hungry at all tines of the day and evening. Oysters and' Ica cream In their seasons. March tO, 1870, . D. W. SCOTT & CO. TOWAIsTDA, 124 Hiving loosed this House, is now ready to accommo date the travelling public. No pains nor expense will be spared to give satisfaction to those who mare's'. him A call. sir North side of, the public square, east of Mar. cur's new block. - p lIMAIERFTET 13 :CREEK HO rfz. • - PETER .DANDMESSER, Having mu-chased and thoroughly refitted this old and well-known stand, formerly kept by Sheriff Grif fis, at the month of Rummerdeld Creek, Is ready to give good accommodations and satisfactory treatment to all whin may favor lII= with a call. Dec. 23, 868—tr. 08E1- : se- fur- Ices. Ap p .kNS HOUSE, TOWANDA, The Horses, Harness. , &c. of. all guests of this house, insured against loss-by Fire, without any ex tra charge, A superior quality of 014 EagliSh Bass- Ale,' - just received. ,4 T. it. JORDAN, • Tosranai, Jan. 24.'71. Proprietor. EMI INSTIT Incti follow MANSION HOUSE, ;" • LedAYSVILLE, PA. • SN' attOWNING, • Puorazsroa. This Honse is conducted In strictly Temperance Pr:tic:plea,. Every , effort ;will be made to make guests cowfortable: Good rooms and the table will always bet uppLied with the best the market af fords: ; , NoT.I. 1871.. sgari BETIIL.EHEM, PA: OL* MORAVIAN SIIN. INN," MOGI I • Rich in hl :cal interest, it is the only building in the country except jndopenderice Hall, honored by the sojourn within Its walls of Washington, LaFay ette, Lee; :Gates and other patriots of. the revolu tion. This popular hotel has decently changed bands, been improved, entirely refurnished, and the proprietor cordially invites his friends and trav eling public to give him a call—no pains will be spared to , render their stay comfortable. People en route for Philadelphia will find it convenient to tipend the night here, reaching the city about eight to the morning. &sample room on first floor for accommodati9n of commercial agents. 0. T. SMITH, Sept 4, 1873. Proprietor.' NEW ARRANGEMENT AT. THE FIRST WARD BAKERY. MRS. MARY E. KITTREDGE Having purchased the Mock and fixtures of H. A. Cowles' Bakery, has refitted the establishment and purehasOd an entirely NEW STOCK OF GOODS, Suited to the trade, such as Gitocmars, Teas, Corrzz, MIXED Farris, Cam= Ferrrs, Caeoiuv, CONFTITIONZET, PAESI! Bunn, &scrim; Timm, Routs, Ac., DAILY. A nett and attractive ICL CREAM SALOON be opened in connection with the establish :l., t, where ladles and gentlemen can always Ara tb,, beet cream and other delicscle‘of the season. THE, D-INING ROOM . Has' been refurnibbed, and will at all times be sup plied wittl substantial eatables, which will be served at reasonable rates. Farmers and other s -yisiting town will find this a convenient place to - supply the walita of the inner man. MARY E;RITTREX*HF- Towan,la, April ter, '74.1.1. 1 1 0 R SALE OR RENT.—A desira ble House and Lot; on Fourth stroet, fifth horse north of 0. D. Bartlett's, convenkait to Butt into or Graded School. Enquire on premises. 8, MOSCBIP. - Town da,Warchl2, =I . i . PROFESSIONAL CARDS. ()OD & SANDERSON, ATTORNEIi-4T-LAW, TcrwAN - riL re ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Apiil 1,1873 JOHN' O. WILSO'.. COIL MAIN AND BRISOIS 81111Erre. L rm.*: 1758 I= II Scatter the gems of the beautiful! By the wayside let them fall. That tho rose may opring by the cottage gate And the vine on the garden Wall; Cover the rough and rude of earth With a veil of leaves and flowers, - And mark with the opening bud and cup, The march of Summer hours.. • SlClall & Black's Scatter the gems of the beautiful In the holy shrine of home I Let the puke, the fair, and the gracious there In the loveliest lustre come; Leave riot a trace of deformity In the temple of the heart, But gathei about the earth its gems Of nature and of ark Scatter the gems of the beautiful ' In the temple of per God,— Tlif God who starred the uplifted sky, • And flowered thi trampled sod; When He bait a temple.for Sunsell, And a home for His priestly race, He raised each' rm in symmetry, * - - And curved each line in grace. Scatter the getUs o the beautiful In the depths of ho human soul; They bud and blossom, and bear the fruit, While the endlesa ages roll : Plant with the Bow l ers of charity The portals of &lie tomb, And the fair and pure about His path In Paradise shall bloom. [For the REP 011766 A TRIP ACROSS THE WATER.- "As one who travelieg far, oft turns asido To view some rugged rock, or monld'ring 'tower, I .. Which seen, delighs him not: then coming home Decribes and print it, that tho world may know How far he went for what was nothing worth—. Judge me apt thus. * * • • * * * • —A truce to censure r ! Roving as I rove, Where shall 1 find an end—or, how proceed?' 1 —Cownn. In the early morning, as I passed along the beach at Margate, my at tention was attracted' by a number of queer-looking carts ranged along the sands. On each psir of wheels stood a little house of a single room, some what similar to the contrivanc,es cal culated alikcifor travel and encamp ment, which I had before seen in use among the Gipsies of England The purpose 'of these carts at the sea shore was, however, sufficiently evi dent, so that I ldid not hesitate to charter one of, them, upon the spur of the occasion, for a brief marine excursion. A pony was soon attach ed,. and I was conveyed in my "draw ing room car'l some -twenty rode through the briny waves, before 'a suitable depth (Say of- four feet six) was reached ; whereupon a halt was called, and driver and pony returned to shore: while I proceeded through the seaward docir of my apartment, to take a salt water bath;—also took a cold,—as the morning air was brac ing, even to chill ness. All of-which being acconiplised, my attire was soon resumed; a f t the opening of the landward door as a signal, man and horse came to the rescue, and myself and the cart were safely restored to ' terra firma: Saph is the usual style of sea-bathing at Margate,—save and except, as. I bei3evolently hope, the cold- The most that can be said of it is that upon the whole it may be considered an'improvement upon the plan of the Thren Wise Men of Go tham, who went to sea in a tub. From the land surface of the chalk bluffs in the immediate vicinity of Margate, one =may descend by a stairway into a suite of strange sub terranean apartments, apparently ex cavated frotn thn rock. Thomas of these rooms, to the extent of more than 1809 square feet, are covered with curious and fanciful' deiices, wrought in shell's from the sea-shore. The father of the present occupant, as the latter informed me,. with a solemn "assertion of veracity, discov. ered these apartments seam thirty years since—by falling through into them, or other accidental, means,— just how, I I do not now remember. They were then considerably 'filled np with an acctinanlation of rubbish and debris, on the removal Of which, and the cleaning of the walls, the latter presented] the same fincifttl ornamentation as now; nothing -be ing previously known, even by tradi tion, of their existence or origin'. I The rooma certainly afford a very cosy habitation, being free from any appearance of dampness, cool in Summer and warm in -Winter,---al though of coarse somewhat obscure: to say nothing of the supposed mys tery and antiqttity of their . origin, they. present beyond question a curi ous and intereating appearance to the visitor. If of an imaginative turn of mind, he might] indeed fancy them to have constitat i ed, at a remote peri od of higher sea level, the submarine palace of some tasteful Triton or Naiad. , Towanda, Pa The summer resorts and watering places of the British-Isles; stseni . al most without cumber; and are often,' like Margate, thronged to, overflow ing; for in England, all' classes, (down to those actually without means),— must have their annu al "outing," as it is termed, of months or weeki diving the season. The coasts of France,. the spas of Germany, and the lakes of Switzer land, furnish many more places of summer residence and recreation, all mainly supported by English people; and from the same source is derived, for by far its greater portion, the im mense tide Of travel throughout Eu rope and the East. - If any nation of the world, for any': great portion of the year, can be withpropriety re ported as not at home - ' that nation, is certainly the English: And *ere an International Vagrant Act to' be adopted throughotit the Eaatern con tinent, the English race, by about five to one, would probably furnish subjebtaor its provisions and.periata Vt. Yet what people prides itself mot), strange to' say, than does the Anglo-Saxon, upon its strong attach-. went to the scenes, the institntion% and the associations of Home? The French are alike pitied - and re proached, for having no such term as the Saxon. word Home . in their luo gauge: and it isl•probably forttulate teletteb tatirg. FRE PILLAR OF BEAIIII4 thit Ilmunts. No: XLVII for the fame of the man who com posed "Home, Sweet Home," that he was not born a Frenchmm Yet even these, their volatile Continental neighbors, display far more attach= mot to domestic( life than clo the English, in that they . have less dispo sition to seek for enjoyment abroad. Were we to refer to the great mass of the French-speaking communities of. Europe, we should find a superior and conclusive reason for home at tachment in the fact that their honies are their own; while in England, Ire land and Sco tland, the actual °wads of lands and domiciles are few in number; the class •of small proprie tors, so extensive upon the continent, being in the former countries almost unknown. The world at larks, how ever; will certainly not be disposed to find fault with this propensity to travel,- among those who are able to pay their way. Swiss, Ck4mans, Munch and Italians, ministering in various capacities to the real or fan cied Wanta.of their foreign visitors, find their account in it to such a de gree, that were the ebb and flow of this living current suddenly to cease, a financial panic would soon ensue among the shop-keepers and hotel keepers, rai e lways and diligences, guides, couriers, and mule-drivers of the continent. " Oar American Cousin," display ing, as he does, a full share (whether onginal or inherited) of this tenden cy to travel, is certainly in no situa bon to criticize it unfavorably. For him the English traveler may be said in a measure to pave the - - way, af fording him countenance and com panionship, through an identity not only of religion and language, bat to a considerable extent-also, of general usages and ideas. One institution may here be mentioned, for which English travelers and residents abroad must have the chief credit, and for which the AmeriCan will oft en experience a feeling of gratitude; it is that of regularly established re, ligions i services in our common 'lan guage, at most cities and , places of resort along the line of European travel. The niipual bill . of "Foreign Ex penditures," by English absentees, would no doubt foot up in an im mense sum, Which it may be said, were better devoted to improving the conditi?n of the lower classes and suffering poor at home, whom they have " always with them," and in sufficient numbers. Yet ley this ex penditure of time and money by her citizens abroad, the moral influence of the nation is greatly enhanced and extended. The` traveler will not fail to observe that the British sovereign, Britishlexchange and letters of cred it are received with especial favor by continental banleers; while the En glish language is everywhere grow ing in use and favor, even more than the French: and according to the observations of Bayard Taylor and other eminent travelers, it bids fair to become in time, ',the language of the world. In connection with which idea, who:omen estimate the vast ad vantages of ready communication and a consequent "good understand ing " bet Ween all the nations of the earth through a common language? Truly the Curse of Babel was a heavy one, and its removal "were a consummation most devoutly to be wished for?" Embarking upon a steamer at Margate, on my return thence to London, I was again ,forcibly im pressed with the utter lack of the superior style and- accommodation that characterize our American steam vessels• on similar routes. The distance from Margate to London is some seventy-five miles, for about one-half of which we coasted along the southern side of the bay, display ing-the same white cliffs which mark the Eastern shore. A conspicuous landmark is afforded by the lofty double towers of a church knowu as the Two Sisters, deriving its name, as I was informed, from its having been erected by two maiden sisters, in memory of an only brother, who re turning home from a long-.absence, lOst his life by a fall from the cliffs in the vicinity:. Some grains of al lowance are however due to the sto ries which travelers hear,—as well as to those they sometimes tell: and while the magnificent edifice derived its origin from the pious liberality of the Two Sisters, the story, no doubt, oft told in connection of the brother's fate, is probably without foundation. Beyond Horne Bay, upon an arm of - the sea near the, mouth of the Thames, 'stands the somewhat impor tant city of Rochester, with • its fine Cathedral, which has been much ad mired as a work of architecture. —Bearing more wealth upon its bosom than any other river of the world, the Thames, below tondon, is perhaps as deioid of natural beau ty as almost any- other,—it can, in fact, claim but little superiority, in this respect, to a Dutch canaL Its turbid waters meander slowly !Imo' a flat region, abounding in what are called " levels " and "marshes," and have a fall , of but 376 feet in an 'en tire course of . 215 miles. What a contrast to the descent of the Jordan, which is said to.be nearly 1,000 feet in 60 miles ! There are bat few towns along its margin; the most import ant points being Gravesend, Tilbury and its fort, where Queen rlizabeth is said to have reviewed and address ed her troops in the days of 1 the Spanish Armada,—Wixdsvich, with its immense naval depots, and Green wich, famous for its hospital and ob servatory. For miles along our course, as we appriiiched Woolwich, a strange odor was strongly perceptible in the atmosphere: on enquiry into its ori gin, I was told that it arose from ,the discharge of the London sewers into . the Thames, near this point. While certainly not of the most agreeable description, (if at all susceptible of 'description) it may at 'the same time be said not to be as utterly offensive as might be - sukiosed. A connois seur in strange smells, might well here congratulate himself on the dis covery of a sensation in that line en tirely new, and wholly different from aught that bad ever before greeted his nostrils--even had he been with Coleridge at Cologne. Its wide dif fusion* may be understood, when we consider that the discharge from the • .161 1. 4 0( Al I= araAlinals TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, P : 10, 1874. fifty. miles 1 of; London sewerage, amounts to no less than 9,000,000 cubic feet each day! A company has, however, • been formed, with a capital of millions, for the purpose of diverting this dis charge, and conveying it across Es sex, for the fertilization of a large area of territory to be reclaimed from the German Ocean: and well might the voyager urn the Mamas wish to the enterprise that success which it has probably already achieved. Circling round the Me of Dop,ive traversed Limehouse Beach, and far ther on, what, is called' the Pool, where the larger vessels which reach London, suspend their progress, re calving and discharging cargoes at the Docks. Onr steamer, ' however, continued to thread its 'way amid barges, lighters, ands crowd of other dark-looking craft, until a landing was made at Waterloo Bridge, and once more I found myself in the streets of London,—not so much a stranger here as on my first arrival, although •my American, friends had meanwhile departed homeward. In stead of returning. 'to my former quarters near St. Paul's, I took lodg ings in Norfolk street, Strand,; near Exeter Hall and Temple Bar; and, ,as I had anticipated from previous observations, the 'wait) , proved much more agreeable, as being more central and within easy access of the most interesting and attractive points of the city,—although in fact out of the "Oity".proper. The Strand, in many of its fea tures, reminds one of Broadway, New York, although decidedly infe rier to, the latter in elegance and ex ten 4 its name was probably derived froml c ts nearness to the shore of the Thames. For the purpose of more readily distinguishing their location, the suffix 9f Strand is commonly ad ded to the lesser streets 'leading into it. Many o'k these, such as Norfolk, Bedford, Ch dos and Essei, are said to have derived their names from those of the no'llemen whose court residences were f rmerly here when this was the aristo tic quarter and absolutely the ', l We k End" of Lon %7 don. As relics of th times, just without Temple Bar, e still stand ing ancient edifices once upied by Henry VIII. and his Pre ter Wol.- sey : while , near by and still eontina ing its former name and business, 'is the Boar's. Head Tavern, mentioned by Shakspeare as the favorite resort of his hero, Falstaff. In the same vicinity stood the theatre, wheXe Shakspeare first appeared, it is said,', as an actor. Remaining yet a fortnightan Lon don before my departure to - the con tinent, my way of life was sufficient ly-quiet and retired; breakfast being the only meal I took at my lodgings, and this served' in my rdoms. I " dined out," and saw but little of mine host Dickens, or of his other guests—there being no table note. Still everything at No. 4 Norfolk Street seemed comfortable and home like, and at a moderate expense. Convent Garden Market, with its rich and varied display of the finest fruits and flowers, was at just ,sufft cient distance to afford a favoritii arid frequent walk in the early firm ing. . —But there came4rmorning when for a time, at least, I was to go thith er no more. The deep and impress ive bilence of the Great City, in the gray dawn, seemed enhanced rather than broken by the solitary echo ef, our carriage wheels on the way to London Bridge Station, for the early train to the South Coast. Arriving at Ne*haven, I bade fare fell to England, and _embarked upon the steamer for Dieppe, on the route to Rouen and Paris. Thus termi nates a sojourn of t*o months in the British Isles. —Years have passed, and with them the freshness of description that lends an interest to the narra- tions of travel.- 'As regards further experiences and observations, —in France and Paris, daring the palmy days of the Empire and the Great Exposition, in Switzerland, along the Rhine and - through Holland, be neath the clear sky of a glorious Autumn, it is not proposed to enter upon them in the present form. And for the , unforeseen extent of these Records, with their inaccuracies and irregularities, the writer must grate fully acknowledge the forbearance, (if he do not claim the forgiveness) of both the reader and 'the publisher' of the BRADFORD REPORTER. • C. C. -P. A PLEASANT PLACE.—A good story is told at the expense of a somewhat inexperienced housekeeper in this city who found herielf one morning without a servant to cook or wash. A few hours' trial convinsed her that she must have help, and she started out in search of a girl. After calling_ at several places without success, she was passing one of the best residen ces in the city,,and observed a tidy looking woman clearing the yard. Halting, she inouired of the woman whether she knew of a girl that could be hired. The answer was in the negative: The lady had by this time become desperate, and resolved .to hire the woman before her, al though she knew it was wrong to covet her neighbor's servant.. In a . low tone of voice she began to relate her trodbles, and wound up by tirg• ing the woman to leave. Mrs.—and come with her, offering her a dollar a week more than she was receiving. The woman answered that she liked her place, and.could not be induced to give it np. And.she added: "Besides, I generally sleep with Mr. M—, and T. don't think he would allow me to go." The lady departed, utterly aston ished at What she heard. liar feel ings may be imagined when'-she afterwards binned that she had been talking with the mistress of. the mansion, and the Wife of ono of our most esteemed eititene.—Phila. Ex. Sun Lord John }Nasal to--Hnmis, at a- social dinner, " What do you consider the object of legislation?" "The greatest good; to the. greatest number." " What -do yon consider the greatest number ?." continued his lordship. " Number one, my lord," was the commoner's 'prompt, reply. L 1 I/ 10 i 462 , ' A. MARVELLOUS EWAPE. About tyears ago I was em ploed as n ight-watchman in a sugar refinery in Greenock, a town where there are probably more sugar-re= fteries than' n any other place in rifitin. That in which 1 - was en gaged was; the burst in the place, and on accbuit of its size there was another TiVatehinan beside myself. Ips' name wan -Blackwood; he was a l in widower ; d his only son, a boy of about twel e, used often to come and sleep in' e little room where we Dept watch. Blackwood bad prom bed to take his son .a sail, and asked me one dby if I would accompany toem. I did so; and we went to Lock , ' , mond and spent a very pleasant! y, andreturned just in time to go to the ang4-house. It was hot weath er at the thee, and baring done with out our usnal sleep, we felt very tired. The heat of the sugar-house was not calculated to refreskus, and we could hardly kee p our eyes open. We tried as tp reading, usual, but it was useless. Before to b"clock, Blackwood had fzllen ties . I determined to keep awake, and intended, after a couple of -1 oars or ad, to :owe my companion end take asleep; myself, for I , felt it would beinipossible to - asp watch all night . 1 I mast, however, have f en asleep unconsciously, and have r maimed, so for several hours. I i i amt tli t I was ill the cabin of the s . steamer ' which I had been that y, and at it was full of smoke, and that I bi link dad, id ..nat I W it as . being suitoca 4, ant. cnuld not t out. I awoke' as if I 4 viere s ling for life, and found the room lied with stifling vapor, and felt a intense heat, and I heard without th crackling of flames. The il ei sugar-hon was on fire. • I Blackly° d was still asleep, and I 'knocked 'm up, and opened the dpor of th room. A cargo of raw sugar and molassess had jast been taken in, nd this was piled up' on each side f the vaulted passage that led from he main door of the re finery. I is , mass was on fire, and was sending out dense volumes of , smoke; o' the other 'bide of us were wooden s airs, which led to various / parts of the building, and these were. also in flaines. The refinery had ev idently ben on fire for a long time, and 'we could hear the shouts of the people without. We were s surround -11 by the flames, and the heat was great that it was certain we could ant survive long. Blackwood and I irked at ' ach other in dismay. His boy appe red to be calmer than ti ter of u , and suddenly cried out, \ ' Father,, I the beer-cellar ! " The me who '"worked in the. re- Anryt on account of the great heat' ti \, hash hey were imbjected, had_a ita'lY\allci ante of beer, which was opt in, a stone cellar about twelve or four n feet under ground. In passing t e flames at the top of the stairs,. my ce Was scorched and my Bair Inge AThe door of the cellar (leas ocke , brit with the strength of sperati ni w dashed ourselves. against it d burst it open. How cool it fe t," after 'he fearful heat,of the ferns e wee had\just left ! But bow.long nultlit remain so, was the question t t Blackwood and I con indered in a feii, hurried\words. We, i s had har closed the dcili• d evhen we heard' th frightful cr 'of ' the falling ro fof ',the refinery, pieces cif burnt wood came tasking and crackling own; he stairs. We - rolled two barrel's behind the door, which we did not fear would catch, fire, .. , it was covered with iron, and the - Wirwaited; while it began to grow otter and hotter. It was quite dark iiere alth ugh We. were close to the right II es. I I could hear. Black wood pra ing a he knelt on the poor of the cellar. He was a good man, I believe, and well prepared for he death i that met him that night. I soon felt the choking stench of burnt sugar, and on putting my hand, o the 8001 was burnt severely. The incited anan ge r and scalding molasses were flowi g down the stairs and fill ing the p ace where we were. The ficor slo considerably, and. I re treated to t he end farthest from the door.Tli heat was growing intense, pi l l and the ,vapo r was stifling. I be ame unc onscious, and how long I remained tio I cannot tell. When I recovered my senses, the heat had not gone and there was about sit inches of ,water iii the place where L was lying. This had come from the fire -engines, and was lukewarm... I could not feel this with my lands, as they sad my face- were fearfully scorched, but l i did so with my tongue. I had called on Blackwoo4 but there' was no anower'; and ..by Wriggling over with great pain for , a few y I found both'him and his ion dead. The scalding sugar had reached t a place where they were, and, had pareatly stopped Alen. 1 I could 1 the hardened cake'under the water.' I conjectured that they, like mysey, had beconie unconscious, and had been burnt to death by the boiling sugar. In the agony I was enduring 4 I envied them. 1 Death had no,rms for me then. Theti e during which I remained in this p e seemed like weeks. I had' no h pe of escape,. as I knell , al c that abo e there ' must be an im pense niaas, formed by the parts of I the building which had fallen. Mad not strength even to reach the door , 'Lt last, nmy pain had decreased lii, little, ' fell asleep , or fainted, I w p l Cannot to which; but when I awoke I felt som what relieved, and a long. ing forl . ti. ' I also tor the first time 'felt hungry. I managed to get some leer, whiCh revived me considerably. I tried open the door, but was innahle. e silence which pervaded the plies and the consciousness Of ;the prose ce of the two dead bodies; shad th effect on my weak state,, 'and I ew I was becoming-deli* OUR. I ember I laughed hysterid ,tally, an begin - to shout. When I ;stopped, heard a faint sound far 'shove m ; this made 'me perfectly wild. , T re wits a hammer, which .. Imy . him , had accidentally coma I agai n st , d I took it and began beating empty, barrel in frenzy. Then I I eard a shout,; ;from above, but I'w read now ; and I remem ber, as if t were yesterday, that I at tempted strike my head with the hammer. 'nd then I Wet altrecollee tion. Wh ' I regained my oehielotta• ness, I In the Infirm:lazy. They I, ' ' •I , - • ,\ '. \ , L -- 1 1 . .. _ \ L , t told me when - the i'tien were Aping 'away the rubbish they heard a sound, and remembering the cellar had dug down to it. They thought at first that we were all dead ; and it', was not till a medical man had seen; the bodies that it Was discomed , ithat. there was still some life left in cee. ' I lay there' for; months,; and .was not expected 1 , - to recover yonng end *our constitution, however, - served me m good stead ; 'and I was at lakt able- to fill a Ivry goOd Anal. tion, *bleb the owners of the re taery hindly pro Cured for me in En gland. Ten years have passed since then, and I am glad to say very few elects have remained of that-terrible experiencai 7 elbandmre' Journal. `A15[ 1 01.3) Imam. ear y t.. ' Exit . Cipa. N' 1 XV Tears ago itileatitiful child was stolen in England, and the robbers notified the father. that' his child could be 'ransomed for the sum of five thousand pounds. The father re plied; through ,the directed channel that ;he was a ',poor Man, and Could not raise five ' hundred' pounds (400). . Thereupon the robbers re plied that they , knew he was a poor man, abut they. - kilso kneti that he had rich relatives aid friends from whom he could born,* the' amount, and , if, be did not send it by a certain dal the child would/ be killed for self "protection. In the meantime/the affair had got into the papers,, and all England wasaroused at / the au dacity, of _the scoundrels.. / Large re wards were offered; ministers preach ed fi'em the pulpit about it. Great : t sympathy was felt. fo i l , / th arents, the money ' was raised' the child /re covered, but all b' / iseau 'fel curls, bad been cut el e off. he liolice . and defectives were tot s ly unable to make any discoveries a to who were the enthininals. 3I y arrests were made, but with no re alt. . ' One of/the gentlemen bo contri buted to the fund for the ansom of the child, knowing. that th Bank of England never reissues its notes, went to the bank and got its officers tb mark and register the bills he was going to give the father to obtain the releaie of his child, and requested the bank officers to notify him when the bills should be returned to the bank.l He did this, in the hope of getting some trace of the scoundrels.' Several months elapsed,when one day he was notified that the bills had been returned 'to the bank. Upon inquiry he found that they had come from a bank in the. North of Eng,land. Thereupon he 'posted north and found that 'the bills had been depos ited by a person who opened' an se-, ' count with them. The gentleman and hank clerk returned to London, when, upon rival at his house, a detective was -!lent - for, and at the same time the. father of the stolen i - child was requ e st ed to meet them in order to inform him of- their', discov ery. Immediately upon the father coming into the room the bank ;clerk said:- • Why, this is the gentleman who ', deposited the hills with' us." And so it proved, In order to raise money he had abducted his own child. He was arrested for conspiracy to defraud, tried, convicted and senr tenced to penal servitude. So ended the - kidnapping case, and people who had little ones slept easier. •; . 1 Tim following "Answers to Corres pondents" may contain valuable in formation: _ "Orandfather" —We can Isyrnil Pathize with you. We know! how hard it is to sit down on.a mei and pA be able to boot-jack the boy that it -a it tb( but they^ thF - - will all Try SOT but finish pro ' yoi del on 70) ty. in i t JYO yon him drsat ole r man from early twilightitill now the next day if sbe wants to, and then, offer to pay the. lover' s hack home. Harry says Ogle as at a ball and asked a young lady to dance with' him, whereupon her ibeau knocked him do*n. He wants to know what we'd- ' do about it. We'd get up. Kentucky,Home says his wife hat left him - and applied for a divorce, just because he threw the coffee-pot at the cat and hit-his dear partner on the head. Let her go.. A Woman as sensitive as . that would object to hoeing corn, splitting. Wood, build ing fires and foddering the cattle,. and if you get ler back you'd always have trouble with her. Inquirer wants to know the best way to estimate the weight of a saw loge Lift it. Unbeliever desires to know if Iblack eyes are always the sign of a' high temper. Not always; they are some times the sign that'yon told a fellow he lied. , J I.r is said that the young ladies of 'Jacksonville, Tam., have a fashion of tying up their taper fingers IWhen young .gentlemen are expected to call and when the latter Very natur ally ask the cause, they blushingly reglp, l .l burned them broilirig the steak thiii in ,rning!!. The result; as chronicled by the local paper, is that several young gentlemen have burned their finpra .by believing the story. Two persotts, who have chosen each other out of all the species, with the design to be each. other's Mutual comfort and entertainment, have in , that action bound themselves Ito be good humored, affable, dirmet, for giving, patient, and joy ful with re aped to each other's frailties and im perfections to the end of their livee, —Addieen. - ' $2 per Annum in Advance: .. "yam Within the, , last few years Jhe breaking of, water-spouts—if that is 4 proper, name for the phenomenon —like that, which desolated a town in Nevada " recently, has been fre quently noticed. A few years ago a water spout, or the bursting of a cloud, caused ; very serions damage near the bridge of the Chicago and Northwestern railway across the Rock River, three miles west of Dix on; and ' ' a similar, disaster also befell the same road a' few miles east of Dixon. There is an abundance of evidence in most parts of- - the coun try that tbey have oceurred in all of its past history. Especially is this .tree along the lino of the Pacific railway. Broad beds• Of streams per fectly dry are Common in 'Black Hills and Rocky Mouniaie d s ric ts, which show plainly the actioll of ter rible torrents not many years previ ous. Eiiierienced railway-men haVe given it as their Opinion that WI- ctent; allowance is not made in the construction of our roads.' to let tiff the water in such cases. LA similar disaster occurred in senthern Minne sota. recently, Where , very considera ble damage- was done, and a fe i cC Years since the; president Of . the Mi chigan Southern railway and many passengers carne near losing their lives, not far from 'Mishawaka,' from_ the same cause. Several persons in the car next t p them were drowned. • Some years i earlier, a portion Of - the city of Denver, California., was submerged in; the night" time by, a flood coining; down . the valley of Cherry creek, of which the inhabi tants had had Ino previous warning. ; - A cloud had burst on the side of 'the mountain so far distant that no sign of its existenpe could bediscerned, and spilled itecontents into the np ier valley of Cherry creek. This creek been dry for many years—eo dry thatits bed had been surveyed And laid off in toWn lots and wilt uPon, constituting, indeed, one of the most thick-settled Parts of Deriver. The flood s'rack the town shortly 4fter midnight ; and; in an instant of swept off every vestige Of human habitation and handicraft in the Old bed of the creek and'adjacent there to, destroying i many lives and a large amount of preperty,Whichwas hurled into' the ,South Platte, which latter stream was raised several feet in : ` 'a few minutes. ' Probably nothing can e done tot ward off the calamities that often re sult from " cloud-bursts " or water sponts,, but they are worthy of cere al study. SOme rules may possibly *be drawn from the appearanctef4 the, clouds, by which people whese homes may be located in the ,valley liable to inundation / may ; be Warned in time 'to reach a place of safety. The phenomenon of a ?loud-burst consists 'of the sudden„rierhaps in stantaneous, condensation; of a vast quantity of warm moisture in the at mosphere by , rming l in contact with ( the cold side f a menntain, or with a current of cold . air. It is not ire probable that ,the awful 'disaster rat Pittsburgh was identical in its nature with the clotid-bnrsts of Colorado, Arizona; and Nevadri.—Glactgo A .v . I , .BACK--LThe L, Jose ph (MisSouri) Ibinocrat sap!: We have heard of many amusing scenes occa sioned by the liqor crusade, but we, - think that the case' of lawyer J. P. E.—; 'at Centerville last Tuesday, is entitled to tie "blue ribbOn." Lawyer E. was drank The ladles bad him arrested and brought befcirt Esq. P. Lawyer IS. prosecute( the case, and the followinlg evident was given: Lawyer you,re drunk ? Lawyer E. Yes, ,1 S.—Where youget your liqw E.—By Express. I , I I S.—Where Aid yowl drink it? E.—At home--alone. S.—l give evir ihewitiless. 1 Lawyer E. th i n arose and said he would like to cross-examine the wit ness.. The Ceiirt granted, and E. began questioniag himself as follows: Mr. E.--Yen admit being drunk? n - A.----Yes, sir. - ' , , Q.—Are-pm i the habi ing? L.—Yes, I soetimes to Q.—You sa you drn yn I ttoday?_l . A.—Yes, sir.le drink, Q.—Do you often drink A.—No, sir; not often.' Q .—Whom 1 b ave you Inostly? \L—With Lawy er . --- Q.—Where are you drank with rt?\ hu , , 7 A.-.ln Three Rivers, SLrgis,Cen dentine, yhigeen, lldenion, Burr Oak Nottawa, Qinrville, and other places. 1 c e . Q.:—How di. , youlget your liquor to-day? 1 A.—By express, C.O.D : , 1 . Q.—Were any Iher parties connect ed with you inhis purchase? i n A.—Yes; '§q ire P. promised to take half, but .1 ho couldn't raise the cash, so I had t; take it all. r ugh . E.—l am th w ith , h. the witness. . 1 __ _ ALLOW No nipioexafirroiAcy—trp on - this theme i 3 ,irley Dare, in one of his excellent I "observations, says: "There is one i. l rule, that settles a thbuaard queries of the nature we are considering. Vilate'vei is secret may be safely left untonclied. `. The touch, tho look, • the intimacy, the corres pondence that eeedato by secret has something wog about it If yOu are, sure, there i s no evil in your mo tives, for Heaven's sake come out and avow your frlOdship,' your design, whatever it may be. You make the world parer, and set a precedent by ,your franknose that tears away a thousand hyPeclisies. The world has keen scent fox the really innocent; and, if you caanot lace its first sneers of eriticistsii yfD I hare reason to doubt yourself.' - A caosame-s\prrna was trying. to get a gratuity ,from an excessively dandified individual„ who, in resist ing, urged that he had no change, nothing but a §‘2.o bit!. I can get it changed for ver," said 'the young ster. On seeig the dandy hesitate, as if from fear of tru,sting him with the money, hol put it ag.am,ll, ye* doubts my honor, field ' my breeze t, -r!` MI NUMBER 15. CLOUD-BURSTS. =I • Ifi'llEG• 611 A• D itor Gob DABED-' , II: i. IL ,I .L . , This is a. [mica of which I think AOnerican women are Incomin' g:very careless. They i tire"ffo: beautiful as a rii,ce,lso accustomed to conquest, that perhaps they ~axe - getting' to•believe that Pope's line r - I . • - • I''Look in leer face and. you forget ' . them all," aPplies tonmusers;-but a - I I b autiful woman wi wi thout - good man- n rs i . is a flower ` without fragrance. _ S e is worse ; lls miming on her lxiauty and abnsing' ,one of God's •_ eat gi ft s. You must look ;, at her, b t You look - to regret, to being diseaprove; chained for life to instead of seet looks,married to graceful ac• tion, you grow to diipise and hate her. 1 In a country like ours we must expect to find a frequent coupling of ignorance with' wealth, of official station with eckwardness, •of high social' position, 'th bad -manners= comliinatioae in re rarely remarked inlthe older aid more settled States . of Ithe world. Itifigs and , queens must . decently well bred and well educat- - ed. c annot well help knowing They : the, proper way to eat a dinner, they, cannot helpobserving, the proprieties - ofldryss and etiquette'. and the pee- ple immediately aboist them must follow tkeirexample. I No such nee eseity exists here. Vira have a Gov- • ernor or a , Mayor alio is entirely untrammelled by the ,acvs of grain - mar 'and of " spelling, who uses his ~, ; ; ownsweet will in reg dio his knife and fork and - who is till the proper person to receive 'the representative ; • . of foreign liower. i l lln ,on* cities how . ckening it is to see the potentiality of some vat= • gar rich mail who ca buy the crowd ' in More isensee , th n one - . — how mournful, to. nett t e absence of ,geoil l manners in ,so e of- _our pro minent literary nnd rcligions 'celebri- • tifis -- [ lmen whom you I hesitate to ask ; ~.. , tol your house , althou h- their' talents r ;are exercising sO mu h influence on • the World, and their names! aro on : everybody's lips, The trouble lies iu ' al: 1 deficiency of wiped, a lack: of ~Itr4ining,•at'i alisetea-of something JolloOk np to. ; . The best [bred men i in. America ate the officeraof the regular army and • ,riiiVy.-!-Tirey have been taught to look up , to, I to revernce authority, / and to • be respectful. It never leaves / ilien4, they [become the most &gni • / 1 fled a nd . the most simple men in the/ -. g i / Coinmunity i - , :When women reach alarger g/ sp, Of the subject, and obServe this reat rule, I "that, the possession ofrpower . • is'better than the shbw of it'," they ` will have advanced far bey end, their present status.--The l endand aim of the weak and uneertain/i to appear -- strong and ;well tiossesed at whatever Co.it. It his apparently struck some Women in the' society of our nee*- ' • , country 1 which' tritest be a shifting scale s that theya Y ppear to stand well , I by' b e ing isagreeable--:that an 'air of hrteur itld rudeness is beceming and riStoeratic. 1 It 'is the mistake -, of I ignorance, and,; 'would soon hs, cntt'.l by'a carefnl study of the lids • Models' in Europe. ; , 1 , ; i. ; • 1 gIINV GIACIERS ARE FORKED. —THE, ' high mountain ;tops in Switzerland andether parts Cif the globe are coy eril with dry white 6110 W during the entire year: Ijn im toi a certain point, , the heat of Isumer annually remoN es _ the i'vinter s snow, and thus the fall of each winter melts away during the slimmer, ,a nd i there ;is no aceumula tiOn but up big , ler, in-colder regions, • the gain of snow far 'exceeds the loss, ..,__J arid}atidalevery wiute adds a heavy - coat ing ' very , I to those 9f previous minters. Ti w, if this, ,action continued un ehec -ed fo centuries, the pile Of i. sa l e on our [ highest mountains W9tl d exceed in depth the mass of _ the monntains 1 tl4mielves. -:, If a layer of only three, feet a year had •adcainulated through the brief peirod: • 1: „ of t l e Chritian era, it would add to -• -,tilel, height,Jof Uont Blanca nearly 9,1)9 feet, and its summit, instead of -. belt only abeut 1 1 5,Q00 feet above' V scabllFt evel, W i ould, be more than 20 ; 000 feet. If this process of snow adcumn- , latiO had' gone on iduring_the, con . -- . -1— Luce of the geoloffie . ages, the iof snr would rtow extend np . ind the limits of the atmosphere. , our nionntaina do not- thus Optibly grow', higher; what corm ,ting arts" 'comes in here to ar the i creasing burden-of snow? is the great, We JO t of the snow , whir by ' pressing out the air betty en ~the Custals; forces it a co pact mass, and this, with aid of partial thawing, followed 'iCezing, gradually, converts it lee. The force of gravity sl°wly g,ii thej whole., mass down into valley between, the peaks„ ,thns acing glaciers or, rivers of ice. urna C7l.emisty. t i pulp ile Y I t 9 Bt pert drii( rest. It' itself 4om into the I .* 1 ' I P bind the prod V I I 1 - Gnnto iBELI. I --W i e should ' never got (1 bed . i ith a hoe L.:rrest, deep, and. perfect repose until " all is Sa y. Tle preliminaries for retire= went are a 1 just as important as aro those for t e day's duties. We-must ot go' to bed, withl an overloaded :t stomach, i , an,anzious or troubled t of mind, with Coldextremities or4' . , • , ithont anticipating and respond- , ing to the calls of nature in all re spelt& Standing before a fire is not the best'w ,ay to' get , warm from a night's slep. We should take such vigoOus e ercise asnwill give quick ewe lation to the, blood, and not de pen - .on tificial, but on natural ilea Att t ir ntion to 11, these things she id be ollowed I%y suchdevotion al e ercises as ',will bring all the feel._ ings r emotions ,; and sentimentsinto s e c rd with the divi e,will, subduingpas ion; ilemOvink-lhatred, malice, I insY, ' venge, and opening 'the p orals of heaven - to , all who seek ;es, peat and 'sweet repose. l of dri •-e a nk alo alone? ank with . . - --- 1 1 I . Ticie;rliest dap of the human roc; whe ' population was \more Sparse the; it, ever has been since, the lintrod ctions were also sneer, witl r little, or none Of , form or cere ictoJ ) cards" l ir Lair. first T o 7 unselves to s llowing 1 alai' ,A: 4 1 . 1 Alam." Il Om ten get Bo: I 0 gal 11/11.414 air- 7 -(%), lepposti na;these must have ivn a good des! in thitt time." dlady ot)iii3 as ithough she had misunderstood! I _ i : Blu, - ia l - Auaial :ervant girl has abaiuloned er pla4e ;because for aii !whOle wee s she ever went to bat tJarce circa s. fon prayer meetings 1 1 43even picnics aot o steamb*,ot lail#4lll. z hi, sa ,s ; she itranU,_to ha -e a lit le time td heiself: ' (They hickens chick to, be ; (tend these."