Advirtislag In all c ases exclusive of salxserlp t lolls to the reper. . , SPECIAL NOTICES Inserted at surramt CZ Ts per Ilea, (or the first Insertion, and viva tsars ver line for Putarquent Insertion& - LOCAL NOTICES, same style as reading mat ter, TWENTY CENTS A LINE: • • ADVEttaISEMENTS will be inserted according to the following table of rates: Time. -1 1W 1 1w ( 2111 1 :1m 1 sin 1 lyr. 1 Inch 1 e 1.50 i 3.00 5.00 1 6.00 1 10.00 1 15.09 1 2.00 5.00 1 8.00 1 10.00 1 15.00 I 20 . 00 3 Inclres.;.. 1_2.50 1 . 7.00 (10.001 10.06 1 r. 0.001 30,00 4 inches., .71, 3:00'1 8:50 1 14.00.1' 18.2. 1 25.00 1 i 5.00 nnt.. cOlO 1 5,00 1 12.00 1 1/4.00'1 22.00 1 50.00 / 45.00 Column.. 10.00 I 20.06 I 30.00 . 1 40.00 155.00 1 75.00 i 010103... 1 20.00 1 50.00 1 60.00 00.00 (100. 1 lio.. A DMINISTI: ATOIL'S and Executor's Notices, '2.00; Auditors toitiees;r..so; Itu s inesri Cards, Ave Lines, (per year) Vi.CO. additional lines. 41.00 cach. YEARLY Advertisements are entitled to quar 7 terly cimiges. • TIIANSIE7.:T advertisements must be paid for AIIV AN CF: . .' ' ALL: Itc.solutions of Associations, 'eon - I - inmates; ion, of limned or boll\ idnal - interest s altd mitres of Marriages and Deaths. exceeding five Miles, are elidritevi TEN ('ENTS PER LINE. .1011 PI:INTING,ni evelY kind, In. Plain and taney rf.Mrs, I e with neatness and dispatch. ll:m.ll4ll 4 ('arts, Pamphlets, 1111theals, s•tatentent ' s, every, variety and style, printed at the ',shortest notice , . 'rile I.:Ermi:Trat um.; is stippllvtl NN Ith power . pr6:=st•F. goo.l a:sort itivnt of type_ anti everything in the - Printing Ino eau be evAxutel In the most artistic manner and at the lowest rates. T 1.:111IS INVARIABLY ('A1!....5• .?rifez4vaal and Stsiness Ca 1-1 s7.II,FETEII. • LAW OFFICE, OVERTON & MERCITE. J. ATTORNEYS AT LAW, - TOWANDA l'A Onlre user MoLtanyes Stare. ful f ay67s. WA. OVERTON. 'RODNEY A. MEIZCUR. QMITII . & MONTANYE, ATTOR comer 111 Main ;,.ss(l Pilo :St.. (Tpasite 1)r. Porter's Drug• Store. •_ I%T IT. CiItINOCIIAN, ATTolt.- kix AT LANs - Troy, Pa : Collections . :clad- and promptly remiiled. litW. I'ATIIICK, A TVITtNF:y AT i.AW. .11106,„ -"test door to (Una , . Towanda., I'3. 1)11. Wool)l3l7llN.•Physi etan-alya `.. 4 trrgoon. Oftrc. ov'r A. !Slack', T,,sattsta. W r O 0 I): tc,'. S.AN DE lISON, Arrol:tiEYS T . 1. • - MS` A.. Iv' I. 7lhity-77 r ‘. 4'yk - r .TOTINSON k NEIVTON 1;%7 I,r • 4` lori - IDLEY - ATTt tIINEY AT LAW. 1•..771. TowAND.A. 4 - .! F: O :IZUE " 11 " ; I; It INK, .1 tu:tive' .7% _IR 1: • ' .'Zqn , y:LTievr. I tr.-l[ . . . . • - - . - 1 ; 1 11. L. .1)01iSljN. r) ENT/: -. T. .- i ' l, WO ' 1e... -. 211. 111:11" N. r 4 -"• lln the • tt.tlit n • ...- i th•ni : eil ::.1.1 - 11 , ,i '4,1 - 11r. l'r:ttt', H.AI - •fri I" I.:: ': t . t.' "•• 1 . ...•[. I;!i,in,:: i-I':1,1:.NI. -1.17 i, • . ryt-r T.,wnn,!... pa. T.. - %1111:-.•:**, T 4 ah.l 4 , 1- .14 (..!,-.!ra.1,1 DAVIE ; •:. • ATT , •I:NEV- AT LAW 11 R'S (IC K BEIM ‘'ro , l:\ rx , S ( 1. 1 -. C " "7. 1 )1::"-AT-1..k \V •• to. , •z• boa'l'.o,all.la. Pa. %N1)1;1,W IL'. NV M. MA.XW ..7.1* EV' AND • 1T ••:,•13 =‘,l. STXN DENTI,ST. (411,t, t'tAt. I • ta•: - .. a , all kitn,l- 1 , 1 ia ta•v.' qa , , I. ) V VF.II. C. E.. COUNTY —Van altvut L;i‘..22 h. ti:, 4i-7 MISS -1 . 110 - M 1 1 S( )N. A TriIIINEY 1 V • r v. IV) [ i:tl ;.,A•ll.lnt-t.,1 is au :12,1 E , l :ntr. FM . TOI:S EY-A T-1 Ns , t,.., MMMI LIFE IN -rt[ltNct DIM 't^ • q;riff:!ft Itridgo St. 2 .•7 I. Bt - su, '..III•T‘ , IV N. 1:1: 1 ,11+' , .1:10 )l'\11'1". I*.\ MIZEIME It; =SE (VEIZTON ,t: r S!"1 AT +%.. p n -4•!7.•r f , Z , V •4 . 1:1! :Itt.•11Z1 0 11 t , . !., fr• :01 4 1 Y. • WI'“N . .1 I:. .1.:11-7.0 . Irt .\ Li. !,( 'll LI E.' _ El' , I.T I. tw. T w A:CO A, VAt. kti:ll!t 1!: • Fir,t • I!.S-711 • 'A. N. • ‘1.10,F 1 1 111 - • :I.NI - .1: 11 'I; .1 N . O J 1 I; N (,3N N W. AlfN. .!,T [:..;;•W T ,, lvN•i“. PA \ I 1 ri - 1 f k • • ,Jf !,•• 1' r 4.1 l•7 • c. 1,1 . tit, Jo •li • Ct. ;;;i 1 ..•11. HOP, • i 11;.!:;11. , • tri • .1. • P.a. I •C. };! X REV.. I CA11: I A•C; e 1:: PI a 1"..1\1'1-:1: I) I:. - ::. • 1::;t: KINGSIit - in • 0. =Mai I , 1 ; ' 7 ,;..411-1 sr:•-"! [1;T.r.1.11;1,1., .\NA? nut.: TinED ME • I 1 1, 1 1 It Sy N N . 1: N K T% OV-IcN MEI BM ; FuNli •"•• • f"o ; IMIIIM DEj'o,ll . :" .\l:f A , :IVLEMI'N't T‘t C• 1.1 t. tp,N ;`.l.' t.. sr‘ • . . . , _1(;F: TICKETS P_l'ti 111•1= .".11T OVI !: I , tTEF. .1. 1 . 4 d• I - . S.. Ii i 1 :h1 I~vl.i F I O , C I 1.1..../ . ”1:1"1:‘ , LNI , !EEC ,fi:NE/ -I T, , ,„1;1,1,114t buy gt. 0.1 AND TOBACCO I\il.3'o: (.01Art I SEM S. W. ALVORD, Publisher.. VOLUME XXXII. THE'cqg'-' AND POPULAR, H A 1,1:10•W ARE STORE. Invite the , attention of the public to their stuck. TOWANDA. Ps PARLORS lIHATIN'd STOVES, SHEARS, SCISSORS,, ItAZOIIS, CHANDELIERS, ' BRACKETS. larT., , eNt acid best assort. • t meta : Lept. in Northern l'enthylvania. LAMP‘iCIIIIINEYS AL GLOBES. lin=rl=!l lu e u t u v ,s larwly. of .ohlr , own manufactait% war- OEM ME .1,,m,thg,',1 aIV kina: 1111,11 r bike ryoinDtly atipn. to. :ltd 1,1A;O: trough; put up in the most N.3ll,tral`plry tt.autti.r. cat , slowt. notice. GAS_ FITTING ANI) PLUMBING A z , perlal.ty;- TILE osLy PEACTI- I" AI.,II.I.7SLDEIt IN TOWANDA. 4-, 'Crnr:un~:r. 1' tityl the poldir• griter4ll,y will I.tatr to tullt4 that Nxc sell goods ottly tor Itelviving Stilly! o nly syst;in by which Justice can 1,, done (wilt taco and Iriemts fi)r ;I:Itt.1111 f4r •past sr , lira z .330 ituctliref V. 3 , 6111, th, . 3 , s u. rat,cti that to ilt olt , r 33ni greati:r !Jim! :tay 0i1i. , ri...4.110.k10w•1it lit 1111•Tnitittry. aq er carr,,:a largcc au n t facilities Vart I. B A INS N, STOVES! All P N • s TOOLS 16=1 = 11, 1,01: MEESE II 1) \V ARE STO E =EI S. IMACR, '1. , 11 \ 1.1. l' 1 El:4 NT,.. 44 . \ $l- 1 . - 1 ,111)(1 51},i11111 N. N. .1 . 1% tali:• r R•. •int, Barttware, Crockery, &c. aCIDD - INC & RUSSELL, HARDWARE GOODS. Consisting of COOK STOVES pc the most aPproved 'patterns RANGES, Of all kinds in enilless ;va . riety MATERIALS, l'airnished at 13OT1'03t PRICES. ICE CREAM FREEZERS, = •;,- l aM . POCKET CUTLERY, (IC I` Ilt,t manufacture, and warranted CARPENTERS' TOOLS, ()r vvery descript GAS FIXTURES. LEI ME I;Ell'aBliNE LAMPS, tn.in clwalk,t to tilt: he,t gr,atly rCtiity.4 price, TIN 11" A RE, 1 UltcQ lilr.t-r: 11 V. A I) COPPING & RUSSELL ISIM TINIVAIZE, _.t 11 A D k " IRON AND PAINS, (3LA. NE it. 1': TOW,INDA, DIEM t)i t 1 RN AIZ'OCKEIt OF VARIOUS PATTERN;!:. AND Low .t Tlit; I:OWEST GLASSWARE, TA PLE 'CUTLERY. SILVER TI 2 ATED WARE, WOI) WARE, 1 -_::TON E \VA RE, CAG BASKETS, Gl,.‘ss Sit-ADES I tumid to tiir pul Ik that oh any kilt .51 ,, C1,: 1 Will and t tiliderr4,l,l 0. A. BLACK: -- 11:74 .. • . . •• _- , :-..- -------- .. - .....,..,,.,-...-...*,. - - 4-4.,....- -- - -•,-,,, -...- -., ;I** ;'-,•;. '•=,- •..- ' „ :.:... -.•-•..,- -, ' '" - ' ff""' .- ---- -z" - ' -.**-- '-.-•• -•-•• -'' -• i - • .• ' ' . ~.,,,,--.._* . ' \.. , • . •$-,. :,. \ ) . - :' ; ---- ':,. / , ,-..:. i 1 ...' i .. 4 1 .4 'l :( 1 1. I L 1 ~ .• , 1 ...., •-.. • i . -i 1 . 1,. L . 1 - 1 . .1 . , . • ' t • - -----,, t \'-r -. . _ .:. . r . _ 3 ~ , .• 3. ! I 1 , •• ' - „ . ! . . • .. • - .. - I- .. .-• 4 , ;...• ..:. ~ • , . • 31 • i , ,_- .-- i : ' -- z '-- -'' . POWELL & CO. • . Are now receiving their Secon arge Stock of Fall and Winter go d • . anti,' ar prepared to Exhibit ..- Greater ; variety of Goods, and More attractive prices than oVee:be- °ye. Please call and see their Ne P A Y! =l3=MiE V I" W 1\ CA:sE. DoSTON PLAID DRES: , Goo I s EMI MI ME ONE CASE OF SIIIICTING PLAIDS Now is the in Dry Go( ' Tolca Polon k Co. Good. PO\VELL k CO =I WT. KENT & BLIsB, 'FER THIS DAY, At package Prices. MB KENT £ BLISS, OFFER TIITS DAY. At wholesale" price. ALSO, ONE CASE irk' TWILLED CRA:4II, to be sold at IMIMIN JO UR STOCK and More complete than ever MESE ONE, COME ALL tnue to 'lmy everythin 'hi :OA Notioiis cheap, at • COME NT I BLI SS ', No. 3, AIUOItE,'S 131..00H ELM I=EMI In cff A= The wutmletl . up] A tel %ah.t angt r Are draped tn A radiance-leui Aud yellow plei Are waving get 'Yon keep the memory of another day 4 j', Whei all the Atttumn's languorous softness la Upon the lields,l, and o'er the woodland elope"; When earth layldreautlng In the arms of God; You gathered sheaves of royal golden-rod, !, And bound then' with the-circlet of sweet hopes And dreams, r Of hornet; dear And gate them 1 And with love's Simko of sweet : And pall; Or tral 1 'But I had taup myself to look above Life's cumndoi ay:+, and gave no thought to love, Or even days ltd h yontar o•er the sea; I only heard the syten voleo of Face, Bidding inc lea all elm, and win name— 1' f: And ti.) I seat yo ,1 far away (rota me, H llissing the gm( that long time had been mine. Had I but kept I we precious gift of thine: The rare, gift of by true mid kingly heart— Alas I learned d oo late Its prltTlers north: ; And thus my bviirt Mai thl, long, barren dearth, Fort hate garnered nothing In' he limn of ear t h's vain temp and pleasure. it Is v.eli That in life's nto . Sug 't i'. so hard to tell i M hlch path Intl tonat d to the . gates Of famo;- Eke, wandering 'er th • wary, dattened road, We early faint I . neat h the ponderous load, And so forget th glory of a name. Now through - ill. 'mellow oils::: of ole:aucholy hazy, That yell the gill of these Autumn days.— flazlng, admen the dreary Waste of years, Upon the lonely ay my weary feet line trott, gather sheaves .1 royal golden-rod, Aiel,;:bliol them Rh my unavailing tom's. I ROB "I am' I James" , II There was Franklin's v and the lad "merry, saucy crs to suit ti "Because ••he fau twenty thous ) flneladv, the wife, for We must was the,repl3 "But he ,wi tively furbo. the fanu." , "poe--do married ?" " I have cowardly,.l3 only rt:latii-e, It is not because he owns the f;tt•m and can leave a little money, Milky:, • " Hush, love; I know," Daisy; an swered, putting 'ti" soft, white hand over her husband's lips. " I had nol Other father or mother either, for tin matter, in all mylife," continued Wilbert; "and if the farm is dreary, it is home." "And you,.do not like to he ban- . ished Well!, if you will keep your , promise uril chid Jane over to see • nie. you shall) nut 'be. Now talk •of something elSe. Oh, how can Ii let you go for tweetong months !'' 'For Robert Franklin had under taken to go lin person to see about sonic Western lands in which his uncle had investeil, and which threat ened to involve him in loss. Daisy could, not well take the long journey. arid besides.lPaisy had other scheMes in her wise little -head. Loving Rob ert well, she resolved to - remove the only shadow from his life—the reso kite opposition of his uncle to a tine lady wife. ; Robert Franklin had been One froin the: tarn three days when This ITnele James yielding most reluc tantly to the Pamrs of his old eneiny, chronic rheuMatism. told Jane. his servant, that he -must remain in his room. ' The 'old woman answered promptly : "lf you are going to, be laid lip, Mr. Franklin, I must have some help. Itm getting too old, too, sir; aml trotting up and down stairs isn't as easy Fis it was twenty years ago.". "But who will come, .fans ? Girls are nut plenty tiere, as you know." ,"I've a niece, sir, would come to me, though she'd never live ont." ' "Send for her. then, and—oh. rub my leg, will t• u,?" • Late in the :.ftenoon, a little bus tle beloW stain told the invalid of the arrival -of (the niece. She came with one blink in a wagon from the railway station, and standing - in the wide, dreary-lOoking kitchen, looked .a :picture: of healthy beauty. Soft brOWn curls gathered in• a rich knot left little crinkey ringlets on ,her forehead and caressing the ;round, white throat ; Jorge bt . own eyes light edl a sweet, fair face, and the neat dress of blue troolen.corered:a dain ty . • l• `Will you go up stairs, hiss--` Jane hesitated.l Maro•ar t "1 . "Don't call yout yott de). My nal Mt,. Franklin "Nut yet. • Ti see, scarcely Lai; - . Margaret .100 the blue plate it, the two-pron soiled napkin, f; the neglected fo "Show me w and I will get s Jane led her In 'One was a se smite fine table' ER some glass. Those were ago," whispere Vranklin expe She died, and t used." • With her pre tho hidden words, Margaret Xroin the shelf, a snowy napkh wanted from :wain to the kit :lames _Frank' • effOrt to liold hands, was now chair, musing, ni t the door. 4 Come in !" I,lut he starte a sjveet, bright disiaal old far iitcl44lDiESS, DOUNCIATION MOM ANY '4I.TAWTE'R. TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, I% THURSDAY Unlit, OCTOEit 2 - 8, 1875, a a). trice eiteite: GOLDEN ROD. rntta U. LA PAUltr... lauds, tu rat splendor dressed } ' - 'ear steeped In peaceful rest, kututnn's mellow, golden WWl—, ier as the smile of litMl ; sues of royal golden-rod., s that deck the perfect days. 'e -tinted, that had fu e/ your life— , leasuress and a Well l oved wife, ii,—the while you Lehi myhauds, l i rairture glowing in your . eyeir, aye, neatlisunriy Southern skies, el in strange, foreign landa! iclllarrcwrr . RT'S WIFE. 1 sorry itibout cal sorrow in JZObert cc awl eyes as lie sOoke, • who listened drew her face into dolorous puck !e occasion, five," continued Rob ,ies because you have nd dollars that you are fleeted and useless, not k poor farmer !" show him his mistake," 11 not sec you. lie posi s Volt vowing, ovq to .s he know that we, are of dared to tell ltim t not? But he mid I love him tlt,4rly said 'the new comer. niece Miss, whatever me.is Margaret. Has id his supper?" here's his dinner, you ,Lted." ked at the big tray, ith food heaped upon' iged fork 'and a half -1-1(1 did not wonder at iod. here the things are Nita," she saki. from closet to closet of gilt-edged china inen, table silver, ant bought thirty years ' "whet! :gr. ted to 'be married. ey have never been ty face saddened by gedy of those few took a small tray nd covering it with n, selected what she lit• closet and went Niel); in, weary with the_ book in his aching sitting in a deep arm I hen Margaret-tamped as she obeyed. Snell ace, was new in the r house, strongly in contrast with the bare, meagre room, and desolate air surrounding her. • • •" brought' your- supper,", site said, drawing a little table near We' arm-chair, and covering with iihiie,elotW Then, going to the door sheichtered,agairi With a tray. Upon. a white China dislrwas half a' chieken deli4tely browned,..a potato roasted. in the ashes, and a slice of toast; and besides .this,, a • delicate cup !till of fragtnent tett,' " You •must not scold' if I have anything.wrong," said a clear, sweet voice, " because Aunt Jane is too busy to look after inc. , I cleaned-the fork And spoon, for silver gets,dread fullk black." Then More teiulqly as she marked the painful effort to move the tortured lingers—" Let me cut the.ehicken, sir." • • Grimly vontlering, the old man' suffered himself to be fed, finding ap petite' as the Well-prepared food was eaten, and listening, well pleased to the eherry voice so unfamiliar to his 'lonely life. "dant. Marnret said sitting down the tray in the kitchen again, "I = don't wonder he is sick—no ear" pet, DO curtains, that great hearse of. a lied, and nothing pretty near " It's all clean," said Jane. "Clean it' is, but ohl so doleful. Can't we fix up a cosy room'?" "There's rooms enough'; six on that t100r,7 said Jane, "and none used but the one Mr. Franklin's in, and Mr. Robert's, the little one nextto it." " we'll 'see to-morrow. Can 1 have a man to send to town it 1 Want anything ?" '"lhere's men enough. Will 'you sleep . down here to.nig,lit, or in one of the rooms up stairs ?'' • "Down here, in the next room to. vours." . - " It is now already. I'll go up now and make 3[r. FrankHa comfortable for the night. " Comfortable !'' 'Margaret :said, MEM llut the next morning, sifter put ing a tempting breakfast before the tvalitl,Margaret selected the vacant edrooru she meant to adorn for his se. It was larre, with four windows. lib mid . cheerful. :Is well milted for er purpose. . . . In the intervald of directing Jane, eiitling the man to town, with her orders, and giving her own dainty touelt to everything, Margaret visited the invalid,--reading 'to him, chat ting with lino, and making the long hours tly hy. It was late in the of when she came in to Mr. Franklin, the mom . across the hall has a s6uthern exposure, and I think you, will find it more comfor table than skis one. Will you try to , vet there it Aunt Jane and I will help you r lain Very wellherv.7 ' "ilia you will ' ho better there 'lease come. - • So he yielded ; but once,fairly in the room, he could not repress a cry of ,amazement. , carpeted, white (ttrtaifted, a bridit fire crack- ling in the store, a dainty supper spread upon the table, the room was e ,, s y and c•heert• enough to coax a smile Prow► the grimmest Vet when .1 anws lfranklin sank into the bright eliiiitcovered easy chair and looked around lmiked strairely familial'. That was the parlor carpet taken from the never opened room , below ; those were the parlor curtains fleshy starched and ironed, and I►eld hack with knots of broad. pink ribbon. The bed. bn l'ean, wardrobe. chairs, all were his «n, polished till they shone again 'he snowy bed linen, the,wliite eoun terpane, the' bureau covers with their knotted fringe were all his sister's work, stored away in chests since she died—lonr, long years ago. Even the chintz on the chair was part of some old curtains he had stuffed away in a-long-forgotten cor ner of a Closet.' is very comfortable, and yo► are: a good thoirhtfni'grirl," he said ooking around with a keen apprecia ion of the added comfort. •• I won ler we never thought of using thee. hinge." let me r6ad- the rest of our book to you. I have sou►e ne•w peri odicals iu my trunk if you will look at t hem The days clew by, cold _.i'eather strengthening, till Robert wrote he was coining home one chilly January day. Margaret had been busy for a fornight before in the lower part-of the house, but Mr. Franklin askell no questions. lie had been very ill, but was recovering, so that he hoped to welcome RObert inm, the sitting room. llow- he shrank from return ing to its dreariness: and sending Margaret away, he told no one till he held his nephew's hand fast clasped in his own. "I can neveriell you, 'Robert," he said then, "what Margaret has been to me. No daughter could have tended me more patiently and faith fully, and when I could listen, she read to me and talked as pleasantly as if I were a,companion to her, in stead of a grumpy old bachelor past sixty." ." I am very glad you have been well for." Robert said, turning his head to hide a merry twinkle in his eye; "you look very fine here." But when he carefully led the old man to the sitting room, both were amazed. - Was the handsomely-car peted, cheerfully-furnished room, the dreary old place in which they had been so contented? While they won dered, a new sound greeted them— the tones of a piano touched by skill ful . fingers, and a- voice sweet awl Clear, singing a song of praise. throwing open the door to disclose a beautifully-furnished parlor, Robert saw also a little figure on the Piano stool clad in a shining black silk. with face and pretty jewelry to adorn it. "Margaret!" Uncle James cried But Robert said softly " Margaret It rant Unele ame Daisy—my wife." Then she cane forward with shii mg eyes. " I - wanted to make you love ame," she said in a low, tendeivoiee, "for Robert's sake." . "And for your own," he answered; "but I am bewildered ,my dear. - Where did th'Cse things conic front ?:' "Front my old home. _They are all mine, and you wilt let - , them stay here, will, you not ? for our new . "home 1" she added slYty, slipping her hand into Robert's. I don't want to take Robert from yoti, -Uncle James, when he is all you haye to love, but if you will give me aAdace here, too t I will try to be a gOod daughter to , '' Give you a place here the old man cried, " I think Aio greater grief Could come to me now, Margaret, than 'the thought of lOsing you. God ever bless you,- ehild 7 for few at your age, would have cared 'to so kindly overcome so obstinate an 'old man's studied prejudices." ." Thank you," She whispered, touching her lips to bps for the first time;.- "you have made me very happy" And as she presided over the . care fully-appointed table, a costly fur niAed dining-room, Unele James had used for spare hasneFis and bags of grain, but which was transforthed beyond recognition, there was no cloud on the hrightm* of the face of "Robert7s wife." HOW SHALL WE SLEEP, • • Just how much fresh air shall be Admitted to sleeping apartments dur ing the night Ihrou7,7ll,!open windews seems to be a question whose prac tical solution involves! a wide range of ditfeting opinions.! THre are those who. carefully !exclude evpry breath - of '" night and .depend for tkeir pure oxygen upon the air already . imprisoned within their dwellings. There areithose who fol l'pw the other extreme, sleep with open windows when their therrnome ter-ls among the eial4ies l 'and when ,-, . it sinks below zero l As Usual, a happy medium bet Ween these • ex tremes involves the best conditions ur physieal well being. A Supply Of pure air is as essentinl duriig . the day as Airing the night. Sensible people who understand the princi ples of respiration. will agree to this as.ertion. At the Same time great .i:are should be takci that the fresh air admitted slicubl be as free front dampness as pos,sible,l that it shOuld of he allowed to ente'y in sneli (Lim- titles as to produce a . sudden and great ditll. , reuee in the temperature of the sleel;iig. room, mid that no draughts formed by its!illgreSSshoubl disturb the repose and injure the health of the sleeper. 1 1 r the s e con (Mimi are faithfully Observed, there *ill be fear nights dUring the year Iyhen it is not safe as! well as es.sen- tial to health to sleep with an open window. CoMmon sense and sound judgment must regulate the quantity of outside air requireo, whether the inlet shall be the erao - . funned. by raising , the sash ahovela hoard fitted to the lower part oil the window frame, whether .the upper sash shall let down a few inches. Or whether the ohter air shall have full play through t the wide open windo‘k. There 'may be a system of -ventilaltion that will fully iIIIS . WeV the required purpose to carry ',olf all the impm . e, and bring iil A'esh supply of ptireiair, raised to the; desii*d temperature. We have never seen any ventilatting system of action that would pro ore anything hut partial results, arm ; the ol i d fash ioned way of regulating . the supply of pure air by a judicius use of win do•ws is . ab:'int :is effect Eta' as any that has since been invented. - We would not advocate the ab,:;ollite fashion of sleeping in cold rooms on feather ls'ls. under a mass of l bed clothes that keep the body over hated and ir ritated ,with perspiratiOn while the ittiv2 . s; are drawing hi the vital air at a. temperature that InAcs one shiver to, think of. Even thjs contrast in engierature is nut half so enerva ing and disenT,e prowking as the wlern fashion of sle, r eping in fur :we heated houses, where a blanket i's - .surperthions in call weather, and and every avenue for the entrance of fresh air is almost heri4tically sealed The Westminister /kriew, quotes from Mist; N igfitengajle some very sell:Able remarks on the subject of night air. ller acconfplishments as a schOlar, and her exiverience as a nurse give great weight to her views onAhis important subjiict. She says the. dread of night air is j an extraor dinary fallacy. What air can we breathe at night but a night air?? Our only choice lies betwen pure night air from without, or fiul night air from within. It is Unaccountable that most people perfer the latter. What wonhl they say if it is proved to .he true that one half of the di- cease that we stofer from is oceas ioned by people sleeping with their windlaws slut?? An Open window during most nights in 1 , the year can never hurt anti• one. In great cities night air is often the pnrest and best that can be obtained during the twen ty-four hours. TherefOre. in, town it would be. 'better, if either must be done, to shut the Nvind#s during the day than during the night, for the sake of the sick. The 'absence of the smeke:and the quiet Of the streets make the night the best time for air ing,the patients. A physician con sidered as high medical authority on consumption and climate as§erts that theair in London is nei•tr so ,puFe as after ten o'clock at night. An immense :monk of fresh air is required for healthy respiration. The average respiration of a man is estimated- at twenty-fonr-eullie inch es and the average number of respi- rations Burin; the minnte is twenty. Therefore, 400 cubic feet of air pass through the lungs of an ordinary man in twenty-four hoOrs. Awl.yet knOWing, these facts, we, shut up our house and go to sleep without a thought for the supply of the life producing oxygen. as necessary for the well being of the delicate tissues of the lungs as food for the renewal of the tissues of t the body. If we had. to buy pure-air as NV'p (10 preCiOUS stones, we should socm appreciate its irorth. Because. it ‘free ns iatr,l) we are unwilling to take the pains and eltre to regulate our windows for its' judicious supply, and carelessly breathe a tainted atmosphere which flesh is heir as the - reialty for the trailsgression of physical 1 • SPANISH I'ROVERISS.-0 n the course of iv long article On :3pabbili proverbs thelLendon Gbabe gives, among others the following as indicatory of the national characteristics of the • Span iards: . • Here is a thorough piece °illation al Pritle';'' .", f r t true hidalgo rather lict've- :his clothes..tori mended ;" arid here a - rap at. .risy ; - "You'steal - the pig, am 1 -give away ~ the pettitoes for sakes" 1 ",Horse . play; clown'' and pii's,tallivill never make" arrow," ; is quaint as any of mli and " Under a bad clOak there ten a good tippler" reminds us days ofiCervautes; when - gascoi old seapegraces',hung about I wine_shOp. The following ark very full - of dry' humor: - "II bill to pay at Taster and you Lent very short.", "As uSell monkey's . fat;" is an ' Ohl say : theAhues of Indian discovery. tired 03; treads hard"' is - of I origin. I The following is esp ' lipanish: " The smith's dog at the noise - of the hathmer and at the grinding of teeth." "In ing of love, you begin when. yc and leaVe'oif ivhen yOu can" old truth very, happily put. ' .perity forgets even father and 1 er" is a met very titernly put. homely Spanish selfishness can find refuge in a - proverb su "My - life and Soul are'at your se ` but not lily pak saddle," and "i; the garlic, Peciro ; while I gra6 cheese."' "134ter be the head rat thanAe tail of a lion;" " k want it; I don't want it, but put my hood." here is a, hard. pre steeped in moroseness of experi afrains't sorrowing: •ql'ii who recovers not, or if he recovers, r i ers not ail,. or:if all, not the . age, anti if the same, a mortal ellen y in addition.: Sonic of, these prolverbs are verY pictorial, as One against . recklessness, which runs thus:,' The, glass dealer's li&rse fell out, and he looked on to See which kicked hard est." Many tnrn'oiillie sayings of certain proverbial types, ,like 'l'The unfortunate tailor of Campillo ' who worked fprnothing and found thread. To judge by. the adages, Spain has long been ripe for a reformation., "The (lola climbs the belfry by the. vicar's skirts." :" A turn of the key is better'than a fri :Lt.'s i promise."' ."A church stone . drop§ gold," "llon't take a r•Ood friar for a friend or a had one for ai enemy," "The 'friar who bee*; for God begs for two," . "Where irlar,,s §warm keep your eyes open," '4t is always the fools ,to whom the Virgin appears," are not - sayings expressing much. respect for the.pational faith or its most stren ous advocates. Nor is there partic- . ular - devotiun in the saying, , " From a praying young man and a fasting old one Giod preserve :my cloak:;" while in the old proverb, - Colleerri in!, 'the king ttnd the' inquisition, m-iii!" there is greatCr sense of call 4.in than:respect. . . E:=0:10 BOYS. AND TEMPERANCE• It is the most nattual . thing in the world that 10 - s shotild he off their guard in 'the matter of temperance, forgetting that little :things lead to great, and, that step bV step one goes Think a nunnent, boys.- of tlki essin ,, it will I . )e. to you all the way rough life, tO keep yourf4elf pure froin ever3' haiiit which may be class ed as intemperate. -Think how fre gtivntly,' ho« abnost invariable, the most obje'etionaible habits cluster to gether—sMokiii:T creating a thirst. and tl6t thirst it longimr:for strop , : drink. mid altAgether the constant lowering of the Whole character and tone of it ;man Or boy. Think how true it is that there is not a single argument in fM - or dl the use of to bacco or lignorii. and every reason against it at 011. Think how much better yonr hands anti brain. will work with tenikrate habits; how much better will be the class of friends surroundhyr yoti; how much better able to battle with all the ills of life ; how much better able to serve God and those aiound you; and how much sweeter will be the memory of your name and life When you are laifbaway in the grave, inire and un contaminated froM these things and fail nut to remember how easy will be all battles with sin and trouble with (loci i n voui Ode an Ms falai ill your heart. A SLOT OLOOK• HOW IT MADE GRANGE JUDD RICH Orange Judd. ithe veteran editor 4' the American writes the following lettier to the New York I•rihufe: • .; Sta:—The aeciNutt in Saturday's Tribune, of its new elOck, with the , tppeaKance of a false story that just now met my eye for the hundredth or thousandth time, leads me to send xou it true itecount of an incident iii my busines's experienee; of great in terest to me and robably suggestive. others;, the old T lie, clock was an impkrtant),sfnetor, in the trans; action. j - Some , twenty !years ago, having just succeeded i t'yom • the • editorial chair to tic: propriertOrship. of the .1 nteriefin I ,lyricOurist, I tried to ascertain bi trial • whether advertisi ing would not clo as well fora good thing • as fOr patent Medicines and other humbugs. Though haring a small working capital, I resolved to do what was then rather large thing. viz: taking forty. lines • under '!..Spe eial Notice." ail' in one advertise ment. llelpg nntixpeaedly delayed. I reached, the Tribupe. 'Once at 3 p. with ,the advertisement still to write, whilif mi engagement in the country retinired Mc to take the four o'clock - boat from' Fulton-slip. Securing fortY lines, space at the head of the first' ; cOluinn, I went to the little desk on, the southwest side of the °thee, over which :had stood the old, clock. for, thatiy years -kin tended to Write rapidly at variety of matter during thirty minutes, and in the next twenty Minutes pick outthe strong points, and condense to forty lines. KeePing my eye on the crock occasionally'-,I wrote on "letter-baOis" furni•died at the desk: . and ,pasted thentAogether• until 1 had four'feet or more of copy to condense from. I turned to the ,clerk - and asked iif 1' could have. a line or two : naore than forty. "Yes," hesaid,"you'have the first place; take all the space. 'you want." Chancing to notice the City Hall eloelt.lt pointed to ten minutes of four. The old clock:had stopped . $2 per Annum in Advance. 4 . u . at twenty minutes past three, notici l ed by me. I attempted to draw the pencil : through some portion's of the; manuscript; and in despair threw-thei *hole at the clerk with:an orderJO insert it, and ran for the boat, :'tei save a nine-mile bight-walk.. • I The matter troubled me all night, as an over-hasty thing. anal feared to see the Tribune,. and the probable bill. Starting. before daylight the next morning, I bought the first copy in the' hands of a newsboy. • awl counted 190 'lines, costing $24.50 at that tithe, when , ordinary advertise ments were eight cents and specials twelve and a half cents a line—a terrible dose for a literary man, new in the 'business and with a small :cap ital. Hastening to the Tribune of-,• lice 1 Pahl the bill, and slOwly .and sadly went down to my second-story ollice f fully resolved to act More.dej Tiberately in the future. The result: The bold advertise-1 ment..conspienously inserted, attractl 01 the attention of the Multitude coming in on the morning trains. Over 100 dropped in and subscribed on their waY,to business; others sent in messengers, and others called on their way to a noon lunch. At 30. m. I had received 220 subscribers from that one 'advertisement, and more came next day by Mail. I re', peace' the dose in the Tiibrow and Other Papers. This experience taught •ine that if I wanted to move a crowd with . a big rock I would hurl .it:at them, and not throw it out' in bits of pebble or sand. From that clayl to this I have nev l er been afraid to advertise largely andlbuldly—the : only limit being the tine - I , devote •to preparing good, truthful advertisements, and! to selecting good mediums—the latj. ter a work of no little difficulty.' Myl . suceess in business has been abundJ, antly,satisfactory to myself, and; trust, to any . patrons also. My rule l has been: Find customers by free •a(1-; ‘'ertising, and then keep them i . )3• 1 supplying good articles and by fair dealing; and whatever o f success have had has been largely due to the Tribtr/iP clock, which-stopper) so quietly at the proper time for me. would than typoe- • • 'ink ki like lii an Pros moth- Good oftva .h as 11211 wind k‘ the of a don't it in NE ZEE ends 'COY- SATISFACTION AT THE CENTRAL "The old man'll give it to'him hea vy," whispered a hoy, a r'''ung man named Hopkins came out of the eon•= IME -1101 hash him right up,"' said a secontl. "He'll make• a clothes-line of him in just a minute's time i " put in! a third .one. _ y oung man was a plumher,and it Was a ease of drtinkenc-s. Ile• seem ed to feel his approaching doom. and as' he_ toed the mark. he said, ".Italge, if you'llet, me off. Plld „jump this town in a;minute. ••.Listen, prisoner kt the bar," sand i. the court. ."Voti were drunk. andH you are a plumber. LaSf winter my water-pipe busted, and I ran for a Ithuriber, lie said lie would come right up, and fix it. but . be let the water gush into my potato bill all day long, and never came near. 1 „called upon another, mid he swore by -the horn spoon that he'd have a man there at seven in the morning. - - No in v ,n appeared. .Ic:tiled upon another. and-he also fzdled me. A fourth one Came and shut the water 'off, left it that way for a week. and the fifth 0110 found thepipe frozen.. For elev en long weeks, Charles Hopkins, had to carry water to wash, or • gig without a clean shirt. I've bought ice, :melted snow-, treasured cold tea as you would treasure gold, and the plumbers still deceive me. Think of an aged man like me being compelled 'to wash any face in a teacupful 'of water. and to stagger throug,h alleys and; back yards with a tub On My shoulder. It' you are a plumber. you are like the rest, and if I had, the ' pcm.,,er I'd send you to jail ,for five thousand years. • I'll. make it.three months. as you are a stranger. bait I realy feel conscience-stricken for not putting 011 a greater punishment." The prisoner tried to conceal his Occupation. but not being seecessful. he cheerfully -accepted the,. sentence, z l i t i or l se took, • the head scat on the saw- FUN, FACT, AND FACETLI. IF people think money is scarce. jus let them stand around foi• awhile and hea a pair of prize fighters' discussing thei relative abilities. Till: result ()lan Indiana newspapei contest k thus announced: hi; Judi anapolk daily sat on the Dublin Ikrier You ought to have heard the thin:, squeal." AN experienced fanner opines that the , man who can plow stumpy ground with a pair' of lively ithiles without swearing is prepared t.) go through purgatory with an overcoat on.—.Ertgon Pqe - Press. NETAnA bridegroMn was only dis suaded from the production of a double Iti2hded clergyman by the assurance that the kiss that he had attempted to imprint upon the bride's brow was whoU unpar oxysmal. 131:x: , :ox, of, I.ixth street. rernovetl the holly of his mother-iu-law from the old cemetry the. other day, anti he says lie could find nothing but her jaw,. which was in state of perfect preservation. \.l fl .I,,oxpoN dentists' circular .says that, as a general thing, only men of culture go into. the tooth drawing profession. And. yet it Must he admitted that inany of theni are not men of gentle extraction.. A pair of stairs that ordinarily :arc solid as a rock will straddle in the joints and Teal; and emelt. 'toga . her with all the fer iir.of a tlninder•elap when one attempt ng to climb them noii;ele.tisly late at night. You' ne. always off at nights. I.eander,'• said Mrs. SpilkinS reilroaelifaliy the Vier everking. ''Yes, my -.dear," replied Spil kins. ." remethher even when I first proposed. pin.considered me a pretty {ootl off-cr. AN Ili lady. residing near the corner of Niuety-ninth street and Central Park, was very much disgusted the otlwd• morn ing to find a pet goat -.reclining at. fall length on her breakfast table. 'S'bel said she wanted no more of that sht,•-na4ty-gim Tun stupidest, boy that ever successfully resisted the attempt to propel Dm Oyniol ogr, of the wonlll4er into his i3Otellect nal system will *display more ingenuity and knowledge of, strategy in rohhing., an apple .orehard 'than the colonel of 'a Inilitia regiment. • . SHE used to keep-bits of broken cpina and crockery piled up' in a .convenient corner of the closet, and when asked her reason, for meserving such domestic lum ber, she shot 'a lurid glance at her hustand and merely remarked: "Ile knows what the-111'4 for," . _ , - NOTES ON THEATIONAL ' . - Y ' . . • ;.? 0070BEn .14- a„ ,, .;.: , _ ': ',. ....",.,. I ._ - ,1 - - ST.4O/15 x 4; 0-10.--GOI,OgNITTAT; ST, JA MVi lif; - 4 - YOUTH gir*HlTit. . 1 .11 . 0 V; - i • N. 11. "These things . " .'. the . w*IS which Preeede... "In oider that niy ,joy may be In yOu." - Ills j4y w _the 'je - ii of • linrity-; the joy Of fruittulii ' ; the joy' ; of answered prayer; the jOt of the Father's_] love. , -LAo your joy belilled "• (or made perfect). I 'i:lfis object Was that their joy might, by the indwelling .1:1 his joy,lbe : ', uplifted and: ennobled to. fidnessto the, extreme of heir. capability and satisfac thiM" Thejoy of dirii,t communica4id through tine Holy GliosH is the fullnessl of hunian joy.i But it is imodified - by Ow 1 special personality of eaelt be;liever. ' i • V. 12. This is my leoumandment," Oh; chief c4mprehensiyo conimandmetd; ' including a 0 those alluded to in verse 10: (Compare *chap. xiii: 34) 4 .The law of his kingdom is Ipve•= - --brotheoy lOve, graduilt ed and measured by his Love to his peoPle. Here (Wrist iets forth the vital law which alone can lead to perfect( joy. :" That e love one another as .I have loved yoq." lieleveri loYe one another with a Nye s:milar in kind to that with Which Christ ~ lived theitc but not itudegree. The "4" me w 's - q ualit a tively, not quantitatively. But as it is . an ever-growing love, it e.S;. : iitnilates it. if more and • more to. OM measure of Christ 'S leve:.l How did Christ love then)? :The chief a'spect• of ibis hive hem -dwelt ,'Opon, ,is . itm self-sacrificing character. They are to love one anotllet! .. with a self-saerificing low i But besidtis., it' was an individual love4--a practical lo tit —an eternal love. I • - • - :3 V. 13. "Greater loye Bath no mini than . tids," etc:: This is designed to amplify the force of the T precedink, verse. Christ loved his people with ii. :self-sacrificing !. love, even unto death.; ,Thas lie - gave the highest proof Of bis atfection ff i ir them. lie sealed his sincerity by 1 4? .; blood. So must they sin w 9ieir litutual lov e by all necessary sacrifices; even i in- dying for One anothel, if God so Or dained it. . 'V.. 14 answers the ga l any one tell wile ; ther he l of the friendsi for whom ( principle, Of solution I • Christ. In ntere_ human implie.4- equality ' and Christian love it manifest jection to_ •the Lord;. (chat V. 15. "Henceforth I c wants." Ile . had bef,;Fe wants by implication; (xi coding to Rabbinical not was ;he servant of the te extent this' „idea ' prevai Greeks. lint Christ will after his death regarded he does call them servant: a')) call them servants. subjection; which has cot I NUMBER 2L - ears, is ht cdr,sv: atul heel o act as fi;eon(mupier lie Holy Spirit. -1341 vas u'rit the Pioril's main i i , Aonger to Uc treated as se ORA NG E JEN) passive tnessiinger and a his trill. •'llin I have calf, (Comparo tit. Luke xii: 4 ready railed them friend treated them'Ms friends by auto them the plans and lip;tea4.l igno _felled :dares, they were it sellors and trillingministei trill.' ‘:•For all things tlia of my Father;, I. leave mac 'rids nifty mean that ] l them all things that God I communii•A ed to theil they were ablO at that trim understaml; (i-omp4re in Making known the Fat -Love. he had .germinally ilerealed the ,whole reve him as Goa-Man. They are his!ri ally (v. 14): lie has alre treated them as such by grave. But he reminds iembihip very (hirer friendship of the worhl—iti ship (as has be:en alreatly ty and reciprkiA•lity. thit; still their Lori! (though ,th rants, but fre'd men and et he shows that 'lle is their, I inn them to he his ifrien elitm,se him (thjir anent and; conSegnenp: an hem to their work, am, friends. Thes . c Word.; rel of course, to , their calling ment as Apostles, but in ti they arc trtic,of all who a, believers. The great obie , tidie and Christian calling... and that not transient but >eon. cause , flwing from the eN;e lasth pie of love tii Christ. And tl I thus bring forth permanent spirh through th inward'c . allin and thin of love, shall have reval prayer. litre,' as in verse 7. th l i that of ciffnplete submissim Of w Spirit of Christ in connection .word; this is the effect of 'erven him, and the essential condition manent fruitfulnes lAnd s - lief. iris pryer will alwaiys.bci agri Gd's will,'mul trill theren ed. ' • ' te- s4;.rvant knowah notl •oeth.* If t.;: is .nt . ado nuiseis: of his master. Int V. 17. Horr agnip,, , the horn eourse returns., '• lloW the ,- heel l it !*•'. Pcrmaneney of fruitidepe! vitality of love; love_ to Chit a quent love to the brethreti,i . B ',closing one stanza of the dit i cotti the same time opens anothe l r: I 1 to speak of ,the per,qceuthre !i t hem from the unrenewell i'v employs the thought of fiat 'a c6rafori and n eompensation They cannot e;:pet:t love fro 1 ltecattsii it bated hiiit •tt Tl iitot grOter than his lonl,:7 'seri tli6n ti be. Elie illin front theiworld, and to be li . . , :Ind muleilletl and therefo ll look.for tribulation. But w be .e (vs. 18 7 19) mutual l' 1 to sustain and , ,cornfint Om su'ff'erings. It.' wlll also sere l'ill rebuke to a hating. pease [They must eimquer by lovinl I= =I bas been releil insane asylitin,i it having bee, he did 'lilt, as Was charger ray an adverc.isiag accont , - A Baltinn l ßo servant iil ti' morning triad that time,. hoiwro lighting a itre with herosejm. has benzine of , hei since. ; AN Alabamian, who lost nliat. Buchanan's election, paid the IV week. The reurns luttstAntve verirslowlv in: Alabaina. plug WIIFS a mart W:111_IL a ,'tg o the, grocery three-fourths (i•3t only a, step, bitt if his mire Want.' . .of cool water from a neimhbor's polite, by some mystenotts age : well. suddeplyi becomes rentov titan half 'a nide away.. I Tue steam haunch Secret Waltham yesterday on -wheels, six horses, and created quite a ..' —Bo. toit (;lobe.—L`mph! Did ' Itnow"a secret to go through , 'PO ITliat it Mated. quite a lens, II I esuori now cite nutabr :'brisk died" Tlfe obedience lore •CriendshiV I • reeTrocity itsOf by sul4- ).. 21, 23). all you Writ set= allec 'them seilz.` 1.!,1-14): Lions,lthe discipti son h .. ied •. amonz it • I 4 'llO Il i tore !i.C. is • afi.~in in .sera ~ontwat itinti i fd for cefoith they 'Ate j2,-uidante .., ,iti nu7ll .tri.iil. lea.l They Nvelo -valits,-rbecanic wittt.' his-LA;tAI - 1 itte 1 into flt; l is ' ! •• 1 - tli. 1 I nlcle 3 1 . - cid cixectittif 'ix( il pin frienkh-:Ii; y. t he had af . -.. i a r t he hail maliing hnow - i' , urpiises' of iiii ''t It anirl coiti:. l tteitie ' nt e , ral4 ri. so.f4lie Lord . * 1. I .have pearl e known untii, : lie had Laii;:ilii lesi , ded sliould , i i ~ -2 1: (.7, ailtir.i!i - 4 , ?reive a;11,1, to]'( 12J 01. till, ul' `iltensiviAyq lei ~ 1 Ild i EMI ialied olepsis of LI that hi 4 fpoin .thi4 this ay-( M l ls na i l -Lid) 1 reut =SE EMESIS not se,r-: lors; andi. MEM litlL:e ord Le liy clioos,4 !fore. theA !tg sta”,e piroilitill Lei !lbv, dui', ate p INEZ lima! ilv MIED aplointl eral sense to:be ' , I I ;the apes- Itfulne.4 , ' • rent, EE .e ca t . I frt 4, prinei- !I ose who EMBED in:pii't. jeiley l e idea is ill to the kith his t love-to of per- this ex cable to aniis% el—, ME of iii,- )o'olll t. ids 111)011 (1 come- It N%bilt. =EI i 5 altotit !at :mak and lie' I love ag MB r teem 0 AN had 1N all I. fie rlr, Hlr, MEE separate Ilarnalt N. ley iyittst. Lis ,must tll sp it% ler their e ti ,Ille TM a pullet .; MOllll. suffel- IEIEI utii! }* an .s.ed iroin the 11 pt.( vt.(l that , attftript tc) t.—D,Th re other plan of Nothine; 1 ai J tme. l ager last Con! in tIOMI I. i Re oil ice• a drink well ley that 01 mere thrOugle rqwn by Ansat u ever yny .town Ltion: