TL7NS MISCATION. . . . inrAsl tort:tang In all eases exclustre at sobsertpo "Pailer • • b rir‘ti' 8 PoCULNOTICriI bassrted St, loortitiet per line, for the Int- thserttenoWirl rims MVO per line tor subwoortent insertions. LOCAL NOTICE% same style ss raiding mot! , ter, TIMM CICVIII A LIMN. ADVEKTISE3LtBTB will be Inserted swotting to the tollowisg table of Met : Time. _lw 4 . 4w 1 tra I am i sin I Ir. [-Ga. ... 1 fiTsor - 1 1 10 - I) — &7o — e } axe j moolaso 2. Lite*.... I tool LOD I Loa) io.oo f ia.oo ZAP itTricbei.7..7l to 1 - 7.1)01 - 10.00 I MOO } 11500 111 WA 4 tiii•her - i - :::. -- 1 - 4:40 - 4. - 5 - 40."4.116111T451 WU* h coitienn.. I - 476011 1 1.80 iliCiTo 122.00 )ID.eo cs.t? U - Cokiiiiii..7lTaFfoirrsTerlo V. - ooj 56441 75.00 I column. .. I MOO I 60.001 44.00 j 540 ` 0 - ADMINOTRATOR"S and Itieentors Seats* 2.00; Auditors notices. s 2• 5 0 Dullness Cards. ell !Ines. (per rest) WOO, tddlttenal tines. SLOG tub. YEatILV Advertisemeuts are entitled to quay . terly ettangzs. TitANSIEST tuirertisetnents must be: paid for t AI;VANCE. ALL Resolutions of A tsOclations, Continnnien• tons of limited or individual interest, and eoilr of Marriages and Deaths, earredlng tra line% are ebarged 11101 CICNTS LINE. JOU PITTING, of every Mud, in. Vain and fang fan eel done with neatness and dispatch. Handbill's, 'auks; Card& Pamphlets, 111116 e do, Statements. le., of every variety and style, printed at the shorten notice. • Ttfit REPORT= 11$011 la well supplied with power pmses, a good -assort ment of new type, andeverything In the Printing Uue can be ezecuted La the most artistic mazer and at the Inwen rates: • TERNSINVAEUBLYCASH -4 anti Buslzems . Carla. Tr STREETER. LAW OFFICE., nugO. OVERTON' & 7tIERCUR, ATTon.NErs AT LAIF, 0.710 e over lioutitres Store. tolayeib. Dv. OVERTON. ' ROTINET A. MERCER. QMITII & MONTANYE, Arrott ky NE.TII LAW.--Orke, COrDer M 3.111 and floe St, oppos to Dr. Porters Drug Store. Hw. PATRICK,.ArroIiNty az • LAW. Ofellercursßloek, next door to Express Office, Tcsriude, ra. ~ Jiyl7-72„, WrD SANDERSON, ATTORNEYS AT LAW,' • i TOWAIr DA. PA. ET/. WbOD. lunar J NO. F. %ANDERSON —4 E g q. GRID LEY. .t I . A .ATTORNEY AT LAW, -April t, ;s. I TOWANDA. PA. r_l_ f'. MASON. 1 1._,A • i . . • • ATTORNEY AT LAW, 1 TOWANDA PA. Office prst door south of C. B. Patch' Eep.. Rm. and floor. N0v..18, '75, E . lIILLIS, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. TOWA.NDA. PA. Oelee tit Smtth & Unntanye, (1 E RGE.D. STROUD. ATTORNk r-AT-L Ate, • ' 33 Che tnnt St. ,-* TOWANDA. PA.. Late c+ Phttadelphta. Dee.% "15 & MAXWELL, V 15TTOP.NF:YS k COUNSLOR•t-AT-LAW; Omee oTee 115yzotia Store. Tonme.43. Pa. RE'S' WILT. 'Wit. MAXWELL ,unsalted In German.) • J. AN!? (liar te • • , 11. )75 HERSOM k, KINNEY, Mil A TTORNEY.S-AT-LA.tr, TOWASD, PA. Ohre 1n Trzry & Nobtes.lllo% ECM 1 ?4, ea_ 4.1.11. to, 147,1 H. TitOM.PBON, ATTORIySt .- T LAW, WYALCSINC:. PA, Will attend !less entrusted to his care in Bradford, tint Wyoming Counties. Office %cub novio-74. - W. to all hus gullivau a Porter. • , LSI3ItEE, L. ATTORNEY-AZ:LAW, c),tl4-7 . TOWANDA. PA, OVE T 0 X & ELSBRRE, Arron: NA: S AT tAW, TOWANDA. PA. Raring en. tered Int e.partn.rship. offer their pmtns.stonal 1. bemires t ill., puhlie. t 4 p-4-ittl attention given to InD.h,e. , s ip the Orpluttee and itegter's roprtA. E. oy EnTON, Jrt. (aprtl-7( , ) . N. ('. EI.SilttEE. M . A. I ILL CALIFF, A.TTOILNETS AT LAW, TOWANDA. PA. • al's R1.4-k, firlt door sinith of the Firs hank. up-stairs. • tiatts-tatyi .1. N. CALIFF Oilier. In Na•liatal I( J. St i l l jOinl ENIM ATTORNEY AT LAW, A sit , , U. S. COMMISSIONER, To*ANDA., r, orth Side Pul4le Sqsar6. oMce D t-v ES' & (7ARNOCIIAN, • ATTOIIV.TS AT LAW, ER OUR Blocs TOWAN DA,PA EIMS RPPET, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. io IA pr:parzti to practice ail I;ratiehei; of his pro t Office. 7.IIIF.RPT - 11 BLOCK. (entrance 611" . south BILLO TOW IL N I, %.• ; C 7 l E 0 1;'.0 E W. Illti N K,J ustice of the 11 , a , c. =el l'",nve,yancur: A1:o Insurance Ag7nt,,Lrl aybrl:le, PaJ Ntare'll I Sf. ' _ . CiEO. IV. 11 YE E!, C. K. COUNTY , BruyEy4l!;.—Partleulla• at - telt:1141 given' to lova: ing di , :ontrd ••!Jne. , ()face ove;• re,:, oize n - . .. ‘ . lay:o3-744 Towanda. Pa. I) ft. . M. WOODBURN, PliyAi rSan,and b - nrgnen. Offtee over 0. A. Black's Crocters se re. - . Towatallt.,lDly I. 157713 4 .. . i fitlS: - 1.10IINS()X 4, NE\VTON. , ph,-)ician., andSorgeoim. (Mee over Dr. oo er B:..sZttos ttr.tr, Snore, Tov.•anda. Pa. T. 1:..10 . 11)e4iN, 3t. D. ..D. N. NMr ro - s. M. D. 14..11-7itr. , 1 7kl - poi. DonsoN,DENTL4T. Lr.x . •On tvol after Sept. 21, u1331 - Fe 1,,u.(1 In the eleg.i.it n.wir0,..:11% ion 2ii:l fluor of Dr. Dratt's new once on i4 , :+te Street. Dus!tt-,e solicited. • Sept. 3-74x:f. ; -\ELLY. DENTIST • fil - r M. E;ltti,:..r.fiebrs, Teeth itt.,oltted T:94,"a frlracted wlthorst Oct. 31-71! ' D R. N LI - . DENTIST. rttu ved (date: !tan Tracy t.or ever liont. S Wafr,..;s• m , 11: prep to 90 nil triad, or dental put hr a now g7O rlllaratUA. • ,T11:1::13 75. TIALII k P.A.TTqN, agents for co N N . EcTlj 'I'T 7 , 1 . T:TrA I. 1 . 4 rt. I N....i11i. A Nrg i'ONIPANV. °me, No. 3), tirlltli . .t l'at (4) . ....F , Mork; 1:1 - 1 , 4*.... Sts. Malcli'.lll..f. ( - 1 :" S. R[I.7SSELL'S ‘--I. • . j 1333:10321 T\N S NCE AGE - IC,b Y, May24-70t f rUJIE 1:11\ - 1)ERS'IGNED, ARCHI ."; Ecrt I%ND 1;r11.1)r.i:. wish-, to Ihrorni t T .w.th la and Tlett:lty. that ts - 1;1 giro. p.tr.!rit , :tr avrrilloit to drawlat,' cl•!signs nut .p nrt' aU or '• iii Ilugt nl - twat: palttetr. Sitperints , l , titeA ttlycn for r•tt:•— ona. . t , thqlwatirdl. ()axe N. E. tons ul atti sores:•.: E. FI.E3tINI:, R.•z ul l. Towanda. Pa MO RIXBEE, CARRIAGE. ANI) DF:erfre ATER. Alm, man lirilss Shun Cards, a few r.r.i.oirr Fat Oft",-, C. rAIN ura,:nr, or (1( I - ;a=t of SCE AGENCY . . Tht! fonowing ,E AND FIRE TRIED P RE MA B c!dinnies .erres,Ateil .L.A.NrsmR .rt 110.11 R; E nen N'TS. I • 0. . ISLA lIK .31Arrh 1^44 KINGSBURY, W ATM, LT F FI & CCIDLN? lIEfL Mt INSr ANCE AGENCY. Oflac owner Ma!n % State TOWANDA. PA. NATIONAL BANK 31 - 4.mh '13., .472, F gIST OF TOWANDA. CAPITAL S RPM:B FUND .ers UNUSUAL FACILITIES for or -4 This Bank n the traniastetion , OENVRA INTEREST P BA NKING BUSINESS ID ON DEPOSITS ACCiIIDING ITO AGUEEMENT. s.7rEcIAT. CA NOTES •NP C lIMIEMBIMI 1 17, to SEND 3IfIICEY to any part of bc , , England. Irrland, Scotland, or r.nil towns of Europe, can here for that purpoee. Party wl.ll lb. rnlted Stal ptioetpal ct procure dreg SAGE TICKETS M 1 1 '4 Country, by tbebest steam or o ys on band. Tr in' from the allln g Hns, al F.6ILIZA LOUT O%tE lIEDUCZD ATIS to paid. f0i1 . % S, Bonds; 'old - and Si!yd..' highest •ri • N. N . , SETT. Js. .out, Cast4or JOS, PO WEir rteg, Ell 8: W. ALVORD, Publisher. 100. 11%. VOLUME XXIV'. gnu itildreth. ATARKED DOWN. have this day " Marked Darign" 9.11. laritand complete stock Of DRY G'OODS ) In order to reduce stock as much as possible before removing. EVAN'S iC lIILDRETH. TOWAND A. PA ==t! ban '` Marked Down," FLANNELS d; UNDERWEAR, "CLOAK'S & CLOAKINGS EMBROIDERIES &C. &C. &C. thie'a. rare opportunity to procure Jan. 1, ISM Bargains. - 71. TEE PRICES, BLACK •ALPACA% IIIMIAIRS, AN!) BR L LlA:svm; at 25+; tci cASHMERES at 77;e, to C BLACK :SILKS at tt GU to C TASIRIE, 'HENRIETTA CLOTH.% BOMBA ZINES, CREPE CLOTHS, AT., AC. TOWAXPA. PA will convince yon that va'e are justified in claim n for our elves the cheapest and best line of . 4125,000. .. 50,000. Of all Kinds, including 81.18 and Wonted Fringes Silk and Yak Laces, Braids, an. We We reduced Brown Monne tram I to 2 cep s a yard. Eleiebed .MUsilini Mai Ito 3 cents • . MARKED DOWN. DRESS GOODS, SHAWLS & SKIRTS, CLOTH'S & CASSIMERES, EVANS & lIILDRETH. it A.R K'E D •D 0 W N,. WHITE GOODS, TABLE DAMASKS, NAPKINS & DOYLIES, Buyers of DRY GOODS, will find EVANS HILDRETIL Dec 23, 74 Seat , AT KE - NT & BLISS'. FANCY PRESS GOODS, of all kinds, Creni cheapest to test The be line of BLACK COODS in the market, embracing oar favorite brand We . feet certain that an emantinatlon of our BLACK GOODS STOCK, BLACK COODS in town. FANCY swops, In great variety with many jobs and bargains. TRIMMINGS, IN DOMESTIC GOODS, KENT £ BUSS, Una % Pa. Nov. 23. an 1 t \ i \ i . ' \'l _ feed ,gatice. ..-.... r..~.r•.. ..•.......••.r.. •a a%.n..•..f.r.."✓5d , LOU ITTEXPILIVID., The sweetest notes among the human heartstrings l Aro duU with matt The sweetest churls inilestml by the Angels Aro cloggad with dust; We pipe and pipe again our dreamy music Upon the self4tme strains, While souids of fear and desolation Como beck•ln sad refrains. t3n ib:tmgb the world we go, an army marching With listening ears, Each lunglng, sighing for the heavenly music lie never hears; Each longing, sighing for a word or comfort= A word of tender praise... A word of lore re chnn the eiidlass journey Of earth's hard, bury days They love nr., and We know it; this sutleas For reason's stiar.l Why should they pause to give that love expression ' With gentle care? Why should they pau.c? But stilt our hearts are aching With the gnawing pain Of hungry love that longs to hear the music, And longs and longs lu vain. We love them, and they know 1:; if wa falter, • ' , With Angers numb, Among the unused strings of loves expression, Tlie roles ere dumb. We shriek Within eurselt.s la voiceless /tamer, 0 ; Leaving the words unsold. Atd, tide by side with those we love the dearest, 111 ellenee ou we tread. Thus on we tread, and thus each heart In sllenco Its fate rtonngl. Waiting awl hoping fur the heivenly ntustc Beyond the ills:ant hllls. The only dlffereace of the love In heaven Front love on earth below Is, here we love atilt know not how to tell It, ' And there we all *ball know. EY,ANGLE CHILD. Into my life came gently down A beautiful angel without her crown— And 1 knew her not, for she wore no crown— But 1 dreamed that the wus an earth•burn thing, Nor be,de.l t le s of-her ang,l wing Though she ;:pt,he in the tones %et the angelaslng. Awl my heart was replete 'With u surfeit sweet, • Of her ilarl: blue eyes and her golden hair, Cr beet:idle so pure and 11ei" face to fair, ' Wi t h Ole . love and d.:vutbm.bcatulug there, Of her willing Nandi andlect. Into my life she brought a light That flooded My path with a glory bright— With a light that was more Lima au earthly light— And She lingered awhile in the chamber:, deep Of my heart; Where fondest memories sleep, That waken only to make me weep, With a sorrowing meet For her life so For her:dark blue eyes and her golden hair; For lierstulle f , O pure and ;her face so falf;‘ , - 1 IV ill. the iove and devotion teaming Of her willing hands and feet, She Burred solos; I thought her a part Of the sorrowing thing I call my heatt— With alt her heaaty a part of my heart— But a ware ofs6rrow has over me rolled,: And the In-11, of 'my hop has sadly toli'd, She has flowu to her home to the L eavenip fold. UL : to sorrow is meet For a life so fleet. For her 'datk I,l[o. eyes and her golden hair; For her l atnite so pure and her fi'd7e alt. fair, • With the love and devotion beathing there, Of her willing hands and 11,e:d. ei,iyllitticatt,. gat: TOWERS Or. SMENOE. The P.rince of \Vales has been per mitted to Visit the mysterious towers upon whfch the Parsecs of India ex pose their dead. A correspondent accompanying Lim : In the sOnth western corner of Boni bay Island the low plain swells up rather suddenly in a hill DO ft. high, from the toP of which the whole city, and almost the-whole island, are Vis ible to the i northeast, and to the west and south the wide city. It is a spot which, witliout a doubt, presents the finest view of what has been called one of the choicest scenes of the world, and might well, therefore, have been Selected 1,3 r the gayest vil las of the richest, inhabitants; but it is a fact. that, till the Prince came to India, no European; except it may have been by stealth, had set foot up on it. None, certainly; were privi leged to examine this. strange place, and if any came, which may well 'be doubted, at, most they could but cast furtive glance around them, and steal away again. Two centuries have passed sinee, in this then most deso late and sai•age spot, a grey tower was raised, no'. life or man's habita— tion, but an abode of death, and HO well called:the 'rower of Silence. As time went on four other towers Were . raised around the first, the Parsecs, to whOm these towers belonged, grew in wealth ',and influence, the whole bill became theirs, and a high encir cling wall. With iron gates, barred ac cess to any girt their own nation. Up to the Prince of Wales' visit I do not only say that no stranger had : visited thi4 spot; I say more, that o no one ever-expected to see it. The Parsees are not a proselyting sect`; they wouktnot accept proselytes tho' they came to them voluntarily. There is a veil Of mystery and mysticism over-much that the Princes do, and they de not love to talk with strang ers about their . sacred things. * As, next to the Kince and his at tendance, I was the first ciuropean to visit the Towers of Silence, and have their construction eXplained to me from the Model, it Will .he well, per- haps, to preface whai. I have to say about Madras with an account of the last remarkable thing I have seen in Bombay. L may begin by saying that at the foot of the bill on which the Towers of Silence are erected there are two institutions which do infinite honor to the Parsecs, and which de serve to be, inspected by every visitor of Bombay. _These are the dhara 7 . modhs, orloSpices for the poor Zo; roastrians of -Persia and those of Bombay. I saw seventy-eight Per!' sian Parsee women, seventy-three children, and fifty-eight adult males in the Persian hospie, and delighted they were to tell their grievances to one who could understand and syni , pathizc witjt them. In the hospice for the poOr Parsecs of Bombay I I saw thirty' men and eight women; and I thoroughly convinced myself that they are treated with the most tender charity, which ministers to all their wants. Their food is good, I.they have clean rooms ai ,d . lieau* ful garden, and they live 'in one 'of the most salubrious spots or the whole island. Khurshedgi Ardasir and the sons of S'ardoniji Sorabji Pamk founded these most beneficent institutions,' and their names deserve eolith re perora virum. ' .• • Passing on you may ascend the hill of the TOwers of Silence by a long succession of terraces and eights of steps .from the south, or you may drive in by - a - carriage road-A. ,the R,EGARDLESS TOWANpA, BRADFORD CO northern entrance, and read,: as you pass ttie gate, the inscription, which tells : you that the costly road was. made at the expefise of the son of.the first baronet., Sir Jamshidje, in honor of his father's memory. After driv ing a quarter of al mile yeti Tweed on foot ;up A long, rooky ascent till yott conie to a gat§with the warning, "None but I'arSees may enter!" . But the prince had unsealed the en trance, . V iand, • in Company with the Courteous secretary of the - Parsee .governing committee, I. went, in, and found a., little way . on my right a stone- chapel. or !house -of :prayer, where the Parsee' who attend the funerals perform their. devotions. 14 From this spot there is a most en chanting .and unequaled view over Bombay . which i every European should See - if he can. While 'I sat here a Model of Slower of silence was brought and explained to me ; the same identical model which had interested the Prince, and the expla nation Was given by the same expos itor. As,J, listened, two corpses, one of whicV-Was that of a moped or priest; were brought up the rocky ascent, each followed by about one hundred Parsees, i i 'n white garments. The bierS were carried by four men, and two others follbwed, Who alone are alloWed to enter the towers. The Parsecs whO walked in the 'proces sion had their gal-Monts linked two and two ;' this had A. mystic meaning. The towers are circular, and are so well built that the oldest has st - 3od for two :hundred 3;ears without re quiring to be repaired. They - are formed of hugh stone slabs, well ce mented together, ; and the largest cost £30,000. If it may be assumed that the four other towers cost on ha average £20,000 each, we; should Wive a tenth of a million' invested in these Imildingslalone. Add that Sir .lam sill* gave 100,000 square yards of land and defrayed the expenses of a road, and some idea may be formed of the cost of the whole cetnentery. In the circular external wall there is but one anertiire, about 5, 1 1' ft. square and,lA . ft 'frori tli ; ground, , and .to this th&earriers of the dead ascend by a flight of steps, and there take in the corpse. This outside wall is from 25 to 40 feet high, according to the inequalities of the ground, on which the tower is built. Inside is .'circu lar platform, depressed gradually to wards thel Centre, where is a wall about ten feet in Cliameter. The sur face ofthe platform consisted of flut e] grooveS laid out in three series. With a circular path surrounding each series, .to:which communication is obtained by a straight path leading from the. aperture to the outer wall to the well in the centre of the tower. This stight path intersects the cir cular paths, and is about 3:1 ft: blow], and then-three feet.. The corpses arc deposited in the grooves, those of men occupying the first series,- those of women the second series; and those of children the third. All the bodies are 'absolutely nude, to fulfill the saying, " Naked came 1 into the world, and naked shall I go forth," i l and in half an hour from the time they are Put in the grooves every 1 particle of flesh is stripped from the bones by the numerous vultures that inhabit the, spot. I saw at least two hundred of these filthy birds congre gated . round the two bodies which had juSt been brought,in, and in half an, hour all but:a very few had retired from the feast gorged, and scarce I able to flap their way to the surround ing trees. The skeleton is left to bleach in sun and 4ind till it be comes quite dry. TwO carriers of the dead then enter with gloves on their hands and provided with bags, . with which they. Carry the bones to the central well, where they are cast and crumbled into dust. There are per tbrations in the wall of the well through which any moisture caused by the rain yr otherwise passes and descends Into two, drains at the bot tom, of tlie, building, where it passes through charcOai and so becomes dis infected and inordorous befo're l it reaches the sea. There •is a ladder in the well 133- which the carriers of the dead : descend when it is necessary to clear the perforations from eb struetioas.l The dust in the well ac cumulates so slowly that in the forty years during which the largest towi'r has been used it has risen only live feet. There was no smell from the towers when I was there, and I sup pOse there 4:v.3S none when the prince visited the place, or he would': not have remained a whole hour as he did. . The origin of the whole practice is no doubt the veneration with which the Parsces regard the f t. lements. Fire is too- pure to be poputed by committing corpses - to the flames. Water is almost equally venerated, and, so, too, is, mother earth. hence this strange system hag been-invent ed, by which it is supposed none of the impurities of the corpse can infect • the elements, at all events directly. And everything-that can be thoUght of is done to dispel- the gloomy thoughts': which some parts of the process are engender. The chapels are situated in a• beautiful garden, :where those who .attend . the funeral may sit and enjoy the beauty of flowers and flowing shrubs. Those who depoSit the corpses in the tow ers go through a purification, and the garments they wear when in the Tower of Silence are Pa away in an other to*er erected Or the sole pur pose of receiving them, and 'there they moulder away. I saw this tow er so` filled that the wind was stirring the topmoSt clothes lon the Very brim of the' building. For the rest, I Parsees_believe in the resurrection, but their creed is that the-body raised will be a spiritual and a glorified body. STUMBLING into his - toom, he, sat down on the edge.of the bid and, so liloquized thus: "Feet wet, tight boots, a sore on one hand an' . a felon on the t'other, awl no coot jack in z' house. Sings got .to be dfrent. E'ther I must get married, else get a boot-jack ; Whi' shall I do ?" A mOthei and father.are trying to force their daughter to marry. Daugh- I ter (loquitei)-:—" There are many ma sons why I don't want to marry him; in the first place he is too hideous and stupid."- Mother (with dignity) Stephanie, did I not marry your father ?" , =I [ t) (ii I I I L [ F DENIIRCIATION FROM Q4RTER. • .„' ' NOM IN THE DANDLE. - ';' Eicry.motith learns for itself that theh candle burns. Every night, while the candle lasts, the slaughter giieg on, nd leaves its wingless and dead arot.id it. The light is penman!, and 1 *Ann, and attractive;__ 'and, im sear d by the dead, the foolish crea ture rush into the flames, and drnp, hop lessly signed, their little liesdespoiled, ,• It has been' supposed that -Men have reason, and a moral Sense. It has been supposed that they•Obserim; dm*, conclusions and learn by expin.- ience. Indeed, they have been i'ln the I abit of looking down upon the animal world as a group of iuferibr beings, and as subjects of,. comMis eratiOn on account.of their 'defelise lessness, yet there is a. large elass . 4 men, - reproduced by every 'passing genei ation, that do exactly what the moths do, and die exactly as the moths die. They learn - nothing by obscvation, or experience. They 41raw no conclusions, 'save those i are fatal to :themsclveS. 1 Around a certain elav of brilliant temp ations they gather, night aftiir nigh 1 and with singed wings or liie- e.is 1' aruui expo. ruin, strati upon I tiact• t obtus, der tl tuitur and : EMU EWEN A-s - ngle passion, which treed not be MI ited—further than to say that, when Aallowed by love and a legiti mate rift of life to life; it is pure any p. ssion of the soul,is one Of the eaidles around which the human , moths liein myriads of disgusting deatlt4.-, If anything has been proy ed 41 the observation and exper ience pf the World, it-is that lice:} t'iousn ss, and all illicit gratification of the )assion involved in it, are kilt.- ing, sii s against a man's own nature,. that b - it the Wings are singed nit only, i ut body and soul are degrast ed ands spoiled. Out of all illicit iii- dulgenee come.weakness, a p,,rvert ed mold nature, degradation of char; acter, gross beastliness, benumbed sensibillitics, a disgusting life, and ki disgraceful death. Before its ,bakfid fire thy sanctity of womanhood fadOS away, ;he romance of life dies, and the trantiful ..world looses all iti charm. The lives wrecked upOnthe rock o sensuality arc strewn iii ae67:, .direetipo. Again and again, with endles . repetition, young men yield to the ong of the siren that - be:ruilcia them o their death: They learn'nothin,, they see nothing, i they kw*, nothiw4 bat their wild desire, and oii; they gilt° de.truction and the, desl4. Every young man who reads tlitA article ihas two lives before him. He ilrty el hi nr,el shame and be time. ,w his life pure, s thy rel; to that beast ii, rife Ar' whom hich ol and 3 muted i may h. one thl as bot In brie man's sham o —cons: noblest woman, and an atalij llace in good society. He ye a dirty imagination, or 1 t hates or spurns all impuritg 1 (Thgtisting and poisonon* ‘ ', he may be a man, with 4. powers or immunities, or 4 ,t• a map—or a white sepulehrO i t ious that he carries with him. ais owt dead bones, and all unelean - , liness. I It is. a matter entirely of choice. He knows what one life i 5, and where it cads. He know!. till: essentied quality. anddestiny of the , other. control placcs control is both of ~ecti that co for a si the ill I time. CS eryti an tilt Win er eand have si I ed butt body and soul. Here the, l' sigris - o danger are more apparent than in the other form of sensuality beeaus there is less s( 3 tocrecy. The candle urns in open space, where . all me can see it. 'Law sits behind. and. sal ctions its burning. ' It payS' a .prin ely revenue to the govern ment. Women flaunt their gauzes in it. plergyman sweep their robeS through it. Respectability uses it 'tti light it banquets. In many - regions': of the ountry. it is a highly respec; table e. ndle. Yet every year 110,000,' 1 person, in this country die of intern= p'eranta, • and when we think of the, blasted lives that lire in 'want"- and. Misery, - of wives in despair, of 'lolicS, bruised and blotted out, Of eliildrerf disgraced, of ,alms-bouses filled, of' erimes_.eommitted through its iitiltW, e ice,'of industry extinguished, anal o disease engendered, and remember.. t 'at- tl is has been going On 'll'4 ti t iousa ds of years, wherever wine, hs ben known:: what are we to ' tiiink o ' the men who still press into` :die fire , Have they any more sense: , • 4 I than th moths ? It isalinost enough, to sliak a man's faith in immortali4 ty to Tern that he belongs to - a race that manifest so little sense l and such' i , hopeles recklessness. • j, Ther, is just one way of safet3l and old • one ; and a young man 1 , ;lio, stands t the beginning of his career can choose whether he will walk • irf it, or inLthe way of danger. Thero is a notion abroad among men - that . l wine is good—that when properlYl used it has help in it;—that in a eer tain way it is- food, or a help, in the'' digestinti of' food: ..te believe that' no greaer or more fatal hallucina: tion ever possessed it'for so long, n time. Wine 'is a• • medicine, and . men would tke no , more of it - than of any Other m &eine if it were not pips.; . 1" . • I NTY, PA., THURSDAY: MORNING, FEBRUARY 10. 1816. odies, they strew the ground d them. No instructions, nb ttulations, no observation Of 1 10 sense of duty, no remon ,e of conscience, have any effeiit them. If they were moths in , * ey could'uot be sillier or mote They are, indeed, so far un e domination of theft anitni4 es that they act like animals, :aerilice themselves in IlameS Le world's expelienee 114,4. to lie fatal oosc either. Ile I may throw away on a few illegitimate day:i which cover his ()row with a the presence of his motheri •ome au old man before hi; ith all the wine drained out of 'or Ire may grow up into r . !:, rong.manhood, field iti heal•:: ation to the joys that pertain high estate. Ile may he his heart; he may have a horn he worships, children e delights in, a self-respe4 .nables him to meet unabash; The man who says Ile cannot himself' not only .dies, bn iis'Afaker in !blame" Lie -earl. himself. and, if he does not; la fool and a beast. The sen3e Lity and Purity and self-1 espect ne of eimtinenee i entertainea Isle day, is worth more than it pleasurei of a world for all fhe pure iii heart see Hod,ih, infr and see Him everywhere; l y are supremely blest._ and strong drink form anoth• le in which „millions of meth ged themselves, and destrop *ant in its taste, and agreeable in its first effects. ; The men who drink it, =I .theories as to its healthfulness come afterwards. The world cheats itself, and tries to cheat itself in this thing; and the priests Who prate of "using this world as not abusing it," mound the chemists who claini:a sort of nu tritious propertyl in alchohol which never adds to tissue (!) and the men who make a jest of water-drinking, all knoW perfectly well that wine and strong drink always have done more harm than good in the world', and al ways will until that milleniiim comes whose feet are constantly tripped from under, it by the . drunkards that lie prone in its path. 'The Millenium with a grog shop at every. corner is just as impossible as . •seciirity with a yarglar at every winiloviy or in every room in the house. All. men • know that drink is'a curse, yet, young men sport around, it as if there were some thing very desirable in it, Ad sport. until they are hopelessly singed, and tifen join the great; sad army, that with undiminished numbers, presses onto its certain death. We do not like to become an ex horter inthese columns, but if it were necessary, we would plead with vow , men upon weary knees to touch not the accused thing. Total abstinence, now and forever, is the drunkard's life and death, and there is no good that can possibly come tl) a ►tiara by drinking. Keep out of the candle.- It will ,always singe your wings or destroy yon.—B . y Dr. 1101- land, in Scribner'. Magazine. • BATTLES AND STORMS. It, has been obierveci for many cell hales that storms, meteorological changes - of a striking nature, occur ,4 !tiring or at the close (ir great battles Vlietber 'these results are coinci- dunces, or :is the 4!equenee of physi cal disprbances in the atmosphere. is a' question n , t decisively settl d Of the r.,6t that storms do occur in close ean • nection with battles there is no doubt. Thrill°. the. ' s late war in 1 this country, hardly ati , aetion'of any I t luagnitt de took place, which was not -Accomp:, Med with . wind and rain. 'rho operhtions on the PeniuSula un der:McClellan, were apparently pro luctiVe of continuous rains, and in the great fights around Richmond iid Petersburg inet?orlogical distur- Lances occurred which at times se riously impelled military operations So too abroad. The loss of the great battle - of Solferino iras { ,attributtd by the AUstrian commander to terrific thunder{ storms which broke upon the field and obscured the mnoveniFfnts of the p2werful masses of the enemy. The decisive ,battle or Sadowa, which elo..;ed the ustro-Prussian war in ISi,;i;, Was in like manner accompa nied hy a violent storm. Napoli:on was heard to .remark that so certain was he of causing rain by the explo sions of his artillery during ! Little, that hi! 'dispo'seil his troops in a way to take advantage of clouds when formed. • No reasonaliki .objections can be urged against, thel l theory that great explogions, producing violent con cussions in 'the air, may change its hp:rrometic conditions and cause con- Aensation of moisture. Beside the disruptive effects produced in a great battled there is the evolution of much heat from the combufition of gun powder'and from the massing togeth er of large \ bockics of men. Altogeth er, it is not didicult to find a satisfac tory cause for sudden meteorological changes during great battles, and therefore windi and rain are not to be regarded as simply - coincident with active proceedingsin war. It may be Urged that our national 'anniversary. the Fourth of July, is usually clear, nothwithstanding the vast amounts of gunpowder burned in all parts of the country. This does not, however, meet the case ; the expl:;sions occur all over the country and are comPar il atively Upon a small scale. Tier is not usually a decided cOncen ration of noise at'any one point. If t 'is oc curs, a shower is pretty certain to take place. Last year the day was particularly noisy in Eastern Massa chusetts, r and in. the afternoon the most violent 'thunder-storm of the season burst , over that section of country. TIM question is one of much interest to meterologists,alid is worthy of more careful coniiileration than it has_ received. -46u r2l al of I; mi f ry. = - Lown, AND 14sBAND.— Perhaps there is no morepainful time in a woman's life than the time of transi tion, when the assiduouzi husband is passing` into the 'matter-of-fact hus band, and the wooer is gradually changing into the master. Women, who are so much more sensitive than men, more sentimental, too, and less content to trust in fame° to an un demonstrative affection, arc for the mast part happy only while they are being made love ti). It is not enough to be loved; they want to be told twenty times a day, and to haVe the harmonies of- life enriched by a crowd of "occasional notes" embroi dering the - solid substance by which they live. • Men,',on the contrary, get tired . of making lo v e. When they have weed and won, they are content to be quiet and take all the rest for granted. They arc not cold, however, because they are Secure ; and to most—and those the best—practical kindness is .better than flattery, security ranks bAllre xcitem.,nit and hysteria, and life passed in serene friendship, fear ing no evil, knowing no break, and needing no praising, is better than life passed in a perpetual turmoil of pas4sion, where there are scenes and• tears, and doubt anti broken hearts, if there are notendless courtship and fatiguing demonstrations. • SHALL WE PILIY.--4f it were not for prayer who could abide the ills lite ? - How can any one help crying out when in jeopardy or anguish of soil ? The rough, thoughtless sailor when the storm sweeps down upon him threatening to engulf him, and human aid seems ,I:utile, will alwayS call Upon God for protection, and surely the good man will - prize the .privilege of seelilng divine aid. Even the dying-Stephen prayed, "Lord Je. 'sus receive my: siAtit. l !--EX. • t,..,...„:•,. t : :.. ~,,,, , ~....• • . , i GOING HOYE. .; • It was scarcely more than an hour's, driv!e along a' quiet country • road. oria mile or two the reluctant lagq straggled ,after. Then, we pass-' ed solitary farmhouse and laborers' : cottDges, a tinyard; graveyrd and4hc rugged sides Oa rocky hill. And then - a little belt" "of 'wooded. swamp lands stretched out its arms, of Wand pine , and hemlock,' of spicy odors, and merry little birds, , and squirrels and gray rabbits - Pall the surnitner long. In the winter this was.-the place where the facies - hting out their . washingh; and sometimes theit pearls and diamonds. Beyond, the Toad grew rougher and narrower, winding up hilf,and 41oWn hill, over tumbling brooks and by a noisy rivee, • • . • - OM Hit every rod of the way- was as *ajar. SIS our father's house. We ktiest,wherennd The 4 to look for the wit*eo cups-,of shining - laurels for pinkl azaleas, for the earliest' May flowers, and the latest trails . of clem atis end swinging southern Mess. We I(new,' too, when a meadow fence had been built,. or. mended, and saw, with ready interest, every patch of new ft:him:des on -a wayside house or barn.i We:rioted whose haying was coming on earliest, wlios . & woodpile. was 141.04, and whose corn promised best:iwhile every face we met, was . the. Mee of a friend. SO with ;many a nod and smile, and word of neigh borly greeting, we drove at last faSt as we came to the end of our jok nev, hp to our father's door. 'cli s ey had heard froin within the -sound of our coming wheels; and therei on. the threshold, stood thir mother, smiling, and. stretching out her Nands. Presently, from :across the street, and across the gardens, one alid another of our friends carne in, always so glad to see us.: :Glad to sees us for. urselves..and glad i'or the ripple of outside life we-brought to the quiet . neighborhood. • - the table vas laid with the choicest Of farm and dairy ; the little farbily troubles were . bioaght out for crisid.• erathni and, sympathy as well: as the family joys; and for -our brief stay were the centre of the household and neighborhood. Ilut of ail the pleasures of the•wel rome3iome, the smiling -mother with the outstretched hands is the dearest symbe2l now.. It is eight years since the eager hands- were folded for their rest Under the'grass on the hillside. Folded forever:: We go and come, and come and go, but they becken iieveri)rtore.'- We see the white bead stonethat says so little. and.: yet . So inuchi from the windoWs of the .room that was hers, but we see nothirig hesidqs. - has that- loving heart ftlrgott6n then Are the hands to be strAelied out tO us never• again? AN, the swift J'eet stved forever in theire.oni ing ? Nol No! It is only that Or jow* home.is not yet aceopplish ed. This empty, hungry,. tiehhig " mother-want" will he someday sat- Weinre on our journey, up . bill downhill,and in all s.ort of . weath vr.M ,ong familiar scenes, and innonir, friendly faces. Nearer, and nearer, nister and faster, Already they, Within the rail, may have heard the sOund p 1 our coming;, IA: . pressiiig to, meet tlB with out-stretch= frig Aide:line. The things which God ":bath prepared have not en = teresl into the heart of a man, but AN+ bare daeh-our own thought and exi peetation Of heaven. And for my lilkiven is as a going home. And as thehearens are higher than the earth,4o will be the joy of that ionic cumin; higher than the, joy of, this. TE4PERIMCE INFLUENCE.—It is a cOMalbil 111 MIC of argument smolt': those Who excuse themselves for di:4- sipatiOn, by saying,: " What good done ;by tempirance societie and speeelies ? There is jnst Much' (Linking as ever." I havelalways sistedlthat a rapid change had taken place In relation 1,9 using stimulaiits.• It is Ifow unpopular to be Seen about tippling houses. If a man wants em: 1403'm:et - it, the questiOn is' asked. •!does)te drink?" If a voting man is to be ;Married, the first question:is; "doesjie drinlo". 'lf he applies for membOship in the Masonic. Odd Fel; lows, KnightS of Pythias or other or= tiers, the question is,"does he drink?" And slo it is, all business is governed by the principle of tetnperance ;no - nr:n haS the confldenee of, his neigh-- )or if ;)ie., drinks; ::The necispaynr or rails 0 7 1' the order have hoistiat the bannei of temperance; sOme of the Masoliic- Lodges have established as - , a rule 21.11 at a 'thinking man, - or one who 4als in liquor, is not- fit for mernblrhip.— ea I if() r - n i a ,Re,•4. r. WO3IAN.—WOIII,III is a very nice, and a.. ver2r. cog plicated roaehine Her springs are indefinitely delicate and differ frorry those 'of a man- very nearlytas the' works of , a repeathy* watch dp from those of a town clock.. Look at her body ; how delicately .formedl Examine her sense ; how exquisite and nice! Observe her derstanding; •• how; subtle .and acute !: But 10k into her heart; .there is the. patch Work, composed of parts wondetfully combined that they trint - . be seen thrmigh a miciiSscepe to be clearN comprehended. The pereep-:: Ulm of . a woman is as quick light-: ;ling; : `&sk her how she formed it, and, she cannot answer the question. :As the perception of a . woman is uneom-1 moldy - 4 . 04;k, so their souls and lmagi 7 , nations are uncommonly snsceptihle.' If fewl women-write,i they all talk ;, and every 'onernay judge of them in this' point from every circle they go into.: Spiritl in conversation depends tirely;iupon fancy, and women all: over the world talk better than.nien.. Have they a character to portray, or tiguie to describe, Otiar give - • but three traits, either' tic one or: the Qther,:land the character is known or . the figfe is -before your eyes Tug. recuperative . forces of child hood :ire at times extraordinary., The boy who left school. sick at 10 o'clock in the t . morning'*ill ga to the circus at '2 1 , 4 Nt. the same day, fall otf a seat: sixteen feet high. and never hurt him-. self enough to miss more than fontor Ave ',Oxide of 'the performancn.. I== Or. MI $2 per Annunf'ln Advance. ST. YALTSTINVE4 DAY. .., , , _ ~ , • - Our own ancestry:in England and Scotland have observed some very funny customs withiti the last three centuries . . ' At 'one :i time ,valentines were faihionable anon 4 the nobility, and, while still Seleeted'liy!lot,.it be came the duty of a gentleman to give to. the lady who fell' to:his lot arhand soine present. Pieces ofjeWeiry cost-. in?, , ..thotisands ofclollars*eo not . un usual, though smaller;,- - things, as gloves, Were more•connon. - : _ A goisippy old gentle:olas nataed, Pepys, Whose priVate diary;has come. to 'afford ' , neat terest and amuse ment 6 K , toour time, tellS how lie pent his .Wif.esilk gaiters and stockings for her , ;Talentine.' And ,One yeir, he says,his own.wife einineedlto be his ~ .vatentine,and grumbles tlist, it will cost trim'; five pounds!' ! -•. ! 't,herejwas a tradition . ; aniong the country people that every bird chose its mate ',on Valentines da 3 i; and. at one time it was the custom for yonng folks to go out beforedaylight op the morning and try to eStelf-an o$ And two sparrows in a net:, If ;they sue c ;eded, it was a good bnien, and en titled thcm to gifts froMiltevillagers. Ariothertfashion aolopg thein, was to write the valentine.“. it:.tO an apple or an orange, and steal ; np to the house of `the chosen 'e)fie 'in ithe even ing, open the door'quietly, and throw it in. ! . . ; - , The drollest Valentine I ever heard of lielonfi,s to those old times in Eng land. and consisted of. the rib of a small animal wrapped white satin ribhon, nhicl was tied in , tine lover's knots in Ocveral places. This elegant and suggestive I gift Was:: sent to a and" aecompanied with verses : ; : do contemplate t!its t . ovOy tipe away to Teas"l, - ; ..104111sttai to h-r tin nto : To hapidile..; tit 314 e but a prollt-at So far, i(is uneertainixrheiher or not the lines 'refer to the pleasures of eat ing,,Suggestel (to modern minds) by a rib. !Int they go on' ;tc},v.,4)lain . ~ . . , " 1 (rill .Clam 1:4 , 1 - ..1 ptr!:ll , , ,given„! ..31*IcIt :j..; [,!rF.,1;111;!:, )3 . 1 , 4 l*c.fleavpi, - 1114 bli,: 'MP.; 11/0.:11Pkt:O I NO social frlewl th.....t J , ,!, - ,..,t0 fhar.?, Gave, llie g',.ty t.:(....nie a va;:a;it ;air : ' • Slld cam.—'t' .:5 all r,i,lt:lC r . !• - . whiel leares nothing;, tik:o Ve': - desired. • , , • • I'm sui: - ..;': . 1 Those Were the - days •pf altsl of course the rural Maidens had a sure and 'infallible charm lso'retell g ;the. fkittir husband. I Qn .tlie eve of Valentine's. clay, the'anxinusillm sel prepared for sleep by pinning to her pillory five bay - left: es: one ateach ;corner and one in thC mhtlire (which Must have 'been deliOtful to sleep on, by the way). If drciamed of her sweetheart, she was'litre s.o marry him befi)re the entl c>f tho-ear.. . But to make a . "(101:snre:" the candidate for. Matrimony must boll an ef .. ;g - bard, talic: out ihe and fttfritS place .with;saltl.-', i 4ust be; fore , roin - o• to beo - shelf, and all, and neither speak nor drink i ' atter it. that wouldui: insure her .a vivid dream, tliere.surely could Le no V.irtne in eharins r ,—Otire Thorne, TUE 117 ' pRLD . S Pjruir..t . ilos;.--A pa per was read before the )lanebester, *tatistical Society a.sliort time ago; ealling attention to the 'researches of 'the Gernrtitn statiStieian, I3ehtu and Wagner. with respect,lO tbelpopula tion of tha world. Of the 'many esti mateof the number of inhabitants of our ;;lobe, none are 'aceottnted !'" • :•- trustworthy. In 16,3 i !A esuvins ti mated that there were 5!,000,000,600. Pain Wa!rner set dOwh the num ts.,r at thq present time at I-,391,030.- 600_ The :.11.bjects of Vietnria are rated at 300.000.000. BuSsia has a population of 82,000,000. India, sup posed to f)e, the most populous coun try on the face of the filobe, has Probably ; 300.000,000; inhabitants. yhina is Slid to have 400,000,00 in mbitantsThut the estimate is undoubt edly grosSly exaggerated. The. pop tdation of!, South America: has been Checked by internal discord. In Par afrnay there is said to bade been an actual losii of 337,000: • 'An•eStimate based upon the s , rowtliof (treat Brit ain and the united States gives to the tbrmer cduntrc in the year: 20010 a population of 541;,000,000, and to the hater of 81,000,000. NOTES ON THE INTERNATIONAL LESSONS. 1 FEW:V.III7' 20, Pra Sam. I t :: 17 2 25. (; ,. .n.DEN Chrop. xx:l l 9 FIRST QUARTER. LESSON David's first anointing as King has al- ready come',nutler otir notice, (I sam., xvi.) Phe second anointing took pla i ce at He bron (2 Sant. ii.) This was_ dime by ..111- deli.; the • - other tribes recogni Ish hosheth, the son of Saul, as .'their king ( Saui, David was thirty years old at this time. The third anOinting.Was aS king over. all the tribes &tin; v 1k1)• It occurred seven years and SiX months after the PrevionS one. The rePresenta tives of the • tribes . who were prd,sent at • ; • llebron me this occasion ninu*red ‘259,- xii: 2:34 . 9). ",King pavid made a lea"me with them in Hebron be, • Ore the Lord." "They had no•intention of placing . ;lieir rights at the tlisposal of the king. • (ertiin conditions %verb a/greed to on both sides, ' defining his rights and theirs ; and where such conditions exist, the monarchy is constitutional, :.not absO lUte." !in our iresent- lesson we see David's throne estahlished thro' the two-fokl at tack and defeat of the Philistines.: I. (a.) The first attack; ys. l 'During tbb civil dissensions among the tribes the . 11ilistines had remained quiet, probably because they hoped that is this Y.they would _destriii , themselves, -and feared that!any interference on their part with the faMily quarrel. might lead to un ion and combination of all the tribes. But soon asOhey learned .tha,. cad - se dissen sions were l healed. and David anointed. over all the people, they -felt . that - it was' ....nece4ary to strike an immediate blow and crash the goVerntitent l , in its in finCY. They , *ere .no doubt emboldened bY their past success during the' reign of - Sant. BO they forgot or Gan not the. igteat 'difference in' the two ..cases that IlJehOvall who had rejected - Saul, .tought. i for David. Bytinsattaektheyfre4d Da ,irld from ear embaneestuent.. about- warring . • . against those' who whO had formerly . i . :, - him. The stolid Outage of ~, Pleint tines is apparent in thl er -thet" the t Po l 4 had so . glorieuitly trintaphed over, them* fifteen years before; they came upt? seek' David.. The latter eratirtot, ready. in . i 1i,12-., man appearance.fee the, contliet tick her went doWn to the hold, IProbablyor").ol3 of Adulhtin (1 SAM.. eiii : . ' , I ) ; it linty, have a meri general sense and deteotat e‘ . mountain s tronghold in the desert of . :dab where Davittwittidtew for so longl i a a time to , defend ;hi-illicit from i3aiii; (1 throe. ail: 16). The battleground clitison- - , hy the Philistines'Was . .the Valley of He- . .Phaim (f;:e.', ofr'the ants). "chi ~Ittl s -' iiest side of the Valley of Hinnorn rises t a ' • bare, reeky ridse; beyond whiche,iln.., menses au upland, plain,!eimsiderabli, low- - et than the ridge ,brit almost on i a.. !it)Vri with the . city. Itleatenda southward wartigllethlehem more than a 1144 de- . caning gradually on the southsVeSt ; it co-' tracts at length , intO a' narrow and deep valley called WedY4-3Verd. • The Plain i flat and fertile,but hi rhntl in on aU sides by f rocky hill-tops and ridges. This appears ~ to. he the Valley of IReithaim."—.fOrtri! --_ In the hold- Deihl sought adviee and_ direction - of:the:4o.. He had with hint the High Priest withthe Fritit ; awl ithurn,!- niirn (Light and Truth)+-the means sip; pointed by God forascertaining* Ili* on theociatie questions: Ii avid recognizel ‘. that he. tided through God's will forlGecrit glory, and he feltihis entire dependence.. upon Ilis"guidanoe ' l andetreagth.l Tlin • - spirit of 'Jehovah led him always e'scep , I ' on one Or - two occasions doling his .exile anti that was the sec r ret of hisgreatsiecitial His inquiry in the present case is tWo-fetd ---oy - as to duty, . and (2) as to eacceiai' God gave him a positive, clear answer: .The victory wee to be the Lord's.' '1 - I (h.) The Defeat of the Philisiinea;l v. 20., Enemiraged and ledihy th'espirit of!Jehit-1 , , vali, David went up to the valley ot* He pliaitn and chargedthe vat enemy:lThey reeled and tied befcite hitu in great :lady-, 'OM and Par. How 'graphic and truccince i the deseription ! f' David smotiti.lthein!. there." 'With tree humility and piety he'- acknowledged tlil Lord's goodness. I"The I Lord bath b l roken fOrth, 4c.;',' 1. e., { God) has smitten them befOre me and brokenti their power as a flood; bre a ks through anal carries away whateirer opposes it. It iii! a grand-figure and WcirthY of a pea rioet.i, In commemoration of the - Lord's bretaking,i. forth upon his enemies, avid •mile'd ti el place Ilaal-perazio4 i.x., ' Lord of b'rezch-1 , es:" , • '•. ~ 1 '' , . . Nothieg speaks more clearly the, £414 7 1 (tell and Complete rout ofl the Phililtines thin the _fact that they leftl their ireager , behind them 'on the' field l v. 21., • thela! , ~• 1_ ,• „_ 1 , idols were evident l y er weou. :Joey / "nail I brought them to the war ,as the Irrie -I: iteS once dUltheirl Ark; to encourageitheir I army awl secure victoy. David's dispO-; sition of these was according to the Law ;4 (Dent. vii :5,241. Thus by- al woncerfal instance ofPoetic justice, ,I;avid- avenged the disgrace brought upon Israel by. the Philistines, when they carried awn the i 1 •• • , Ark. • ' i 1 • • 1 H. (a). The Secoint Attack. vs. 22-2 A I . . , The Philistines. nought dismayed, arrte. up again : to the same valley,' probably with increased force. IThl stubborn, per,-1 sistent caerage of this people isvery noti', ecable all thro' their' history. Vi hat pe r riot intervened between these comings Up we cannot certainly! deter: Mine. Again 1 David sought direction Of. the :Lo4dibY'. Uri oi. and Tiimmica. The_ ausweri *as somewhat different Ie 'was not to as sail them directly in front' this time, but to make a circuit - andicorne out 'secretly behind them, over ag,earsf e Certain rani,' berry • plantation. The -battle was obe the Lord's, and beneel David - was simply, to follow Jehovah in his movements •,•''.O a sign was given. It *as' " thcsou i dor a going in the tops of the mulbery tries;,'' That is, the Wind would ploduce a sound in the; tops of the trees; like the =trilling • of an invisible army; and this would; be a, sign that ' the host :0 'God .was moving against his enemy add David's. I Theo tite King-would know that the battle had heL gnu, and' he must be sharp, quick and I: i au4 • I active.' f 1- •i • - • (b)., The Second defeat. V. 25. obeyed the Lord's direction fully 'an reselt was . another ' , *at victory. routed the. Philistines ; ;troin Geba t nei.7ltherhOod of Gaer.l . Geba is the; as Gibeon, (I •'.,'laron,i xiv:l6). It is . isolated hill about . six 'Miles north-w Jerusalem on their ;•va,Y to Gazer. Gazes :is the sanie as Gazer ':(probably a irecir nice); a Canaanitish royal city bet!Ween Beth Horon and and the Nediterrarati, 'on the south-Western border of Ephraim!: Both of these victories seem to belon g ti the. period between * the anointing o Da4 vid at iielnou over all llsraeland thd con quest of the citadel of 4i6n.' . ' Lessons. 1. In bang . Havid wec 0, fe picture of.the 3fes.tiah 'in the preseu dia. pens'ation of his Kingdom . The. he. thei;t rage*and the kings i[tf the earth set #ietri F selves against him itryam (Ps. II). Christ) a' enemies meet together in the 'Wally df Gi, ants, biit iMtr - of the! mouth of 'habe.3 and sucklings l i ie perfects praise. (St. Hatti xi:2s). The time is Coining when he aihall 1 ho established and recognized -asKig of Kings and lord of Lords (Rev. xil l l 7 , --, 1 2. Every believer; should use diserrtion.l in opposing evil. It••12.)1 1 be MCC ry i IF soinetimes'tb retreat temporarily to mO hold until . the way iii Open for attar 'and victory. We must _cot go before w . are . I sent, nor disregard thelopenings of P - vi i 1 l c dense. • , -: ' 1. 1 . :- , 3.f Every believer is now a High riest ! With God;and has ail. din and Thu miut 1 for his own use. Ha itai ',the "high "of I the Spirit.aud the "Trtith7 of thel'ord. I He can always obtaini.c4od'S direction' and I know his Will. "Thevlithall all be taiight 4 of (loci." .. —'- - ' ..1 • i 4. We need never.; fear defeat when God says, `.`Go up 2 ni, dt mattersnot hott• numerous and strong may be the enemy. 1 ‘• If God be for us, - 'wlto Can be aprinst, es 2!' • . I . 1 • 1 . • 5. We must not defile 'ourselves ryitlr the iTdels of this woeldLl I.l.Tohn II:1?-10. i 6. Wemtist not think because we ,haVd I conquered sin once .'tha t our warefre IS • ended. The Devil Peter; knows whin boll is beaten. lie will of stay Whipped,. l i He follows as to the 'very threshold of 1 Heaven. ' ' : - I -- . ° 7. God gives 'his people gracion in dicatious of his prOtenee and march tci i 'victory. We can always 'beat the going :' in the. tops of the trees! if We listen fur it. The spiritual can hear the delicate way; inns of the Spirit as he moves among Irtert When God is about trk revive his work; he lets his Praying servant, knOw his pui pose• --- - i , 7.n.1, • . 1I ~ 8. ' ‘,' Observe 'rho' Gook promised :o go before them and ismitethit:Philistinoi, yet ' David must...bestir himself and be ly to pursue the victory. r illete, Geti's , . ea' must • quicken - our iendeavots. If God work iu us both to - will-and to do, .i does not follavr that we . Masi sit still, - as hose who itave. nothing' to i deti but we ?nest.. therr:fore work out . mir salvation with' il Os riblo Cam. and dilligi l mcO." • ,(11eni , y). '' t • '-- ( t• I Pria gladthat this Coffee don't - oWe tile' anything," said Brae*. it boarder at the' breakfast table. -...'fiVbr, ) ,". - said Stull b. "Because I don't- believe i it .would e'er settle I". , ' ' ..' .. 1 I •- - '' S - - -- - I .I 1 •1_ : 1.. :'' ..-.::.: - :*, -, =I Ll= I I El E 'NUME ER 34. mil tir II? 1 , th? st