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TRANSIEN'r advertisements must be paid for N ADVANCE. , - ALL BeaolutionsTof Asscielations, Communimi liens of Milted or individual Interest, and notices rot 31arriages and Deaths. exceeding tire lines, are .barged TEN CENTS PER LINE. 300 PRINTING,of every- kind, la plain and 'fancy colors, done with neatness and dispatch. Handbills, Blanks, Cards, Pamphlets, Billheads, 'Statements, ke., of every variety and style, printed at the shortest notice. Tax ItEroutzu office is well supplied with power presses, a good assort ment of new type, and everything .in the Printing tine can he executed in the most artistic manner and at the lowest rates. TERM INVARIABLY CASH. trotessionia and susiness STREETEIL LAW OFFICE CEE2 TOWANDA. PA. OrEnTON & MERCUR; ATTORNEYS AT LAW' • - Office Over Idonia-ttee, TOWANDA V. ij'A. OVERTON. ("11°75 RODNEY A. 31ERCITI1 SMITH MONTANYE, ATT'Olt- NEYS AT LAW.—Ottice, corner of Main and Pine St., opposite Dr, Porter's Drug store. -,vv- H. CARNOCITAN, ATToa • :TEY AT LAW - Troy, Pa. Collections utado . and•promptly remitted. Efelds49tf. • ; - PATRICK,. ATTORNEY AT H. LA . W. Office-31erpuir's Block, next door to Express Office—Towanda{ Pa. )Iyl7-73. S. M. If — '00 1 1)BVII . S", Physi- Clan and Surgeon. Office over 0. A. Black's Crockery stone. Towanda, May 1. 1 421 r, • _ • WOOD it: S..A.NDERSON, . ATTORNEYS AT LAW, • TOWANVA. A. rina3 : 27) J NO. F.,SANDERSON 11114 JOHNSON AL NEIrtON. nifsieLans and Surgeons. 041e4 41yer Dr.! Porter d: • Son's Drug Store. Towanda, Pa. T. B. JOHNSON, M. D. D. 1. NEWTON, H. 11.7 FC. GRIDLEY - Jo ATTORNEY AT TOVANDA. PA A . prll 1, 1571 GEORGE. W. MUNK, Justice' of the Peace and Conveyancer. .Uso Ile , nranec Agent,.Leitaysvllle, Pa, March Alf P. L. DODSON,' PENTIST. d , On and after Sept. 21. may I found in the elegant new rooms on 2nd .floor, or Dr. Pratt's new onen on State Street. Iltglness . . . • dept,3.74[f. AV. KELLY. PE'srist,—Office • ove.r 31. F. Ttowltfiel&s. TONVIIIIII3. Teeth insetted nn (itild, *Met, 'Dubber. and M- UlliTlllllll base'. Teeth extraetedlwithiint vain. 1;41. 34-72. p EET DAVIES. ATTnIVNEYS AT LAW BLOCK. April f-71. TowitNoA. PA. WI L T & XW t ELL ATTORNEYS 4: OfirNsT,Onfr..LAM *lnlet! over Dayton'ti Store. Towanda. 163. J....LNDHEW WILT, 1v M.M. X WEL (May be consulted to German.) " a1;r2975 MePHERSON. A i'ToItNEY .'N!) • CouNsEcon. AT LAW.: "Thwanda - t iftice In TrAry 3: Noililii's Ni 7 Ill(wk. :iiiiiyl3. IR. C. 11. STAY'S. DENT/ST. . n ti ailr; mmoveil lit .. Delit3i iriffil, ilito Tr.le3 : ..k ~ 'll i.e.- , new ',hick. liver' Kent & W:111,1)•• StOTV, ii.'iiiivy pp... Tamil lo ilei :all kind, or 4 1..1.'31 uork Hi. tiii, iiii.ii put iti 0 nerd gaN :IpWr:I111 , . MIS/ 375: fi / 7 406 V. MYER. C. E.. COUNrI N, SILI:VEYOIi.—Partp-illar attention g A - 4.tt to locating (111 - inlet'. —lliii.s. i nfiire OVI•r Ilii , t t•rnev. ; . MEM r If. 'lllOlll . l'St.4N. ..11-n)RNEY t I.t - t t. :Mend busine,m vitt nt- - 4.41. rare In I; rut Gerd. , ifillivart Vryolltlii7, I tutee.. 'Porter. 1,,.% 19-74. . TI A LE tC l' 'I ION gc•nt -for %MN N .I:CTOCUT )11711 - ,ki. LIFE 1 N'..l" I: rl IMI'AN Y. omee Griffith .5: l'attott•! , Hto k, 17.04;....- March , TAIL G. A. c.‘3II•ToW ItltA 1)1 , 01:1) coUNTy. 'Treat' t`hr,,y, by lit`W nif`tbod•. May 1 1 ., •: , 11111'd by ktwr - E TON &, Et.sl; EE. ATTort , vEy.. AT LAW. TOWA PA• Ilathngen- L - t,l into r"Liiattrir.hip. ”t&1- their pr0n....1.4ml In life attention given (n they 1 01 - 1.11;e1C:. 311 , 1 E. (V E1tT(1r....", (ape, 1-7.1) N. (•. ELSIIREE., & CALIFF.. TT , )I:NEYS AT LAW. Tow. NDA. I.llll'o 11l Wlootr , tirtt iloprs'”utla "1 1120 Fimt ,! , :atl..ll;lll,7atk. ttj stain., H. .1. MADII.I.. [JaliA-711v1 .1. N. (_%1.1 - FF. 1 1 • MENEM N (' I.; _V G r 1 •J 014 N W. MIX. \ - 174)1 , Nry - \•0 \w L. AVID , (1)31311SRIN TtIWASII", • inhre—N*4 , rth !_nnan •J:111. 1..1%75. THE tiNDEIZSIONEI). NI) 1111.111 - 4:, to inform tll- citizen , . of . , l'owatitla all'i illllllV. that hr will particular attention, t,t design, „I,...•ifkation; for all 111:11111 , r1t1 prl at ..m.l pulAte. Sup. - Tint.lol.Pnec far ..:1:1 c at 11,10(.:1Ce N. E. t. , ecott.l nu/ Ellzattet)t stroe.t•t. : I • • .1. . P.••x 511. T• n ramia. Pn MEE BIXBEE. - CARRIAGE .1 c. . 1' A INTER AND 1)}:6)1rAI E.R. AI.: Mall, .1 fa, Weer of Ortiainelitat (;13,:i Show Card, a teci •I.u.rc ea , t of the 1E1 ., )117rj: I Mee. frr:r2l-75. . \T ' AV. KI NG S,Bt RV. • . .., j• , , - • . Ell:/ - :; S: ACCIDENT.; ,V S 1 7 14 21 l! 1," ( ni^ m r }laic . ~Lu -fit rowitm)A. PA' T 1; CEENCY. Th, 1•7:2_ I;v:I,I.IRLE ANI) FIRE TRIED 4 c1.1•11,r•wi.(1 • I LIT.NI . N. • - 11.1.))1F 31 1.11' . 11'11.3 NTS \l r,-h I~•; l•; F sT N it'7l 0 N Lll K • z.• 41£ ToNVA 1 4 ; 11 A VITAL SIIIPLf7S FuNn v NrSVAI. F•ICIhITIE for •• 1 ra ti,ft , t Inn of a i;ENEE,AL BANKING lILTSINESS l'1:1:1'z'T PAID ON DEposiTs AcoMDING T( AGTZEEMENT "‘rE. 11i, cArtEGIVLN TO THE roI.LF.CTION OF N. , TES AND CHECKS. - Parties wiNhinr, to SENI) MONEY to any part of : 1, 17n1tc.1 Statc.., England, Ireland,, Sentlail. or cc principal cities and towns of .Europe, can herr i enrP dratls fu That parpccze: it. PASSAGE TICKETS T., or from Use Old (' , nett r%, 11,Y tlwlH , a st am " tih•. always Ohl hand. •' I ‘NTILTESyRrief:LIT OVER AT 11:EDLY,/ , RATES; , rice- ir.tift for 15..:4.,130nd5, Gold and :441ive-r l'i) WELL, Prtslitent, 0i c Tut.:LITTI... STnIFF: '1:01 - ND TIIE COinirit r_ll, iil. - te.t. fu Toratola to buy goca CIGA.R, AND 'TOBACCO. • at low =tee. Itemember. /alit Civs" BLOCK, oppozUe COURT HOUSE • f•si:nor TIM "IN DIA.I.CSQVAIr apr"--75. - lb.oo .ifeTircifict C.OO aio 100 13C00 rx- m] =OO I 30.00 I 41.00 8. - . W.:ALVORD I Publisher. 01 80.00 100 VOLUME •XXXVI. - :::,, Acic . uzs'tite rapid stream of seventy years, The t•tentler bridge of Litman life is thrown: The pai , t, and future from Its mOulderlng piers Uri de,ent moment Is its frail iceystcme. Front "Aust itini art" the arch begins to rise: "To (lust — the fashion of Its form descends: "Shalt thou return," the higher curse Unpile!. in which the first to the last lowness bends. St«et t by youth's magic light 11111“11 that arch. How lately does each Irar4Olt Amu. appear! But air how 'changed when on the onward march tnr weary toutatept‘ bring the yl.ston nrar 'Twat , tabled that beneath the rainbow's foot A treasure lay, the dimmer to bewitch: And tunny wasted in the vain pursuit:' The golden 'year,‘ Oat would. have load , . Ihe in ' rich. I mo ~chrrc n mei' of, many rotors lead.•, V , The heart expecti , rich wealth of joy to Mid; f ltut In the distance Ow bright hope recede.... Awl leaves a cold gray wart.• of care-hchind. • I 1 miniltstream upon ItO boann take, Th' Inverted shadow of a bridge on high. And thnz% the arch to ate and water waken 1 Une perreet circle to thy gazer's eye. with life: the 'things that do apt r. Any 11 , ellug'Andows on linte'?paiSing Cast by the soitshioe of a Itigt er sphere, From vieWles,s` things that eh:'lngeTessly abide, The f+.!:11 1., tilt' the half of life noels The' Ideal in make a perfeet.wlinh! ; The pbere.n( igense is Incomplete.' and plead., Fur closer itiihnt wlth the sphere All thing:, of nst are bridges that conduct 'To things of faith,' 'which give them tritest worth: And Christ's own prattles do us lustri o d. That heaven Is Ott the counterpart of earth.. The pier that nests upon this chore's the-sante As that which stand, ujwyn the furtln4 bank : Ana fitness for our duties here will friptie A fitness for the joys of higher rank. Clark were life without heaven's ,tio to show The likeues< of the other world In this: And hare and ixic,r Ivinvld be our lot below Without the shadow of a world of bits% Then let it pas'Ang wer life's fragile arch. Itegard It as tinteatis and ttot:an end: . As but the path l of falth on which ne march To where all glorie, of our being 4kccllaqcort. Esther Earle's Experiment. there is al [ -woman in black who passe.4 down. the street nearly every morning; a pale, thin woman. with a troubled, anxious thee, Her dress and shawl are rusty and threadbare, but she has abtnit her no lark of neat ness. no•traee 'of slovenliness. S.zome tianes she leads a little boy by the hand—a little Iboy, who, though not as ruddy as the other little boys in our street, is all dithples and wonder in!! Smiles, for it is evident‘that he doe, not get Out often, and ,the fresh air and sunshine are, to him wonder ful new things full of pleasant mys tery. ; Ilk mother does not seem to know any of the neighbors. I saw her smile only 'once. and that smile was a, revelation. It brought back to -her face all the girlish beauty of long ago then the smile faded, -and the woman was again the pale worn Esther Earle--=, longer - the gleeful, buoyant Esthet Lee I • had known five years ago. It was -Bessie Evergreen who had caused the smile. Bessie: who prideS . -herself On, her housekeeping, was coming from market. with thicken's' feet anti' spikes 'of cellery protruding front her basket in the most approved way. when -Esther Earl and little Ed win eaine'along; B e s s ie l o ok e d l aug h_ ingly down.at the boy. and the boy looked, slyly up at Bez;Sie. And then Ilessie.searehol in her basket for the largest red-vheeked apple, and-thrust it into the Boy'S unreluctant It was a very little thing--a very little thing; but it brightened little Edwin's day. and gave his mother new strenth. for it madether think that the world was not ali as harsh and hitter and 'scornful as she had , learn - 4A to believe. Tem .rich. 1„.;1 :wig ,-7 I I= . . I think she sews for some. clothing establishment, for when. i. , passeS i:lie usually carries' on hey arm a coat or vest: The other day, as a police Mall was rather roughly dragging along au intOxiCated ' l and rather un innio,cable nian, I saw Esther hasti ly dr o p her work On -8 doorstep and run across the street. To the police man's amazement .She: wiped the drunkard's cut face with her hand kerchief, replaced his battered hat, . a nd loosened the cravat that threat ened to cause appople:iy, - '• it might pcksibN have been hint! It tni!'rht .have beeiiii ini! - '' she mur mured, as she resign .d her work and went her way, . In the summer - of . 1869. Esther and her uncle. John . 1 . ,ee. - were domiciled at cape ,May for the season: John Lee was very wealthy :; he was the proprietor of a dozen productive farms in Chester county. and besides petroleum had been lately a struck" oit 'a scrubby lot of hiS• up near Wellesboro.. John Lee W:1 ; :'; a plain-speaking, farmer-like man, , with "no nonsense about him." He had a_fair : mount ] of common-sense, and an undoubted' talent for agricultural ,operations. Esther was au orphan, and .his; only living relatiVe. j He loved her in his matter-of-fact way, which, neverthe less, was a tine and lasting. way. He was not in the habit of frequating fashionable resorts; lie hated "airs" and fashion ; but this year his purse was more plethOric than usual ; lie felt that Esther would be the better for a change of air and a glimpse of a new mode of life. Besides, be had another reason which he' hardly ac- knowledg,ed.even to him Self. He was growing old, and Esther was on the verge of womanhood. It was time, he thought, that she }should ha. — ve stronger and More secure protection than he could give her. :Being his heiress, she must; marry money, and among the crowds at, Cape May she Would prObably ;Meet more "likely young fellows" than :at home in the seluded fartuhou4e at Chester. Thus, half consciously,; short-sighted John I Jet- argued. .Esther had natural good ttiAte and a early blaiwhe for her expenditure, —two things to be envied. Her face was pretty—Very like the face of Guido's Beatrice;Cenici, but without the expression which makes that face :beautiful; her eyes and lips were Smiling and saucy, and she was as graceful as a kitten. This** John Leg's satire as'he saw her, in white, 0. A. lII,ABK $1_25,000 '50,0,00 N. N. t;TT, .1 it. - r MEM ME ; 44 c11!1kd othy. TEE BRIDGE OP LIPS. BY Mi‘ITIUCE EAGA with coquettish kncits and ends of cherry-colored ribon, driving her lit 'tie. pony carriage along the bench. The driving of that pony carriage, which, in 180, .some -ladies called' "fast"—though, indeed, the Pony waS one of the slowest, of his species— . broupt 'Either to grief, for one morning after a sti:pria had thrown; UP hillocks of sand on the beach, her little chariot capsized on the very verge of the ocean. The pony came to a standstill, and Esther was gently tossed into the paternal embrace Of a White-bearded wave! One of the numerous young .men who generally happened to be oti the bench when' she took': her drive, ,in stantly rushed foriraid and helped her to regain her feet. The wave had rolled out with her wid-britninc;cl hat and its ribbons of cerise, but Esther looked very lOvely with her hair powdered . With .salty pearls, and the half-frightened, half-laughing es.- pression in her brown 'eyes. " The, prettiest girl in the world— `by Jove !" thought Edwin Earle, as she thanked him. • ! . , 'For her ixtrtyslie, instantly made a hero of the tall; handsome man who stood before her, and when he had returned from the neaaest hotel with a borrowed shawl, she allowed • him to drive her home. . , "He won't do," cogitated John. Lee: "he's only a bookeeper off on a holiday. I , don't object to that, though, but that' deep flush on his cheek comes froth brandy, not health. I know ,all about him; he is always hanging around the 1.);,r, and he was, more than ' half-seas over' the other night. But," and John fllled his pipe, " I can trust Esther. She's not a fool. I'll not interfere till I see some cause." . . Short-sighted ; easy-going, John Lee! Weeks passed: :Hops sailing parties, drives, pleasant readings in- . d4ors on rainy days, made' a bright dream for 'Esther, for !Edwin Earle WAS usually near her. , ,•, , • Uncle," said Estber, as : on one of the last "hop nights " !she went out inithetwilight on the deserted piazza aiii stood before him; a. lovely pie tal e, framed in soft lackand rustling sil -.—" Uncle, I, have ptomised to be Ec win Earle's wife !" ' What!" cried John -Lee as if thUnderstruck. ." Yes," she answered; blushing; "l4t asked me to-day, and—and he wil! come to see you to-night." olin Lee groaned. 11..!yoti crazy, Esther? In a few rs that man will be 'a Contirined _in filet, he is Veryy - intemperate " know it, Iliac John," she said, rely ; "but he loves me. He will !nothing stand between him and He will become temperate for fry n. • let -IYott are leaning -on a broken (1. Esther, if you trust to that. est, it is but a great risk—too (.; ' t - for you to run. I do -not be vi in -these sudden refoimations. . nl't you wait and try him a year or ol? No? Weli, you are of ,age; Clinnot legally control . you.. But in-; you are abut to: try a terri '. v langerous experiment." " have no fear ofits -result. un - -a :love works wonders." Aove!" 'John Lee paused, and thenl i waxed angry. "Give , me good prinCiples, and mutual esteem, and —what is the.use of talking ? Look here Esther Lee, if you marry that mank-ou shall never call ii vent of my money t'our's! You know I nev er break my word" E=S!IZEMEM! proudly. JUlm Lee saw that his last speech was a false move. but be could .not ! reinc4 it now. Ither Lee became Esther Earle. For several months Edwin Earle maii4 some efforts to keep the prom ise of athendment, but by degreeS he gre . n more 'reckless. After a time the firm which employed him was foreetl to dispense of his services. He had become worse than useless. l'evcrty and shame were Esther Earle's marriage portion. Esther worked patiently and lov inglV, never losing hope. Through dream, days and nights she minister ed to, this man, who managed to ob tain the' liquid in. spite of all her efforts, who passed from drunken stupor into cruel bursts of fury.l Uncle John never wrote to I nd she never wrote to him. She refuSed his advice, and chosen ~I w n lot. She would suffer in si- God had not forsaken her— tad her child. her, .1 had her o, lenee she It . uneyal procession has just pass window. Three days ago Ed : :arle died of .delirium lremeus. A ed th, will ife, in her threadlx►re DE and the little boy,! are the only mciurners. I eateha glimpse of her fake. She seems teri ytvs older, and by that look of frozen lui,guish you can tL.II that she mourns for him as deep& as if he had ! been .the truest of huSbands and the! truest of Men. . I hear that John Lee has offered to take her hoMe, and make the little boy his heir. • May she find rest and peaet, for if her experiment failed, it failedi not for want of a womans boun 'Hess faith and love. ! 'L. FORNEY IN EUROPE. i LTlte ()laming Is a portlou of Otle of Col. John W. For key's letters to The Pres*. It Is, like alt his correspondence, remarkably well expn.ssed and highly Interesting.) ; 2. - BERLIN, July 30.—Berlin is about the distance Iromi l'aris that Phila delphia is from Chicago—say 800 miles—and you reach it from ctthe Frencih capital as rapidly and almost as comfortably as you travel between the to chief cities of Pennsylvania and ..linois. The ride from Cologne, 403 English miles, was by express. I left that Catholic centre at ,6:30 A. m., and gt here before 8 in the evening. Therei was (lust enough in all con science, but the Carriages,_ or cars, were c l i omfortable, the fare reasonable, the attendants silent and Courteous, and the weather superb. Twenty live (1011arri acid between Paris and Berlin, is the price for these accont modations, and if you "take a Sleciti er," which I did not, you pay about double the rate charged for that lux ury: in the United States. The Ger man fruit - Ways are better than the French, hat even they lack the supe rior personal accomModatiOnS on all American trains. There are no wa ter-clOsets or lalratorh and no cheek- ~ ~ ~... ? .~.:A _. w. 3 ZEE =EI IN TOIYAN4 BRADFORD COUNTY, PA . , IiTURSDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 9, 1875. ing of baggage, and -their .absenee l leads to many painful embarrass ments to travelers, and especially to strangers. The het is, the American railroads, at home have so spoiled our people, that even the critiettl. Ameri can, who is always re:hiy to fall in love. with . European habits at first sight, is glad to expreSs his gr4te fill preference for our. railway 'usu. ries. I wish I had ' 4 ufe to describe the other, impsessiong of this rapid:jaunt through the three:eOnntries,—Franee, 'Belgium and Germany—So close to each other and yet so different. You are hardly over the line of one before you realize the' contrast in language, dress, and arehitture in theta' The French houses and roads shine in their ghastly white, and the French people prove their industry and rift;• but how much- superior are their Flemish neighbors, especially those of the country watered by the river Meuse. Au aggregate popula tion Of 7,000,000 sliarms L over thiS 'Kingdom, among endlessi fields of grain, clover, potatoes, hops, vines interspered with coal, iron, limestone, marble•• rivers abounding in. delicious fish anal forests with game. • The banks of `the Meuse between Namur and Liege are a 'gorgeous picture of vitri ; ed.seenery. Indeed, the whole ride , in Begium • was through an almost Continual town. You hie never out-. side of human habitations,.. work, shopti,foundries ' fainories, villas thriving fields, and a • happy peOple. The architecture has lost the French whiteness, and there are a vigor and Variety in the work alikenfnutn and nature that tell their . own story. This one valley is a vast granary and faCtory Combined, and. you can easily realize,why the i great potters long for the possession of this beautiful coun try, and why, left along in its isola tion, it grows 'So strong and so lOVely. Lying ; right between France and Germany, both preparing for n new conflict, however it may be denied, Belgium may again become the thea 7 tre of a quarrel not of her own mak ing, and to gratify a stranger's ambi tion may be torn into - fragments Sim- ply because of her geographical posi tion. When will the • trade .of the mankiller be ended.? And from Belgium you may pass into drermapy 'with instant notice of the fact. herd is' the black eagle, the military guard, the 'Penton lan guage? the signs of Germany, and all the marks and memorials of authority and vigilance. As we flew along be tween Cologne and Berlin 1 saw much to impress this fact upon my mind. A long, leyel country with- Out tunnels, mid a""Tew hills, yet what a flash of forte in man mid 'fruitful ness in nature! The elements of ag gression lie all around you. The small fields, full-cropped even after the late raiiio, the gardens and or. 1 chards of vegetables and fruit, every field and garden with its men and woinen workers; the lordly stations, the vast iron, coal and granite beds, the red-bricked Arouses, gleaming crimson against the, z green landscape, were not inore,persuasive of German power than the collossal ironworks of Krupp,-,covering four hundred and fifty acres, 'with its eight - thousand employes and one hundred and nine ty-five steam-engines. Along this flat prairie, that nearest Berlin be ing aloire apparently sterile, you read chapters full of warning, and - which may be read with curious and profit able emotion by the great powers. A few days ago I saW new fOrts ris ing rOund Paris, and I did not 'need ask why; and if I had Witited!for the solution, I should have !found it in the no less manifest preparations of the Germans. What adds jto the strength - of this chapter' is the fact that both sides are eager and intent for the crash : Germany in the belief that she cannot be entirely safe until her neighbor meets a third Sedan and Waterloo, and France that her prey-' ligr demands a giant effort for the restoration of -Alsace and Lorraine, and far the vindication or the fame she won under the first and lost under the third Napoleon. However faulty the logic of both, it - becomes the philosopher to. accept the fact that each side', believes its own argument. No third party can arbitrate between such foes. France is spoiling for a fight, and, Germany is quietly putting on her ganntlets. Both profit by the events of ISW and '7l, but it remains to be - seen which has gained the most experience. Nations are like'indi viditalsthey rarely learn thet value of good example until it is tdo late. Franeeipy precipitate a fight with Germany 'a Ocond or third time, and if so she may . be crushed ; .but ' even as a victor will Germany Lclast ing gaincy:! It is a dark outlook, and we may thank our star 4 that the bloody wave of this impending con= filet cannot redden our shores. , . ORE BIGEIIOI I A cynical bachelor is reapensible for the following direetionSi hew to tell the married : •If you see a lady and gentleman disagree upon trifling oecaSiOns, or correcting each other in - coMpany,. you may be assured that they have tied•the matrimonial noose. If •you see a silent pair in a' ar or stage lolling carelessly, one at each window, without seeming ,to !know that they have a companion, the sign ,is infallible. ' • - . If you see a lady drop a glove, and a gentleman by the side of.her kindly telling her to pick it upi, you need not hesitate in '.formingl your . ! . opinion; or— If you meet a couple in the fields, the gentleman twenty yards vance of the laxly, who, .perhaps,! is getting over a -style with difileulty, or picking he way through a, nimbly patch; or— If you see a lady Whose beauty and aecomPlishment,s attract the atten tion of every gentleman in the room but one, you can have no difficulty in determining their •relationship to each other—the one -is her husband. If Ou 'see a gentleman partieular ly conrteons, obliging, and good na tured; relaxing into smiles, saying .sharp things, and toying with every pretty woman in the room excepting one, to whOM he appears particularly cold and formal, and is unreasonably crosa—mho that "one -la:. nobody can be at a loss to disooier. r qrr,r . t vavi BM < 1 4♦ i ' . ' i ~. .~ ~. REGARDLEFR- OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QVARTER. ,If you see, an old couple jarring, checking, and thiMiting each, other, •difreringluVpinfon • belbre the opini ion'is,expressed;:eternally. anticipatJ. ing and breaking . the _thread of .each. other's discourse,. yet-. using, kind words like honey bubbles floating. on vinegar, which are soon Overwhelmed by, a preponderance of the 1101, they are, to all intent , man'and wife; it is imposifble 0 be mistaken.: . The rules 4bove quoted ,are laid down as infallible in just interpreta tiOl=theY may be resorted to with confidence; they are based upon-Int erring principles,- and deduced from everyday experience. MURDER Ot OKEra)BEN INDIA. There is, perhaps, no form of crime more common; in; -India than child murder. The practice prevailed when, first the province of Bengal -passed into the hands of the British, and it flourishes with seare.e abated vigor at the present day. Open at random the "Decisions of-the Nizamut Ad-. awlut"—the Supreme Comiskf-Crim inal Judicature—and at .ef—inter-_ .vats will be found such cases as these: In Cuttack a woman draws a child aside, takes the silver bracelets from, her arms, and flings the little victim into a tank, on' the surihee of . which the body.is found floating a few days afterwards. In ,Behar a man stran gles a boy nine years old, for the. - sake of his silVer bracelets and gold earrings, and throws the corpse into a. sugar plantation. .At., Moosheda bad; Ohameo robs a child aged five, and drops her into a deep and rapid part of the river. -At Benares a fel low entices a boy - twelve years old into his house,- and there cuts his throat in order to get possession of his silver bracelets, while a friend looks on and mildly expoStulates, but 'neither sericrhsty interferes nor gives information to the police. Another takes a neighbor's son into the fields, under pretence of helping him to fly his kite, and there strangles him with his waistcloth, and strips him of the, trashy . trinkets with - which he was adorned. Yet another conducts a boy, aged nine, to Withess a religious procession,Jmt passing near a ditch' suddenly throws him down, partially'' strangles.him, tears - the silver orna- ; milts from his arms and feet, and flings hint - into the diteh, which is fortunately dry, and where he is found before life is quite - extinct; By the promise Of It - melon Leela inveigles Debee Pee,. seven years of age, from his father's house, brains him with a hoe, and buries his turban and trink ets in a field, leaving the body where it had fallen, and where it was found by the anxious father. This murder. er. like' the, others, on being charged with - the crime, at once confessed his guilt, but pleaded as an extenuating circumstance that he was prompted by -an evil spirit. A woman holds a 'little girl under water until she is droWned, the temptation being a ail ver collar of the weight of two rupees. Two women .one evening asked a child eight; years old to come to tnem on the morrow for some fruit, and, when she eagerly arrived, the one holds her while the other passes a rope round her heck" and pulls t till the breath has fled,. The body was speedily found in the midst of some tall graSs near the house, and' the spoils consisted of a silver collar weighing four roupees. 'A woman of Tipperah was engaged' in cooking. her food, when, according to her own account, a child not above six years old came toddling up to -her. Sud denly a ; thick darkness lenveloped . her, and a voice sounded in her ears bidding her strangle her little visitor. Thereupon she seized •the child , by the throat and the: darkness passed away. So she dug a hole in the floor of her house and laid the body there in, after, taking off the' few valueless ornaments. A girl, aged' nine, herself recently betrothed, drowns her play fellow in a shallowwatereouvse, while •a bOy fourteen years old leads in Play a Youthful companion to the edge of a tank,'smashes his skull with a flint, posiksses himself of the'scanty orna ments; and then lays the crime at the door of a . neighbor. ; Similar cases might be quoted to any extent, and they all' aesemble one another in sim plicity. No ; sooner is the child miss ed than it is traced to the company of its murderer ' who straightway re lates the whole transaction and points but where the 'ornaments have be'Cn buried. These usually consist of very thin silver bracelets and anklets, with possibly small gold rings on the fingers and tiny pearls set as ears rings, the value ranging from two to 'ten -rupees.' The trinkets, and some times the body, are buried a few inches beneath the surface, either in the dry soil of a neighboring field, usually the murderer's own- plot - of ground, or in'his hut, where its pres ence must inevitably lle discovered as soon , as decomposition sets .in. Bodies exposed in the open fields or carelessly thrown into . the,-nearest .jungle are quickly rendered unrecog nizable by • beasts and birds of- prey, nor does the scanty clothing affoid trustworthy means of recogni tion.—Pall Hall Gazelle. • One of our church societies has been long wrestling' with the ques tion; "Who is thy neighbor ? " 'Some of the members incline to, the belief that, in ; the scriptural , injunction, "Ltive thy neighbor," ell mankind is .meant others contend that they only are our neighbors who are friendly to us ;.'while. - yet- others, of-illiberal and contracted views, maintain that one is to have no neighbors; outside 'the pale of. one's . own church. • Let - them settle, it as they may, the neighbor will be a neighbor still. We have one of the: right royal sort in our mind's eye.' • .11e' keeps his i chickens up when we make 'garden; lie lends us good books, and borrows outs ; . returns what he borrows—andnever asks for those he loans comes over often and Chats, without telling us his grievan ces and trouble -or seeking to learn ours; gives no' advice,and • asks for none; careac.:;not whether; we have family prayers' of•domestie broils; if. „he thinks our. baby, 'doesn't look like us, he takeia.nO pains to mark the pornii . of; difference; on general matters he expresses his own views OUR HEIGH:BOIL ..~,~...~,..~,~,~:.,.,~~;~.~,:p.t--..: ,w~:~~~.-.,..nom--.4.~~m..~Y W ~.. EMMIMI ~•11 .-.:~ 2: ~V ME 11111 boldly, 'and ; doer not think us a blast ed fool. f we do . not _coincide With them; 'Tani on us we are sick,, and talirlo us ordark, 'dismal holes 'in ' the . ground;• or 4911. us of, a number; Of persons he ,baS known who exhibited the same syrup torus as unrs and finally -died.aftee a' terrible= and protracted • illness.; when we die,:he to the funeral arringeinents, 'see that no sedon47l4andieeffin is palmed'. off on us, and tenderly ,support our aPpar ently grief-stricken widow 'when the falliug clods - send back to her. ears the rattling notes of freedOrai; final ly, that he will assist- her to get an other and a . better husband. • , heaven bles s our neighbor! There , are few like biol.'. 'More's the 'pity.' STRIKING THE BULL'S EYE. The steamship „City of Chester, a. few days' ago, earried_ out a company of AMerican marksnien to eontest,at Creedmore, Ireland; for 'the champi onship of the world. At :this de parture Of what.in sporting parlance is called the "American Team,"much enthusiasm was 'excited. We hope our side.will heat. Would it not be wise for us who stay 'at home, and who have other 'targets to shoot at and other' catridgcs, to load, to be studying ho* to.be skillful' and more in our departments ? We want more spiritual workmen. We have enough ammunition and '.enough rifles, .but we are very apt ;to miss, our aim. The American team just, now depart ed for Ireland, had been practicing long while at a thOuSand yards range. Missing the . target, they felt cha-' grined; but we go on year after year in our • Christian' work, feeling but little disturbance thinigh we make a very poor Score. '• If a man shoot at a flock of ra hundred pigeons and does not bring 'down onhe would , hang up his gun over the antlers in the hall and say nothing for mortifi ' cation. but how many ministers on the Sabbath aim at a flock of five hundred souls, and think it nothing 'mortifying if they& not strike anyt We all need to study skillfulness in taking aim. While the American team arc contending with the rifle men from Belginin, Australia, New Zealand and Great !Britain_ for. the Mastery, let • is be improving our fa cility as spiritual marksmen. "They do itto obtain a eorruptable crown, but we . incorruptable ." •They shoot balls of the right calibre; but some ministers shoot cannon shot weighing nearly half a ton, while others use rifle balls, and some bird shot. But it is.not always the.cali bre that does the work. A spiritual mustard shot that hits a man is bet ter than a theologicaFrifle shell'which goes whizzing away in the air, ex 4 ploding in empty space, and not even frighteniing a chicken.—f hristion ni t 11 - ork. • FUN, FACT, AND FACETIE. A matter of coarse—a river bed. Griatwttorlrims—dancers on the green . T COLOthiE is called the seenthriental city. A atA.t: who is always in a stew gener. ally goes to pot. PERU will pity off her debt with guano, seentlor cent. CAIMICINO up bricks for masons is a hod way of getting a living. lluco was about the only Victor that the American Team met abroad. TUE extra sleep gained by the use of a mosquito canopy is net gain. A. NE* definition of an old maid is— a woman who has becinl made for a long time. • You can't- speak in a balloon without having high ivords bUt it is death to fall out. A Western editor returned a tailors bill endorsed, "Declined; handwriting il legible." • . A Saratoga lx•lle writes home : "It is horrid hem—not a man in town worth over4l:i, 000. " SrE...tkiNti of his late barber, a Mont street man with a tender face said, "He ctit me and I cut him." !YUEI tried to set up the scientific name of f , the potato bug in Delaware the, Other day, and it pied the whole form. toiwist 'was asked' in what parPof BWitzerland he felt the heat most, teplle,d, "When I ,was.going to Berne." A whine frOm the East—the claret is still flowing in the Turkish provinees,but the Porte is very nearly exhausted. TOY-RE are forty-two churches in Troy. N. Y., and yet there are more cock tights there on Sunday than in any other 'city in the State. A Saratoga philosopher says a single woman as a general thing, can be told from a wife, and yet he has known many a girl to be taken for a wife. WitnN freedom froin her mountain height unfurled her standard to the, air, her skirts,. pinned back so very tight, make her appeAr exceeding spare. A Kansas girl says nothing makes her so mad as to have a graSshopper'Oawl up and down her 'back just as her lover has come to the proposing- point. , Mr. Benjamin Ginning sometime since presented the - poor of t,1143 city of Liver pool with .V4O, upon ,which some wag wrote, "A good B. Ginning." " I thought editors were intellectual be ings," remarked a Missouri hotel keeper, but—but"—and he stood back and surveyed the pile of bones *bleb one of the late excursion yirtYr had left behind them. Traces old wonit;upinl a lame man con- stitute a debating society at Dubuqlle. The three old women live together, and their chickens scratched up the lame man's garden.. The debate is held across the line fence. TILE man whose wife gave. away his last bottle of cocktail to a sick beggar has since been heard ttO mildly express eth opinion that chqrity should be gin at home.' Ttu compositor who substituted an "in" • for " w iu speaking of a lady troubled with " swelling of the feet," ac complished the worst typogiaphical feat on record. Tltti Philadelphia man who was. arrest ed in Delaware fur horse Stealing, wrote home to his friends that lie:was tempora rily detained there by a heavy prey ure of stocks. I xtr.vint place much reliance on a man whuis always tolling what he would haie .done' had he been there. have noticed that somehoW this kind. of people never get there. . SrEmatio of crooked whisky, a West ern rural editor significantly remarks,that it "ought to he put down." lie has doubtless been putting it 'down. as often as opportunity offered. : , TuE. Boston editor said he wrote as plain as could be, "The sacred heavens around him, shine," when the blasted printer went and made it, " The scared twee= round him shine ' • Tim way to right yourself is to be care ful-. Dot AO wrong" others... With what mason V you meet, it sh".ll_ be. lansured at • . .. . . .. . . , 5 . \ A ) ,:: . ~..:• 6: ! . ..' ''' ''' 1 ~., , . - • A *ERA' MOM, RECOVERY. • i- - A ytoung lady of Harrisburg, Miss - 31innil IL Walters, spoke' in one of the pryer meetings of the Oakville (Cumberland. county) M. E. camp ineetirt . which ended Friday ; relat ing to remarkable cure, which, she. attributes directly to the interposition of Christ.. „.The occurrence, related. by the 'lady in detail. in a private conversation, is to the effect that over tiro years ago she vasafflicted with a spinal disease so- serious that she could s areely move a finger, and she .was co fined to a couch purposely suited or the disease. ', Nearly two year ago slie became cOnvinced.that she - needed - closer - consecration to Christ in other words, she desired the . bi ssings ' of. 'sanetifica' tion, so prominent in the Method* belief.— She 0140' earnestly Without avail. SOmetlyng seenied to tell_ her that r ii consee tion of body - rni Well as soul was re( liked; and it was revealed - to her tha she Would be 'healed. - _Thir teen . in'Unths passedand no . result-, On the 26th of January . she once more resolved to pray more earnestly e l: for the nifillment of the revelation.-- , While j raying the promise came to her, wh tSoeyer thou Wilt, ask and it shall .b given. She,prayed first for heart purity, and next for ;bodily health. 1 The`words came, '""Rise up and iralc," and to - hir .great' relief she foupd herself in ; apparent health. The doctor next morning fourid • her . restored without need of medical at tendance. Her statement *a:4 Corrob orated I,y font : other persons acquain ted with _the ciriumstarrees,',llio re joice withher over her restoration to, health, which she unwaveringly :be lieves to haVe resulted from - the stretchitg forth of Christ's hand - in reward for her great faith.—Altoona .Mirror.l . EFFFAT OF LIGHT. . bore,. the metaphysician4inui f the effect of light on body Dr. - 31'; :Teaks - ii: and min ." A to Ipole confined in'_ darkness would nc ver . beemne frog; and an lacing deprived 'of' Heaven's free light will only grow into a shape s idiot, instead of a beautiful .and reasonable being., Hence,in the deep Clark gorges and ravines of the SlilfiS Vglosia where the (Urea sunshine 7 • never reaches, the hideouS prevalence of idiocy! startles the traveler. It is a strange a melancholy idiocy. Many . citizens :ire incapable of ,any•articu late spee4h ; some.are deaf, - some are blind, smite labor under, all the Pri vations, And 'all are misshapen in al- Most eveiy part of the body.' I lie- lieVe therb is in all places a marked ditlereneci,in the healthiness of hous es accordl4 to their aspect in re gard to ate sun and those deci dedly healthiest, other things be ing equali in which all the roome are during some park of the day, are, ful ly exposed to the direct light.: - 'EPi demics aitack inhabitants on the shady sidp of the street, and totally exempt those on the other side; and even in epidemics, snch as agne,,the morbid billuence is often thus partial in its labdrs." A STORY ABOUT KING DAVID. , • The following extract. is froM an an interesting article on the Talmud in the ConnhillMagazine • ' _ • " There . 1 is a touching passage in . the book . f Psalms—all the more af fecting ifo4 its mysterious wording-: a passage which few sincere Chris- . tians can read without tears, in *eh - DaNid, irh):• has evidently been lately suffering from serious 'distress, prays to he sayo from the lion's mouth, 'for,' say he, Thou luasrheard me from the Warns of the unicorns.' No* here the difficulty, of course, flen in the unexi*eteit introduction of the unicorn. Adam Clarke satisfies him self with Baying that he alludes to the Gentiles. Not so Rab Hanish in the Miami' Tehillim, who thus explaihs tlie passage literally without recourse o allegorical exegesis. When Payid was feeding sheep .he found . onel day a - unicorn sleeping in the desert. ' ' lie took him for a high hill, and ascending paStured his flock. The bcast,iafter • awhile, awoke,rrOse; and Davidl l rising with him, touched the heavens with his hand. Then Said the son of iJessie ! in this unexpected emergencyl, •• If the Lord will heliime down from! this unicorn, I will build him a houle of a hrindred cubits, !the size of thil animal's horn' ,Some-S , he measured its .width, others its length.. Plenary agreement on any subject inithis' world seems impcissi ble, What occurred ? a' lion came. The unicoFn crouched in fear, and David desdended, Then he 'became anxious abbnt he lion, andjt wash on this occasion or soon after it that the affecting Hues above alluded to were composed. 1 . composedl • • - • 1 1 , I ' •., [For the P.OonTr.lo. AV JAN DOWN SAM i: I. 1 In a former fetter we underteck toile= scribe the (linage City of •AMerica, the sea-side watring pkve on Martha's Vine yard, but - th 9 half was not told. .Sinde my last written the great Methodist catap r meeting has 'been . in session., , There are propably nor on the ground thirty thous and persons.! The first . was held on thiS ground in Itill:i. They arc mill-• holding their fortieth annual meeting. Several grand Iltrat4 palaces arrive and depart' eery day, loilded with thousands of ,tfaii sengers frond New York, Newport, PrOvii Renee, floston, New. ,Ileilford and other cities. ' The l se mammoth steamers are elegant and lifted up With splendor be , 1 yond my win-to describe. The Bristol, the Providen!e; atet the Plymouth R'ck arc the 11144 beautiful. Their saletins and .state minis are. rich enough fcir a monarch: t., •,,' .. .. ' 1 . The Island of Muriba's Vineyard . n.; stitutes the county of " Dukes," . .. iii : lie State of Mataehusetts, Its n e9tuity , r. at. is Edgartow, situated on. the north-4st end of the Island. It is an old town, :Ind one of the tiritto tit out ship' for. iVli,* ing. • The Inifildings look old, but somifoQ the inhabitants ire wealthy. AbOut t . i-o miles from Oak Bluffs iii• a beautiful har- 1 bar, where the water sets back into they land,- and anarly surround& • by higk Pills, forming a safe place for ; vesseli of all sixes to anchor in a storm.. ThetOl . vn; his for two hundred years hid thaeupita:, Woes name of Holmes' Me. .1t - is . ow, !;'4l-1- '41,.... "r. , ~i-flo!-.',-,,,),!;-:..,:,,,. i ; 'v. , -1 - ' 1 * I= =::: " • I '• I . • • 'Vineyard Haven. counted over fifty sail in tbislia door. . I • . : Weed's Hotels another harbor, on the side of the malt( land, Where pasSengeris by the Old.COlony p ailroad take boats for this Islarldand !Nantucket... Among. the many beaatiful! gems of Islands in the waters! are:the F attytuuk, Penikese, NeshaWana,!,Peskanese' and Naushon. The latter is'!-oWned !,by, Capt. Forbes, Of BoSten. It ls several miles ! long , and a mile wide. Captain has arine resi deneezhere; with plenty of :deer and other game, and llvefi 'hero manarch - of , all.ho surveys. Ile cannot leae his farm with 1 . 1r • out sailing across the water. These Is lands abound objects of interest and beauty' evea3)wbere.. The water, are fill ed with' thelinest 'fish which .supply New York and otberl Markets: hile the Is land of 31artba7S ! Vineyard has such cities as Vineyard Hagen, ):11; Bluffs and Ed gartolin, the 'ectretne point of - the Island, Gay Head, is: rough and ! rocky, inhabited by scattering: native llndians—degenerate sons of noblesir i es. They are lazy, thrift less, 'wortlilet;rd man ant his family gay Head/ h,c',..-11-hou l on a high poiiit of tar the otliersof its lkind of•the Vnited : States. • - There is bete ttulithited amount of fine clay, whieh looks like Castile It is used as ainitnerq paint and for many other purpose's. steaTers take excursion-' fists to this pOintl where they can see this part of the world as the Creator Wit it. The land is brio6n atUl rocky.- and : rises • • high above the sea. flie Water is Oiler; • ally routill, and: as Promontory and look ocean, {Se inviluntari "Lo on a iiairirm no,ek or Will • • tvi - ohnhothololl m.as I stand. - • We look in vai i nueross this vast : expanse' of water to cOch. glimpse Queen,Vie 7 , 1 toria's possessi,ons. or even old Ireland. We can do abf!mt as as the Scotch highlander, wlio when he. was asked - if he could see America, said : " Oh, farther than that : I, can see the mune.•',.. This is a- good place tO build a light-house. but what else could be successfully l done here • I fail to discover--unlcss it is to Write 1,0 7 • - Nearly at thci opposite end of the island a new town had been laid out—on Paper, and, the stake have . been set on the ground—and one hotelerected r -which cost one hundred thousand rlollars—Mattakes ett Lodge. The new town is called Kata nut, aftor the fair daughter of Kitig Nat takesett. probiddy very soon: be a large city.' 4 itt.-4 1 -t two hundred and fifty years to bttild one house,' how long will it take to- build a Icily Katama is about three • miles from Edgartown, the countyj-seat,and isa level plain. The wind. blOwiso hard here that a person should carry an 'anchor with him. A rail roadlias bleu built, and cars arc-running regular trips - witti crowds of passengers between Oak lilnits and Katama. Think of a train .of loaded ears stopping in a city where thereiWas only one house. The terminus of the. road.--t to wide ocean be yond. • What do passengers ( l onia here for? • A clam bake. Shall I describe a clambake The place nntst bel l by the sea _shore. A kind of pavethent, , of large cobble stone, several square yards in xtient, is prepar ed in the open air. A wood fire is made ou this pavement till the stones are very hot. And while :the fire is heating the stones, men are, filling baskets with clams fresh from the .ittid. The fire is removed —some sea-weed is c overed over the atones; on this , ; mayl be' placed thirty bushels or more' oflelatna, which are eery-- ere& with sail-ebith and more wet sea weed. It is left. iiVenty Iminutes, when it is ready for the table. n the same bake they_ frequently bake . sweet potatoes, green corf4 etc,. The anus are brought on. the table in the sltel in large dishes. Every one helps himselfi l by putting his hand in the dish land opening the shell with his fingers, and Often eating the cla i m in the sante is an institu tion of this country, and patronized by. everybody. I attended a bake yesterday, where about a thonsand'nersons were fed. It is a suinptuous!, repast. I must leave• the remairider of the d(4n East"i story for my nest letter, I, • A, C. El OAK Bl.tfFS, .Atlg. 30, 181'5. • • • (For.tbe TEIPERAI!OE. , ..- , • Much has been Lid and written to ad vance the cause of Temperance; much of the time of mir Legislatwe is taken up in the making of lawa.which so exrected to help this matter; aH do in a measure; i but through negligence inenforcin — thetn they do not answe the pWrpose fo' which they were made, :end w find . Int f riper alien instead of I Tempe nee on Ale in crease. '" • 1 .. . , :, i ; ' Much of the Wm . I t 3 .11a. been laid at the door - of the rum=. We cannPt see how any person Shonld willing to sell the vile stuff wheal lie -e:iinot help seeing the consequenceS; and it is strange that persons should -entisent Ito gii-e him an "elegant- living,7 Vilett big him make '3 ..profft of two to" three hundred per cent. in the deal, when at the same time they will banter With tbe grocer for one-fourth per cent. oft' on sugar, or the , same on any of the neeeSsaries of. life Then perhaps before going to the placel that . should be home, they stop ,1t; the hotel and pay out to treat the crewfl. eneugh to provide bread Stir their fawillY- foti a week. •- , I Why is this? Is .00 the blame with the rtim-seller? - has he Imanaged to persuade them that ho is giving them the worth of their‘money 2 . Not by any means. How then? Wo anSwer,lfirst, by parents keep ing liquor in the IhouSel and using the same in the familytko +Rd thereby ac quiring the taste - ot ,it which proves its ,ruin, and in manyi ,• - ises the child, 'node grown to mannook ••liarges it back to the Parents, ilovr will lit; be in the day :of judgment? ..Secondj by I the making of Wines for _family fainily Miel I whio is as tlano '''' vi, - " 1--!' • ' ' qus'as in the first ease. Setter never. see a'grape, currant 'o'r f deity, than to put tfiem to such a b 4.4 useJ, Eternity will only reveal the anichint"oft misery, wretch edness' ' I and: crime which are chargablndi, redly to this - s'ollree'. Third, do pill do all you can to. mid 9 home pleasant and agreeable? Do' y ou thr iz tugh love and kindness, gaud the :iffeeti ns of your chil dren ? or do you excuse 3rourself by say- Ing,- have so many business cares, and society, has so much claim upon me, that I haw very little tinie to spend with my Would-1t not better to spend something for extraa to make home more attractive, and give . more time to ibly • I .. ~~., ' ~1~ ~,; =ME EDE ME M!EM N (MEER 14. rnorant. One white pare • charge . nf the l e. 'This TOC:ated wed kept ep like by the govenimck ' - e :Amid um* this upon the 'old : blue iy-repeat—. - yOnrself, even though nen suffers somewhat. Know where your children spend 'their evenings' and the compan they keep. , . We say the lack ,of th se and othe things of eqdal importance, I which all ;pal rents can supply, drives thelphild into the street for company and edneation—whick company leads to the dra,m-shOPI th doors of i 'which are the very , gates of per 4ltion, and tlie edwition of the m'es loathsome, wicked and filthy characti that can , be imagined. Ifere the dram . seller comes in for a share of the blame b • keeping a place for the congregating o' bad company, and helping- en the gist which has once been.formed, and:formini„ a taste in those who Veere free from it 9)e fore.' .May we_ pot conclude that when all kinds of liquors and ' wines' are . Ivanished from our, households, and hoin9';nadc su pleasant that will love to. stay there in; preference 'to going into the street and dvam-shop ; that nine-tenths Of title salooin; and dramiShopS will go out of 1 • • ,or starve onO - , 1 GEoitn F. D.i 134)t: x _ • [ Burlington, Pa NOTES Old THEINTEHNiiTIONAL LESSONS. ' i . sf:Prg - fiiiis:H2. mit . I • - ; .---..: • 1 ST. 4011 V i: j-11-760LDP..% TEXT: IMAIAII. Y.l: 11 I - _ i'lllpD 41.7A11.7411. NO. V/1 = .3 • . i The first section of ;this tenth chapter 1 .. treats of, false shepherds. and the true I Shepherd, The first were represented in 1 . tluit.day by thelliarisees. They.fulfilled '1 the prophetic declarations of the' Old; Tcs- I i tament. I (Compare Jer, xxiii.-.; 1-2; 'Eijk.,' xxxiv: I-10! 'Lech. xi: 4, - 4). The preceti- ' I ing ehaptei shows bowthorotag„hly, they played their roleJlx: `.3,i). • This gave Je sus the oceaSion'to present hiniself as the . 1 ., i trice, r e, the ' , eod Shepherd. Strctly speak- ing., this passage is not - a .parable. • ~ The 1 word tianshited " para ble " - in the 6th i • 1 , VIFIC (paraMi(l) is ill the word used by i si the,Synoptists' (paraboe), which Dwain! a I 1. i • parable. iSt. John limier uses this latter I wen), but, instead employs piri6iniirt fottr, , times. This- difference in phraseology .- 1. i --, has a meaning. I 1 And accordingly Nve find - 1 1 • 1- , that St. .Telni never follows thee: l / 4 „act ty pc 1 Of the Parable, though:, preseriing. its es-' sena in the relation !of add'resses and 1 acts (x: 1-4-1:1;-xvi 1-6; xii:24-; xvi:2l;xiii: ' I • 4-12). The word he uses - in t h is chapter 1 1 . means literally a by-word, an out of the 1 way discourse, an extended simile.- Per: .1 haps the nearest equivalent iM English is 1 an i allegory: • It denotes a flowing para- 1 belie discourse.. With ithis explanation. 1 1' • 1 we will use for convenience the word- Of i 1 Ti , • r our.translation and calliit a pa.rable. - l t This _discourse (1-11 vs.) consists of 1 two parts :1 (1). The Parable of the Door - 1 (1-10); and (2) The Paijable. 'of the-Good-',; Shepherd i'll-18)- -; - I I The Parable of th Door." Verily,l , Il''' ' -- • verily, - . etc. (v. 1). ihis repetition 01'1 the partiel for the sake .• of emphasis k` pecidiar to'St. John. Iris a solemn fin•m- ' ' ula, drawing particular" attention- to *ha t • .follows. Th ' e sheepfipltlS in- the- East-are usually' 1 • • " Iluv, flat build,inr , s f erected on 1 i• ~ t he 1 slielterrd side of tare valleys, and, :when the nights are cold, the flocks are !shut up iii them, but inF'Ordinaryweather they are nferely kept "Within -.the yard. - They arc -tic t Icifended by a' hle stone wall : crowned byi sharp thormi, which the wolf will, rarely at ienipt to.se4le. The ieePard and paiither,however, irlien'press u ll with hunger, Will overleap dui thorny hedge. - i i Thieves also soMetimes sealethe wall and . i . carry off a Dart of the lock; , Along the rear s of the iimclosure waS'a covered space • 1 . (or shed) to, protect the flocks from - Storm, .- _ and the only e n trance wa s san arched door • . 1 1 in the front t wat]. This door was guarded, • i i at night by a porter, vvho was alway-s armed, and, Who was sometimes the shep herd himself, or, in the case of the larger - muttial -folds, one of the shepherds by turns, and sometimes a Servant specially set apart fo• thiS duty. 'lThe. porter ad,- . mitted no one tothe sheepfold except the shepherd, who•came in the early morning to lead ont his; flock. • If any one else . gained entrance,: it was by climbing up ' the wall, and proclaimed him tobela thief"' and ,robber:! The door, I Therefore, was the right and appointed mode of entrance to the fold. 'The shepherd, when'. lie-en- I tered the fold in .the morning, called out' .. his flock, and then, placing himself before ' theta, led- the way to the pastille. lie , always went before; never behind the flock. All lEneir his 'Voice :it was the source of his power over them and the means of control. No other voice would ',the flock heed'alid obey than the voice of ' , its o w n shepherd. 'llut!while all knew his voice, only the , favorite. sheep were l .: Called by mine. They Were-emphatically I 4`hiS,Own slieep.” ''', • ~1. A 'part of this allegory' must have-been Clealle the Pharisees; ;The fold'evident ly represented the church of God—the sheep, - his faithful people"; the children of , believing Abraham—the;shopherds, • the appointed ministry 'of the :church.-- But further thanthis they'couldnotgii. • Their' Moral blindness prevented- thenifrom 'un-! lerstanding the chief point •of the dis- - , course. Who Was .meant by .the doorl) They suppoSed it :was Moses (ix : -29). Hence when the-nets-,visiOned maittleclar 'ed that lie luitLfound another door,. they cast him oat, of the church. It was impi ety, treason to God. But, into this "spirit ual blindnesS Christ sends a ray of light. "I am the door !" 1 1 All' (sheep and shop- ' herds). must -enter- the church through . him. lie is ithe Only pOSsible :entrance 4 421.11", that ever ;came before me are thiei'es and robberS." Ile was the door from the first. Abel entered -the kiiigdon , Of Heaven througli him, as shown by his - sacriflecof alamb 4 ,..se 'did Abraham, for . he Efa iy, his day and was glad. "Before . me'.'' must therefore mean "instead of nio'-i-i, e., all wht came Claiming author ity ever the Conscience as ! SPiritualiLords: But the true sheep ? the genuine spiritual ' people 'of God, did not heaior o , them. In every age Ifromj Abel d .. own p. there -were some' to recognize and, enter the door. At the floci the sheep were reduc ed to eight, and' at; the tithe of •Christ's coming there and' nottuany mord:', Still, as represented 1* S. inicon' and Anna, they : all waited for the , consolation of Israel. And there were always some few. faithful , teachers or Shepherds left -among the faithless. All priests and scribes were: not tlrves and rehbers.. if`.By me, if any . than, nter in Jhe shall be saved." ',To be lieve on him is to''enter ins through hini.-.. All who thus enter are - 'saved—at once and friver;-saved; the moment they be lieve. "And shall go in'. and out and ':find'pasture.7: - They shall . , go into the 'Old and find:rest 'and safety; they. shall go out and,flad the pasturage of knowl edge, I holineSs, peace and joy: , "The thief cometh not, but for to : steal,'. and: to kill, and to destroy," ,Thi',4 describes al-. legorieally the design of all false teachers. It ought to have reve s aleritthe Pharisees unto thernselifes. Pver;against these self righteous destroyers of the tlock, Christ places', himself : !'I am come that: they May have life, and, that they may have abundance." Here is a change of figure— introduced asa trnesition to the next par, able. ; Christ rsAlie doer 4hrough which God's people enter the kingdom of 'Way:. en. ,But'theri they - are, spiritually dead, arid cannot enter the door 'until thcy'are quickened. Ilenee he says : " I„ . ani, come that they may have life." Mere is'a fore sliadoWing of verses 1:5-18: By -Ilaying clOwn ,his life,- ented, life -for his sheep.; But beyond sc this 7 l he- provids them nmple nourishment or this newly bestowed spiritual life. 'tie came that they might have; abundance of feodt green lastitrer, living watirs. Compare i:l6. . , e. IL- he Parable.of the Gpod SlMPherd: v. : 11,. The good 'Shephend is: the ideal, perfect Shepherd,' predicted by Isaiah xl: it, and Ezekiel xxxiv : 11-Ifli Ho stands-op- • P4Sed tp the hireling onhe • one hand, and to , the well on the .ot er. He' does not forake, (the Pharisees , nor destroy (the Devil). He' dies to 'Ye the flock ~ from destruction (Matt. x : 28). - IS hi our Shepherd 4 If not, we, shall . be, tles , troYed, If het r is, reuil and 'rejoice u, 234iPialm I i . i . El 11