TEMIS orztriuCkTlON. G4-Advertising In all cases exclusive of subsciip= to the paper. „ , VECIAL NOTICES lusertedatrirrEEN CENTS .r.nac, for the first insertion, end riV.E. CE.I4TS r for subsequent insertions. I. , lc F k T. NOTICES, s:unti Ellyie T. 4 reading mat . r TNKI.NTY . CENTS A LIN% wil/ be Inserted act..upllug t.• itie following table of rates 1 I 4w 1 2m . 1 ant 1 6tu I Iyr. 1 11.50L3.00 1 5,00 1 6.001 10.00 1 15.0 i) . 1 2.001 . 5:001 iIOOSIO.OO i 15.00 1 r. 0.60 10.00 1 13.00 1 20.00 1 30.00 hes.... 1 3.0 1 8.50 114.00 1.13.25 125.00 1 35.00 I 5.60 1 12.00 /8;001 22.00 1 30:00 45.00 r"lumn.. 10.00 1 20,00 j 30.00 1 40.00 1 55.00 1 : . 5.00 1 20.00 j 50.00 I 00.00 tom 100: : /30. 03ItNISTRATOP.'S and Esecntor's Notices, ; tlinlitors notices. 12„:".0 ; Easiness Cards, five (per year) 13.00, addiiioual lines, 81,00 each. YE:LIMY AdeCrtisetnents ar.. entitled to guar -1 v changes. TRANSIENT adrerifsettients must be paid for IN V AN CE. ..1 r.t 1:t ~~'~es ...~~ lA, Resolutions of Associations, Communiea m, of limited or indiv Metal interest, and notices • Marriages and Deaths, exceeding five lines, are -,ized TEN CENTS LINE, .101 i PIIINTING, of • every land, In plain and :If y cohr., done with ,neritness and dispatch. Card , , Pamphlets, Ilinheads, ,tements, &c., of every variety and style, printed thr shortest notice. Tue. REroutrm.offtee is • 1; supplied With power preFse.a a good assort . m of new type: and .everythir,g In the Printing .•• can lot executed lu the most artistic manner •,1 at the lowest rates. --: • TERMS iIS"VA Alt LY CASH. • Profezzional t.lla. Buz!no= Ca.riz TT STREETER LAW 01,11 Cf IAVIERTON & y ATTOWS LYS AT LAN% • . TOWANDA DA. 411 Ce Oyer Mout any , s Store: . ,(maya7s. r A. OVERTON. RODNEY A. NEI:CM . MONTANYE, ATTOR- I' . I KEYS LAW;:.--Offlei., era - ru , r of Main and •St.. oppestte lir. Porters Drug store, \AT 11. CAIINOCILAN, TTOR- N 11Y, AT AW Colleet lons ond , - I - I'ATIIICK. ATTORNEY AT Mock. I.,•xt 11 ,, r • 1 •‘P , ' , ••••• To•A'AntIA, ra. Flll. .s'. M. AVOOPB,L7I:N. ela:1 and ()Me.. Bia,k's .• 'Ty .z.i;,t-v. . 1: 1-721:,•. ; ; • . TOOD SASPE:H.:SON, 7:) - s ATI.AAN T.,WAND.A. PA. A—. V. TN , ) F. *- 4 1NDLIISON .101INSON 4: NEWTON i.- ..;d o)',. j - ...1011:s;:--ON. M. IP. I oN. M. 1) ./.; 1 i 1701: 'AT E. kW. I. 1,73. • - TuW • I' . 1' F BOYNK Tirtive Uf E'4lllve:.V.lleer. • • . . -4 •; , ` I). L. T)()DS(YIN. DENTIST. , i 0 1:1.-In;1:*1•E•Ili :•.; • (It 1 kr. Prall'• 1 ,. ‘1" , • 1. • I)ENTisT.-011ice • I:. ra;• • 0•1 . M.O - 0 • ya!l,. Ill.:I' ~'; 1)_1-111;:: A TT. 'l' 7 , L. •ily. 1 II ;:*; BLOCF T. w Nrs. rA. L ,! - 1 ) ; M. Lk XIV E y y 1:)"‘$ L cOUNSI,l11:•;-AT-1..6V. ME • 1):1,14.1C,! 4 tq,: - .% T“ I':t. 1)1:EF" AVILT, ; W3l. 7.I._VNIV 1.1.1 tos ,curl I: (.;,11:,:1,1.) - MI:PIV:II.SON.' : ATTORNEY - ',Av.. To a aZ..). a Pa. MEM ST_kNI.Y. DENTIST. 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THE OLI I- 4.Nli POPULAR if A It DIV A It E STOR CODDINC & RUSSELL, Invite the attentlup of the public to their stork EMI 11A Ruw.xg E (-,1001);i. 0.11 . 4,5t1ug pr COOK STOVES or the iult;t alpro%e4l p:ttterl RA:COE:74. of all Lind!, PARLOR & IFEATINU STOVES. vari.ty 1;1 7 1:1,1)I MI; MATERIALS ` k.::rni.,lird at IHY1"1 7 911 PRICF:S. ICE Cuan FREEZERS, I= SllliAlV , . SCISSORS, RAZORS, POCKET CUTLERY. II: t h :• t?e,t inanutarture. ts at ranted CA PEN TEE s''POOLS, I }r GAS;FINTURES. CIIA N I►ELI 1.:,,R5, BRACKETS,. ESI ranety. •fiCIL• ;.trge-t 'and beNt KEROSENE LAMPS 1. , Ip•-: LAMP eiIbtNEYS . & GLOBES. A t.;;n•aily I'l\ W.A":“E, . . In emilc, , N.triety., 6f our own manufacture. NNar- 1-mited flrst-ch, all kiwis in our Itne promptly att.'n• (ie.', to. Tin r...lfi. and care.: tr, , ugins put up in the nn,t ,atiNta,tury 11131111 yr. at ~1,11. to tice. GAS r I- - 11"11N1.1 A-Nl> PLUMBING A :I“,lalty. WE tr. vE THE( Ll' I'ItACTI tl.rmi;l:n IS "r(WANI).\. . our 44.1 irlotlis and tilt- p;rbti{• ILA', we 4 (.11 67n011 , 4.1ti!y (pc E A P A Y! th.• I.y h!, ca:l ii.• /01y.'r (ilaterut Ilbet al paireuage, ate nor Hilt a contilluapee of ta•ur witri the a„, t _ ranw the m'e Wier you gr...ater inthweinctit3 that? any other estaliarli•lleut hi the ca:utitry. carve a hirg-r peculiar facilltie; rueclia•:ag. CODI , ING k-1117:4:•;ELL • 13 A GA I s I X STOVES ! ' L :11 A ft 1) W A it E. I : /N Ni) - p :%; (' A E N 11' (1 ► L 01..\ & & ( 47;Vi:\ I'l 11. , II It D \V;% It E Si' 011 L, I'OWANDA, PA decl7-73 k. =EEO CROCKERY OF I .IRIOUI I'_ITTE h N. =I GLASSWA ll} T A 11.1-.1 V. siLvEn WARE. WOOD WIA HE. ;STONEWAIIE4 MID CAGES. (i LA , :•4 :.11:11)ES. I would say to the pubilc that on any gOods kept In stock I will not .he tudorsld. F. 1.1 "I T ,ONVELL & CO large Stock or Fall and Winter goods, and art I)r )Dared to- FSllibl t Greater variett• of Goods, and at ..liore attractive prices than over be- foie. Please call anti see their New A T E 1% 4 14 1- (NE. CASE RI iSTON PL.% II) 1/1;Es:- GoODS, Ilil COME ONE, COME ALL 1 . - Now is the time to buy everything in Pry Goods and Notions cheap, at 0.-A. BLACK. ',Powell Co. Are now •receiving their Second 1 ~ Goods J'OWELL & co. Towand:4.. 'Out: 13. 1x75 OCT. 14 KENT I BLISS, iiil OFTEItTHIS I)AY. 1 t package prices. C=Mil KENT & BLISS, - OFFER 'EMS DAY, i)NE CASE OF SHIRTING PLAIDS At wholesale price. - LSO, iNE. CASE DV TWILLED CRASH. . to lie sold at JUItISI\U Pl I€E . C►i"!t STOCK Will fozval mono complete than ever. ( KENT & BLISS', No. 3, ,TRAt & MOORES 13LoCH Tvtvrinl:". OPt•l4, 157". ...*•••',".....•••• , ..ti. , ....... , ...1.01.".r."..n.e........... BONG OF TIEBT.Ont IW - intl. I - Mournfully : MOurnfu ly : Mournfully !! :sing .ti the Autumn wlml to.day; I Whlrling the leaves (rpm bush and Irrti sObbing :uul roaning, ,' fikhlng and roning. Whltt'llng.at tlmealltte a child at play: Wl:lspering anon, as' passes by. Tale forgotten among years; ' Ending Its tale with 'a sigh; Sinking Rivelee till tt'sortuds. at iitnem, Like yipplintwaves oeumstent Chimes. Chadgefnlly I Fil fully t 4 colemuly Sings the AUtu'rrt AV ad tO-dayt We - tiding the boughs m the shirring trees ',ts'ettering the leave. like ocean's spray: Lisping and ooing, As if It were wooing. Summer back froni th farnway: Then changes Its song f peaCe, With angry blast complains again, And whirl's its dead lelve:i o'er the Vain: Bending the bushes, red :With the berries, whir tell ny so plain, Of the Autumn. and owers now dead. 1 Mockingly Mocklugl.; I Mockingly : Shfri th 6 Autumn w1:41 to-clay: Laughing derisively Mt, We Sigh, ‘, • 'While the sheet floNVerb,, We onee call 41 ours Withered and dead aviund us lie ?locking tiS still. as tearfureye We thank the Father; That.lky•antl-lty A suininerrimies. NV lqh will last. for aye. no dead leaves fal the pilgritti:s way Milli 4 Story Succossfiilly Told. t Pre tt3-,pl ti mii Mr. Arch i bald Steele ote the following paragraph in one her letters to her husband the oth day John must con e down here at alive, whether you c'an spare him' or not. Oor dear little Laura is greatly tafthu with a tall, lthin young man, with a hooked no' e and thin lips, called Stuyvesant. It is whispered abront the hotel that he is a very good match, and las the veritable bide blood of the old Dutch governor in his veins. I in st say it has a queer way of showing itself, for the yoking man is as pale as a spectre ; anl dressed in that white duck ) with hi sunken eyes an bilious skin, is en ugh to frighten o e. I ha'e grown tohate him, while aurals growing to do quite the contrary, I'm afraid: Al the ett , hing• 4i lolls up agalbst thl wall, neVer dancing, or opening hi. mouth save to give vent to some ha eful sarcastic criticism upon the se ne around:him, 4nd yet dear little oth erL pretty eyes about—are perpetually be eeching him for lttention. In the da.-time he is always with a long 3 1 bl goingek horse, that coivers more ground will its legs when it is than ttan• Mina I ever saW: Wheritattra I go t ‘s alit to drive behind it, and Tan isl es out of sight with the bony cr ature, I tremb e to think how dr adfol it would if our dear little girl4voulil ever bee me part and par ce of this wretch 'd man and his wi ked beast. So think John had I be ter come, dnvh at once. I just long to see hrn is hlindsoe face and her his honest voice, and I think it is iabout time John should tell his little story to Laura, and have things settledcomfortably,'" t Mr. Archibald Steele smiled when beiput the letter oe his wife in his w istcoat pocket, ail(' piCking up the in ruing paper, scai ned through his go d-rimmed spectiteles the news of th day. Finding nothing therein to rule the exceediUgly satisfactory I I condition of his affairs, he put it down, and smiled again as only a pkisperous, ebnteuted, down-town merchant can smile. lle was one of thOSe happy exceptions to the ordi nary rifle of mortal, with whom ev erything went well. His whole ap pe trance was anexclamation point tol that effect. If li ventured 'a little hazardotisly in ti-ad ,fortune trimmed her sails to favor hi . If he set his heart upon anytiiire* relating' to dt>- '; pestle felicity,all the elements of art !Ind nature conspired to bring it about. So when lie stepped to the door of the office and beckoned to a young man with a strip of commer ciiil paper in his hand and a pencil be mind his ear, with that general air of briskness and shrewdness about him that betokenedi& successful mer chant. in embryo, r. Steele smiled the third time, with the air of one wlio was not at all afraid of any bilious, blue-blooded obstacle that might be 'thrown in the path of a domestic happiness lwhich he firmly believed had been arranged by an omnipotent hand. r ' ' John," said M. Steele, closing t 4 door of . his Ovate office, and looking upon his piano - clerk benev -Antly, "I've got ali order here from 1 It s. :Steele, which I r l wish you would t eIo- I,aid John. "Shall o o i u 'articles myself?" i t ' , c i elrta and di 3 . ~, seitrtclii `Why, the fact iii, John," said the rchant, enjoying his joke mote id more, " its'oLly one article7la ,her bulky one. 'lt was bargained long ago. I think you will have go with it, John 1" ' Down to the seashore!" said ilin, getting a litt e hot and flushed. is it a very valut ble parcel, sir . ?" - Well, perhaps -our natural mod y may depreciate its worth, John. -s. Steele and I (think a good deal ' it, and Laura, t o—l'm sure she Rs. The comm dity is yourself, it'll. Mrs. Steele wants you to' go wn and take a lit le, holiday there." hen the name f Laura was run ned. the young man's face grew re 'flustered an 4 hot than before. "You are very kind, i sir," he said, . iv end Mrs. Steele is always more like angel than a woinan." " Rather solid a4l plump for that," erposed Mr. Steele, but liking the tram nevertheless i ,. " But it is simp madness," pur led John ; "to dream of further hap . aess than I enjoynow—your affec ?n and that of your wife; trey posi [ion here. I don't l'care, I can't hope anything more. Oh, Mr. Steele, can't .tell her ni•• story, sir. She old`shrink fro me with hoer frog d aversion, She is so young, so autiful. Let meat least enjoy the esent." " And in the Meantime some ca verous, bilious,que-blooded'seoun el will carry herb off from us all !" Then John's fade grew pale and 'rn. "If there iS th slightest feel- 1 Cioolfs es , 131 1 of ItiGAnDLEM OF instsclATloli Pita An orAtt I= A, BRADFORD COtilitir, PA., TRUIOAY lifOßN*G f OGIVBER„ . 2I.„- 1875. TOWAN e"bi t e•• gfltr4d tug upon ! hey .part for-40, Any else, then indeed, Mr. Steele', my cue is hopelesa." , : . , The commercial ' paper: Ifiutteret from his hand, the , pencil fell his ear; leaned his head , agailui': the desk and trembled. " Why, who would sUpti 3 Ose could be such a eoward ? ' said - Mit Steele, iinf)etuously. " YOnlshall46 down with ine this very day,".` All the way to the teashore.Jolo face wore the look of one *. resolved to - Storma deadlybreh - , r , but who did hot WO to et~cbive Elie' attempt. -- tven - *the !oceah,lwheit confronted them, wore a tlirpateigng look.. I.lpOn - the horizon n pilo r of clouds formed a backgipapd, : wan and gloomy, a great blear' mbiti;lay in the zenith, a dense red vapor almost touched the water, "A verylnasty sea;". said Ms Steele. John snuffed it in, his eye ililatiug, his broad shoulders expandingi his head high iu the sea-scented air. - A tramp on the hard, wet sand, and like a Meteor a long,llael horse shot - by, disappearing in the Est, leaving for John the memOry Of charming dead crowned with Weide,' curling hair, two kind eyes bent neon his own, 'a white, waving hatri , ex tend salutation: • . , i '..!'John,'' said Mr, Steele, "didYcni see the face of that man ? count upon your saving Laura. Did You see his thin, cruel lips, his trencher- ous 'eyes ?" "I only saw Laura, sir," said John, simply. Later on, . Mr. Archibald Steele and his plump, pretty wife were alone together in their private parley. Mor dimpled hand lay lovingly in his, her shapely head, fresh from the hands of the Coiffehr, rested recklessly on his shoulder. Suddenly the door opened,--and there was heard the rustle of silk drapery. A still shapelier little held, and fresher from the lianda of the coiffeur, all unruffled by the audacious touch of a mortal, peeped in at the door. Laura . was pale ; her little white hands were clasped tegether ; her musical voice trembled. "Oh, papa, - mamma l conic reetly ! Mr..-Stuyvesant :ventured out : top far, and—and=' ; • . "Was drowned ?" said M. Steele . , with a peculiar combination -in his voice lof pity and relief. " no ; how can you suppose so dreadful • a thing? He was rescued, but he is very weak and ill. I He, lufs asked for me—and inns I go!? Will you come with me, mamma ?I 011, do, theg, of you! Can't she, papa ?" Her blue eyes filled with tears ; hor little feet seemed pautin4 to fly through the corridor. " Certainly not," said " Lei f him wait till he is ablelte Come to you or to'rne. Either a men is drowned or he isn't. Because he was imbecile enough to risk his life,' that is no reason for your being 'the talk of the hotel." • Lanni raised her heait " No danger of that, .P4aand, besides, every one is occupied - now with the one that rescued hith." . "rind what madman wa • S that ?" said poor Mr. 'Steele, who could not reconcile himself to the pretient con-, 'dition of affairs. "J• don't know—a stranger, I' be lieve; I was - so interested in 3Fr. Stuyvesant I forgot to ask." " Pah !" said 'Mr; Steele, getting, upon his feet and walking to • the door, " I'll go and find out all about it. Do you stay here till I•return.'? Before he had gone far Mr. Steele heard from the. eseited guestSseveral differeht versions of the affair; but one and .all agreed that the rescuer Could be nothing less than aoliampi on swimmer. " A regular waterld ogy' Bald one gentleman to Mr. Steele ; and as-the merchant merchant had heard this epitnetused but-once before in his life; and that on an occasion of ;vital interest to himself, he sought i out the hero of the hour, and found, to his unbound ed astonishment, it was John Waters himself! He was quite enveloped in the flounces and furbelows or pretty and sympathetic women, whOlinsiated upon knowing every half second if he was sure he t felt strong and and how in the world'could he buffet those dreadful waves in that grand, heroic way, and,how did .he manage to drag poor, dear Stuyvesant. in to the shore ? • 'John, like any other hero, of the hour, enjoyed this womanly adula tion, but looked anxiously at Mr. Steele ivtien he approached. . " Hum growled that worthy mer chant ; " s pretty fellow you to in terfere :with other people'g plans! How do you know he wanted to be rescued ?" ° I " He appeared aniistua that, way, sir," said John. " him self about the 'like a devil-fish. thought one time we'd both go clown together. There ought to beta school for teaching people how to et theni selves be . saved. It's the easiest thing in the world ; the water itself is an accessory, if you manage it right." ." Oh, do tell us how, Mr. Water. 4, please !" chorused the pretty and sympathetic women ; and ns John began his lesson, 'Mr. Steele slipped away. "Oh, papa," began Laura, "how is Mr. Stuyvesant ?" "I don't know—l didn't ask," he replied, "I was so interested in the fellow that dragged him ash Ore. He's an old friend of ours. The way we made his acquaintance wasi on just such an occasion ; he saved a lady from drowning." " Why, papa," -said Lanra, • " he must be a splendid fellow I"1 • , "Magnificent!" said Mr. Steele. •",You see, we_had traveled over a considerable o the world together, your motliernnd I while .. li•ott ,were yet a baby. And we found fit rather odd one morning to discover that, having one_ the • ocean and the Alps, loitered in . the Hudson High lantls,•traveled thence down] through the Mississippi Valley, across- the American desert to California, and back again by another ro u te, your mother had never been up the East River as far as Morrisania. It seemed so „absurd to have neglected this home excursion that we determined -,upon it at once.. The Morning was wet, but tho didn't matter. Your . , mother' looked prett,lerlit water :proof ,and , rubbera,:vritli sathevel-hat tied down under,-hers4hi, than . pOst rsomcfi would }n a. balt, wasnie'n — pit.oti l itaidrhitti; 9 r. mild be was sy little tiio'reeklessi" f.* gettiag,,aalioria , to7'.fiee7oliiiif the instil , tutionk-Tor vagokopd..beysi key foot slippedt44, 14 , 94S*PA she poring,: I' • .Iroic6 tilteied . f• the little:plimiti , band hisitlfe ilippedintahis 'own; he ilatehed,,it t aucl went on again. ' • " Oite,..ialqttte ,as neat and trinin wat'Oprobf' and stovet-hat the next she Was Itone."_. • - " Gone!. . cried.. Laura. :," Gone where ?:! = -; • "latO.,the . „water jute _the liungry'green WaVes that stirged up to take' her • frOtri the . Tondest heart inlheuliiverse ;': and itit hadn't been •for - one -or : those vagabond bQY§,‘ who: bad ,been, lnrking_ there for - 11 Chance ',to well) from •the island, you'd have lest-us - both, iny clear, for I mado'an'agOnized:plimge after her, though I'M ashamed to.sar• I .could not swim . a stroke,- and should only have.gone to the bottom like a plum lilet 'lead; but an Official standing by caught and held .me, and cried out that johny Waters had. her safe as.a-triret ; and presently: that'. vac.- .abond boy come .up with your &Area mother on the other side of. the boat, anft±thC:9flicial cried out i- "He's' a regular Water-dog, that John.) , Wat ers !" And these are the very words a guest.here used in relation to John a nunute or so ago." • - ."John!" cried poor bewildered Laum, "our John ? Mamma ? My rhatOma.? Was mania . the lady ? was:J . o . lft the boy? And is it John, our 'John, that saved poor Mr. Stuy-' - vesantr! • • • '" " The very same, darling- . -- - John, our John; he's always on hand whOre there's trouble or danger." ' "Oh :mamma!' • mammn!" cried Laura, forgetting all the years that had paskd 'since the' accident, and crumpling botli the coiffured heads in a reckless manner. "Papa, " stiff then said, "we must go and : tind John. I -want to tell him hot! much I,1" • • . . . "Yes i dear,".. said Mr. Archibald Steele, and 'all the way throiigh the Corridor and 'into the parlors of the hotel, With his plump and' pretty wife oivone arm, his lovely daughter on the other, he smiled. But.JOhn was still surrounded .by the pretty and sympathetic women, who had cruelly deserted the blue bloodedldescendant of the -old Dutch governor, lying in his most graceful and lan tic! of attitudes on a neigh boring tounge—the descendant, not the got'ernor-,-atid had flocked one and all to the. handsome and heroic founde4 of the new school for teaching people the way to he res cued from drowning. . Thesocharming creatures spent so much of their time at the seaghore, and it Was so necessary and so nice to be wise • John was almost hidden in flounces and, laces; but when his eyes met LaurasElieplunged out of these-cost ly with his usual ease and in- trepidity. There was, something in Laura's eyes that he had never seen there before; a tempting languor, a bewitching shyness, a bewildering splendoii,that steeped his soul in mad sweet hope. Laura stopped a moment to whis per to her mamma, and John gasped out to Mr Steele: ' "If I:dared—if I only dared to tell her"— • t‘l.'ve told her myself!" rlaid the merchant. . "That I was a , pauper, without' a come or friends `1 "1 told the story in my own way, John," 'pontinued, Mr. Stecle, "and I flatter myself I told it successfully; don't spoil it; if you please. I have maimed the past and the present; do you'. look out for the future, John."': And , John did. Laura walked through the parlors that night; the envied of all the pretty ,- and sympa thetic women and brave and appre ciative men that congregated there.— TICE 'SPARE BED When I „go to the country to visit my relations, writes M. Quad, the spare bed rises up in my imagination days before I start, and I stiver. as I retheinber how cold and 0-rave : like the sheets arc. put off the visit- as long as:Possible solely on account of that spare bed. , I don't like to tell them that I had rather •sleep on a picket fence than to enter that spare room and creep into that spare bed, and' 'so:! they know, nothing of my sufferings. • The spare bed is alWays as near as a mile and a half from-the rest of the beds an it can be located. - Pts either up stairs 'at the head of the hall, or off the' . parlor. The parlor curtains have not been raised for weeks; everything is as prim as an old-maid's bonnet, and the bed is as square and true as.if it had been made up by a carpenter's rule. No matter whether . it be Summer or Winter, the bed is like ice, and it sinks down in•a way to make orie shiver. The sheets arc slippery clean, the pillow slips rustle . like shrouds, and one dare not stretch his legs down for fear of. kicking against a tombstone. ; _ He is tired and:•sleepy„ . but lie knows the rest of the family are so far away that no one could hear him if he should shout for an .hour, and this makes him nervous._ He wonders if anyone ever died in, that room, and straightway - he sees the faces of dead persona, hears- 'strange noises,- and presently' feels a chill galloping up and down . . his back. Did any one ever pass a comfortable night in a spare bed ? „No matter how many quilts 'and spreads.-covered him, he could not get warm ; and if he ,i-cci dentally fell asleep, it was to awake with.a' start, under the impression that a :dead man was pulling his nose. It will' be days and Weeks before be recovers . from - the impression, and yet he 'must suffer in silence, because the spare bed was assinged him in token of esteem and affeetion. • A learner newspaper publisberid Jen wise° pills his place of business ayrintery ; BEM I 1 - i 1110 MIN !AB ninanomErr, ,;11i - .. .NalibY ,11)aii . published ii.Miii 7 , itirjrOf `the - Rise and -4 7rilt - of tlie-On liiiiiteet-Trns.e- and : Cniiitdenee "Cori , Yuc.n.f; of f;Ciiiifederit'--X-' Roods." We ;printed a fd.w , woeks sines 4n:4c:count of: tlieiliparis4 , of that . instilitioni ;and we give • below 'the. sad story of its decline:bid:frill ': i MORE ANIIS 1N ME FIELD. r." tiii ,citizens - WiCh ar'6 thOtanchest ii:UpPorter . s iv tife --- neW, inteey hey .de termined thater ice lie the .. - rituto' :iihOtt ::money,. -they. flare- the - same rite. : And :soi jowl :more banks 1161 , bin - started. t,his _week. - 1 Then '.' - frontilq setTpi -in ,'chunks. The 'peoplerwhq -- Was net interested in- bankin ireffitized, -pint _blanki:to. take any tiy, theli , ishoos.- Bankswnz ~ - . . - a _ getting . rater -to p frokent. - . - A reackslien okkpired - agin•our money Wicli We Who iyui interested deter mineillo einiti to:wunst. -' •- : 1. ;-.The offishls or the five banks - in the town7inet and (*tilde& to bold a meet-• Ing uv th 4 citizens,: at With stePi Amid be takeniO legalize our iShoos. 1 The meithrwss - lieldinnd lir mire We kerried it without 'any trouble for : Pevell-teAth'S nil eni', bed our money, in their, pdcket4, anilithey wilt very favorable io - 6 ri i aCkSlien that wood keep it a bilin. iTo that end welpitat the follerinlresiklooshens : • .WAnEAi Thti.Deirihcrisy tiv . Ohio. and - Penititiviiii, yi with a singerly just appreShia - slien JO. the Wiiiits . ity the' citizenc'uv the Cross Roads hey denianded amore money'; and - - - i-,. i W.k.riE4s 1 , F ive compinieS hey ear.' ried out' th e idec uvthe Democrisy nv Ohio and s yenrisylvany by• furn lshin the peoplemore,money; and , ;' WArin.o-1 Noiwitlistandin the on ; ., paralleled prosperity that hez result ed frsrd the- increase. in currency, Certin men in• ;the ceininoonity,,by tefoozin,,, ,, to 14e - it; decline' to be benefited ,• therefore t •he it r. • 1?e8olred.1 Thtit, this;meetiu.uv citi enS-;demarid u, l / 4 - the . ; Town Council that it to .wunst couVene- - and - pass an Ordinance *kin_ the isshoos iiv the five bankS ldga.Vtender for every-, thing from l dri4 - s down to takes, and that any citizen iyliti- refeozes to take it, Or • miniuerst at it ;or in any way discredits it, sl4-be held ez a public enemy and be ilkulejitly hung. . . The whereeses and the resolooshen wuz passedito:witust! and I felt easier. With the owe to living all Ns:jell re fooie . to 'take our money, I rather think Itin rankle it ctirrent. A rope over limb IN a tree is a persuader Of rare mnrit, and it; iS , the,,best eiii dorsement luv cur paper that we kin Possibly hey. --; . So far so good. But jist ez 1 .wuz, feelin good over; my success, that on mitigated cuss,' Jehitil Perkins, rose and proposed the yoOnanirrius adep 'lnin nv tl r ic fiipliwiri WherareS ' and iresolooshen: 1 - : . - WAREASI Ef Slio hey' a good - thing Soo can't h ' ev•toO much uv it; and ' WABEAS,LThd, increase uv currency in the Corners hez bin productive uv prosperity Sidi dz we •never. dreeinecl uv; and •j • 1 - i ~ 1 WAREAS,I It is tlteH Booty uv all earthly guyermhents 1 to.difsiase its blessings ekally4hereby iniitatin the loos of heaYen, 1 with !falls • alike on the just and onjrist ; and . • : 1 - WAREAS Theinaimtakter uv money. I Shoot' net be confined to the few, but hood be the privilege uv the many ;* and , I 1 ' ~ WAREAS,I We!rek - Ognise the justis 4nd propriety itv compelling the People to take sch money ez may be ishood ~ , the'reforic, be it I Resolved,i Tlnit, every man may ishoo his notes ny hand, in sieltsums ez may suit his interest or conven-. fence, and that sich ; notes shel -be legal tender fur everything, the same es the noteS islinod by:our live bankin institutions', i. • I Ant - 1 1 ,, the d-4.d - itleots abslootly utssed the teriolooslien without a Ininit's .tielriy, and they: demanded that the: COuneil meet that very nite arid pass the ordinance, wich it did. • Ez everyllast Man uv em commenst I Writin notes to *mist, and 'buying all sorts ill?, thii*s with em, we're•li . 'able to hav r e enntl money at the Cor r 4erq immejitlyz..;much ez our brethren in. Ohio and .Pennsylvany wood desire, even. : _, Everything in the :shape uy labor hez bin abandOned, jfort everybody hez gone into thel,Cititiufakter uv cur rency—that is i everYbody who kin write. Thank , i Reayen' that they never favord iikeols here—the in ability to Shed link -is the only limit to our irillashen. One sinter result has followed thiS ordinance, viz : No body hez nothing to sell. TII4 F11%4L S:ftAtill-Ur. , • , There is glooln onto the Coroners! our sun of prosperity is sot, and my hopeS blasted. iThe Onlimited 7 rust Confidencelis net eggSackly no more, but it's near en4ff dead to make it 'safe to bury- Rion wencher. Its eyes are sot. Is notes,. which is its .holin any cirkelashen. The people' don't take em with cheer fulness neSsaryto a proper, - ,baukin bizne t ss. l i segislashen don't tech em: ,The •eirdnances,*hien : made death the penalty for relopzin our ishoos, only workt so far ez takiu uv em for taxes. The corpOrashim did take cm for' taxes in Pursdoaneei uv their own legislashioil, anal herd wuz where the trouble begun. - The taxes wuz ley led on a greenback basis, and the en tire levy araoruited to $6,000. Well, the taxes for the first, time in the his try of the Coreners •wuz all pale in full, and with great promptness. A more proMpteg set of taxpayers never send; • ' The treasurer hed uv our ishoos when itliecuni neSsarY to buy a plow and four spades to 'do stun work on the roads. In vane he tried . to git: em. gibe deafers home,. knowin Wat, currency, W1141(.11 to pay . in, suddenly gi)Lout 'IV plows and . spades, and whip he - went to Looi's vile it toOk $llOOO in our .eUrreuey to pay his fare, and he offered the hardware deal& the other $7,000 for the impleinet4s he 'wanted, but : it woodcut go. Be had, to come back without em. .. Then 114 came :Intl: demanded some currency its a wichle ,cool yooe, wileknv.corsplwe hedn't_ got none, and tarbecumi au Opponent ) to . our i • Two ahoinniskers,!each with CP,- 000Ati- our, nioney,! - emlent buy a -la Ply Annum In Advance. MS side -nit Sole kather to continyoo their- Wpiss with, and hed 'to stop, our-raleredgakand turnpikes hed to itop l :hee" Z z , got to the pint where - wiled to her iron and nails its gob"things, we coixleiit go on. So &lithe labrers'hedip' he discharg ed, - which made a desprit populashen, all howlin ngin , lint the mist wuz to come. We toad het wethered all this, but alas! Bas coni .:!,.fhis wuz the - finishin . grate :stogerer _which.: the Corners coal not possiblfrecOver from.. 1 - attempted to reason with the I told em .that one •reaSOn av our wealth wuZ ,:ve . .bed it in. a currency we coodent send away from hcime, thus keepin our - Capitul within Ourselves..; . but.they refooozed to list en to Me. They d my 'bonk, they (L--L--1.1 me, and they went for the. honk, swearin that of there wuz anything there that cood be convert ed into likker Paseoin should hey it, It is unnessary to remark that they didn't find anything. • Jintisiipattip aii onplesantnis, we lied removed the .valynobles to a place up, safety, with wuz the .underside "uv my bed at Deekin 'Pogrom's. . - Then' they demanded that the mon- Tey they held be redeented, into suthin they cood.- goose, :but uv course we: 'declined to discuss the Matter / re ferriri them to the ;terms. trot the ishoo ez expressed on the note, ez well ez thet own indorsenient uv the skeem. But this didn't, satisfy On. They deliberately brought ont $6,75,000 uv the ishoos - mr- : the varions - banks, and piliu 11‘;, it Up=on the street; sot fire to it; dancin 3 . demonia6 dance-around it. This ninoozed ine,for course ice led liO'earthly objeCkshen to their red ecteitt uv it in. that way, tut when I seed em riggin ropes'to the trees in. the'lvicinity I remarko to my fellow officers: "Gentlemen, your Presi dent haS preisin biznis'in - yOnder, for est," and I got out ez rapidly ez my poor ~waistid limbs 'wood permit. Indeed, wen .I turned and sax ten or a dozen. uv_ the' foremoSt men uv the Corners clost • behind! me and all shoiitin Hang the ci cl thief!" no gentle gazelle that I ever heerd uv ever skimmed the plain ez I did. I did not cease runnin till I got into the middle uv the swarnp. - Wat beeome xis- the other drekters I don't know. The - lafit fond look that I turned toards the bank-I saw. Issaker' Gatitt and Beekin Pogratn strugglin in the hand's uv the mob; wick wtr2: playfully _forein' em to sit - ,doWn- on a bnrnin 'pile nv their Owpicurreney. I ' 'N. B. I .hey heered from-the Corn, ers. - The ougrateful' L people, after half - Minn the officerS uv the bank, passed resOlooshuns that we wuz all a pack uv tbeeves, and that them ,ez • lied sold land and sich-for our money shood soo for reeoverytherefore, and that they'd 'hang any judge whfch woodent deside agin us, Base6m hez - gone back onto us, and hez sold back to Pollock and Bigler 'the store we bot ity em, and hez got greenbax enuff to . git a few barls oflikker, and hez- re-Opened. He hez puCthe price likker down to five cents agin, and refocizei to take anything.for it but nickels and postalCurreithy. sez-lie. ain't gittin ez meny east-loads us' money ez he did bi,the ,inflashen ,eriod, lint .he's• satisfied. I.'lie most iv the citizens is bankrupt, and roo- . in is everywhere.. Oh why did their faith give oa'n.t the wrong 'time! la • . 1 P. V. N. . . . , - , -10-44110.0.-.------ MODERN DRESS AND MANNERS. . It is a bad sign then men cease to tespeet women of the* own or, in deed, of any class;, bit the,- women themselies are- to' blame for the in, tolerable' ilippent . and impertinent tone pervading young societY. We do not want to go back to the for malities of Sir Charles Orandisoni and there is a winding', Charm in nat nralnesS not to be had front the most perfected artificiality. NeVertheless, a slight return to Old World forms of courtesy, a little dash ofthat state ly reverence of speech land demanor which our forefathers exaggerated into pedantry, would 'be - a gain in times when the'young.men giVe, as their greatest praise of a girl. "There is no nonsenmabouCher," meaning no bashfulnesS, no re4Crve, no girlish shrinking Modesty;l - while the girls jtistifyilie:complimeut by Calling the young men""dear boys," and some- times. when they have ,less nonsense even than usual, and desire a closer assimilation of style, "old iuen." Tliis is the "form" which is taught and held up for admiration iii the la test, .novels of the day, and it is' hilt to,exaggerate the degree in which these Writings have tended 'to corrupt and , degrade the; sex . who chiefly .write and read them. All these things are patent. Patent, too, is the inferenee that When a moman, from no 'fault of her 'Own,. falls* into trouble, she suffers for thel mistakes and follies of her class and; the times; Personally she may be whollyblame less ; but with all these lines of de 7 thareation blurred,' these. distinctive characteristics confused, it is almost inevitable that there should be takes. i Until .we mine tb - "a more ethereal condition of existence the burden of self-protection - must, we fear, lie on the women theMselves. That burthur is not very i heaVy, and the penance It include's:not very bit- ter. It only that Modest ; women Must Show what they are* a series, of negatives, and take care not to ex pose. themselves to take:, by an , attractiveness of out-of-door dress, a . doubtfut manner of : speech ard a Bohemian of behavi for to strangers which shift the labels, mislead their. companions, and end in: the confusion of a 'Mistaken affini-- ty,lfy which they tbeniSelVes arc the greatest sufferers in the end:L.Bom-- da y Teri• 7 ODE to my Ipn'illady—two weelea board bill:—Exchange. Yes.- She tinder stanza joke of that kind, and that's why you're a verse.to meter, we suppose., • • " TUE first step toward wealth," says an exchange, "is the choice of a good' Wife."i• And the first step toward seem' ? frig a wife. is the possession. of good wealth. • Puricisr.• old pity: "Conductor, do, i.n.ny. 'get on. rNV an' appointment—". Condnetort "AU right, sir Now, look alive,Bill, here's a hold gent want's to meet his young 'ootnan," 011 NOME 2.0. a j I-..Eir-.8g.A.: is -IiS.:Z.,, SL:olliint xir: I:ii- ooinxsireir;iir. iestr. vii :o Fouttrit QuArratf,:,. J 4149. ~s - : - : 4... --lhiaiiiitalitilCs discourse (iti . 4oslti '..-,': this {lop .. 1' compate'ehs,p,44•ll! ~,af app:',...,.;, „.... ken aftee.Chilitandliiilikriskt . .. , . , the Upper room,. end ..while;: en AhelewllY •o•Getbseinanii. new eameA.T* Lord s `.select this figure , 'or - the - vine and 05 . ,branches? Blithe siimiese it was !ed bi the wine cuptaiffslfiutipet.4. • •Thiaiiirobable. I _lint ;perhaps -.a hetteri 'ideals that it was ria. ,4 4isted : - *seeingia :vitus!and its , peadelSk . lirsklies..":en, their, • :way.' The truth ille4td , br-tii. l9. I,rt • -linial# the preciatui truth of 'tlia 3 organic -•-• life- . Union of, Christ anti - all 'believers. s They live in hint. - Ilei is • their ) life , and . the source of all High' , frnitfulnes4; 4ipatt ~ from him they .wither and - die.. 4t - is ;he 'same truth that St. Paul sets' forth undlr- -. the similitude oi: the bead and, its inent- -- ,-. bets.' Ephesians v:Ilii; colas: ii: 19. i - " V. I. "I am the true vine,!' The Avoth • translated true means time to the' him', genuine, . essential;', original, as , :f.listin4t. • ftum what is derived, ecipied,typicat shadowy,' and more or less,imperfect. , it . does Mot denote what is trite in api7.o sitiou td wbat is false. Christ is the isisentia , s .. original vine: all oilier vines are 'derived . . and typical. Ile is the living ,Kitirce of A all life and' fruitfulness - . ' "And my PI -; titer is the husbandman." . ThiS expre es his subordination to his Fatheii not lo,his_divine nature, but as tO his medi - torial state and work. His Father dire - ed -.omin the mauifestationkof his life . it llOvVed out into friiitfulnal; lie, spa ' throngit hini, 'he ivil#ight . ' all hittl war. Son lle did with him, as of Man, apordin to his will, as the huSbanclman (lees wit "the vine. And in like inanuer , lie dea With the branches. : . Ile is Abe ,LOrd c the vineyard, ~ . ' I • /- i • V. 2., "Every branch." Belie t ers al ithebranche'S (v. 5). They form aulprgan' whole with him through the communi of his Spirit, ;and receive his qtdekerii life: Their' fruit is liis fruit. - - "In me. That is, in professed union' with in Christ speaks here in an external Manner as it 'appears to men. He does • ni:.t me- i that any one can be vitally unitcdto;hi and receive his life without bearing frui 'We might paraphrase his worth" A s j member of the visible church thatibOret 1 Upt fruit." I The fruit isdefinedin Clal, 22-23. ' "Ile taketb away',.' (or - 'ciit 1 , oft). The idea is that of pruning l awn: • the dead or 'unprofitable brandies Th s was done ,generally by vine-dressers, b t was sometimes participated in by the pi trietor himself as a light and'plea3'sant,o - ;cupation. So all prtifessed,.belleVerswi 4. do not bear the fruitS : of the Spirit will rejected: cut off._ "And' every brane i that bcareth fruit, he purgeth it (ratite ~ he pruned' or .cleanseth it), that; it mk - Ining forth more fruit." • 'Judicionsprtni ing ....ondoces to greater fruit fnlnes in fl , 4 vine: so in the ' vineyard, of gracc.!. tl I prunings ,of .Gitx•rs band (afllicthinsl an temptations)` lead to increased' Itolin s efi and fruitfulness. ''fhis solves the prol lem of God's " s prnvidence as At r e lates belies:en:. . ' , V. 3:: ' , .Now ye 'are clean (or, ~threw ye are•elean ? ) through the Word*ldeli have spoken unto yon:" ('lean;!:lieeani) united to Christ. the, Vine; bee:lase -po. l sessed,Of his indwelling' life.; Tlley we . clean as to the inward prin r eiple of but not as to . its outward .ma7pigestatio l and energy. ":The purifying !lord of .11 sus'ilurt) made the :"diseiple,s clean fro within, Must, be supiAetnenteA frOm with! out by the rather's.sehool of Otferin.l the lid ter, , hOwever; was not to ,giire the principle of ,purity, loft to -f;tting,the' it.and free it from the danfrer&;f denenet ation." . V.-4. - Abide in int.: and' I 'in you. ' The second clause' is usually interprete i l ' ~. as a prom Ase , conditioned on - the first .: clank.. "Abide in me, and I shall- abido in you.'' The idea nridoubtedlyi is that • we must abide in -Christ by faith,! or el 4, - ho will not abide in its by his Holy Spifitl. . ' "As the branch . catinot bear-froit of il- 7 scifyetc." The branch severed- from th •• • 2- ' vine becomes dry and dead; so,no - ! humai • soul can live spirituidly and briuig fort ,1 . • i spiritiml fruit without Christ's life in his . • heart. t i • i. •' 1 .1 i . . Nr.'s..This is a Positive stateineut of tile truth e*pressed negatively iO!,the , pre ceding verse. -And at the .s,lmei Hine it . 'gives greater emphasis. to the orpuie ail- . . • ,fithesis bet Ween Christ and his i people--- [... an antithesis that caunet be ellanged,er reversed. fie Li' . always - the Vpie, and: they the branches; He the Head, l and the,y , the members. And to signalize this,cte,s - .- •,. nal relation_ he addS; " Apart . fl.oin Me' ye can do nothing." t •." Christ i.s the •be- ginning, the middle,' and the end', of 'spi-' -.. ritual life; we can do nothing' Withont • :, • him, but Much, • yea. verythin i g; with • :II . e i him." 1 . V. G. " Ifa man (any one) abide het in ~.. me." That. is, -if . the professed union , • with Christ be not, 'real and actual. ~ if any one have - only the name of Spirinial • life. I "He is cast forthas the lin:Melt, 'and is• Withered," .lle is east forth . 'from the vineyard; 1. e., the, church—heuirrejected . .. froni the unmber Of ['Christ's blessed serf ~. rants. "As thl! branch "—i. e.,1 the use- , , less hraneh, which is lopped ()Minim the - vine, ' And men (literally 'they) gather, then),•and cast them into the ;fil - re, and.: . they are burned (they burn). lii the fig ure i "they" Means', the' servant* of. the : . vineyard, who-gather together i i.the dead iii - d[ withered branches, and thrOw them .. into the vineyard fires, which:of:ay. have ; been burning that night. along the slopes . -, of the, valley of kedi . before the eyes of- Christ and his discil les. in.t*,'lapplica tion, a they " denotes all divinely ordain; , ed instrtiments'of judgment, bui„ 4 ,especial- ly the angels who will act as God!s'special • messengers in the final Judgmek. '- -, • Itl' • "If ye abide in me." - i !ilow call • 1 . ' • [. . we tell whether we abide in hint "And . my words abide in you.'' -If the word of Christ dwells; in us . ..richly in all wisdom '. and spiritual understanding _.then we ' • dwell in him- His word is Ifil; life (chap. . vi: 63). If we receive, his word 'iin faith, . we ) , eceive iiiin. -" Ye shall,: as what what ye will, and it shall be done unto Ton." This means, what ye will as branch+ abiding; , in me; that is, what' my Spirit in ay teach you through the wont. to ask. Thut4. talight by his Word abiding in thein,. they could - not fail to ask for thingsi Ogreeable to !God's will. This passage 'seems tP, teach that' if we submit our Wills to the Spirit of Christ iii. connection ;with his Word; we shall never as amiss. .I'. . . "V. 'B.- "•! wHerein" (in the aners.; to ' [ your .prayers) "is :my Father .41otified, • . that yi ..,,, much fruit" (this--defines• hoW the FO her is to be. glorified by his 1 -1 childx): l " and yo.will become - My disci-, ples (i. i.en c.,. ye will erow, pp, into's; full .dis cipleihip). There is a stature of diseiple• - • . • ship into which believers 'grow; and the fullness of that stiltnro telorlo to him wfio is filled full with Christ (C6l. ii: 10). Ho who is self-emptied and Christ-fulled, -0. •is the largest, noblest, t happies sciple. • ti i —4.-,«_..___.,; Tim ;afflicted . editors of roii: ICI3 - fie, Ind.,' have induced a judge to declare in sane and commit Ul the lunatic asylum, man with' an • ung,')yernabl6 .penchant for writing Oetry. , " I la. . SE