TERM 07 :11711MATION. air- An rerthing In all Aloes lizeinlirs of inibisrip. !to tothe saner. SPECIAL!. WIT IClatriserted it prelims nitit2B M hue, for the firstinsertion. And rislt,cnirss Vor line for siteequent insertion'. LOCAL NOTICES, wane; style as resdrail tact- ter, TWEITY CANTS A LINZ ' ' ktiVISIZTIA ..19i1LNTS wilrbe ilnleftetieeosiling to the followinrable of 7• Than, iv ofor I •amt an. ..... 1 ,..au s.oo I 6.001 6.00 j IOAO 115.00 1n0b00..i.-1:2.C5) 15.00 I 11.00 1 10.00115.00 )20.00 ' MOO I 20.00 I PITO Inebes.... 2.50 tinehes.:.. 2.00 'l .- etdl3,;„ I 5.00 7.00 1 10.00 11.501 14.00 18.25 1 25.00 12.001 15.00-122.00 14, column 1 eohunn. 110.00 I 26.001 MOD fitriiiil aloe t.tkoo akoo eo.oa I tO.OO I la& "AMEDIIIMATOIIIi and Executors NUMMI* t.OO t, Auditors notices. 112. Mi Ansineas Carda, Eve • ince, (par rear) additional lines.dt.oo each. TEARLE Advertlaements ate entitled to q - •t este change*, TEANBIENE advertisements paid far LH ADVANCE.' •••= ALL •Reantetions of Assoelationa. 'Commenter ttetis Itteined-or individual Interest. sad notices of 'Mintage* and Deaths. exeledhig live Mammy TEE CitleTS VERUNE. , .• • / 7 • JOB PRINTING. ot eiretirktod,lo plain and fancy enter'. diine with sestoges and dispatch. Handbills lilanti, Carilk.'-Parsphlets.•Biltheadl alationonto, Am, of a d style, 'minted at - the • aborted till mi) TEE Exavirritat Mhos to Inn =MEM 4, a goal won meet of nem typag - • • ex in the Meting flue can. be exoestodlo - • most saddle manner ei/d at. the . I tro•toi. - . •'" - • • TERIaINVA • 'ABLY CAM - Prife.l2ll Carh. t lAMBS WOOD, ATTORNEY-AT:LAW. _ TOWANDA, P. mchB-74 I OINT. SANTWItSON, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, • OFFICE.-Means Rutidlng (fiver Powell's Store ineb9.l6 • TOWANDA, PA. • c !us. L. TIA - 1.,V 41 . \ : , . 1 \ ' NOTARY P tIB Li O. Fire aMi Tate 'minim:a In first-cimi companies, Macs with Pattitk h Foyle; Towanda, ra:ifeb22.) S ,7•Cri A Wm . .. LITTLE . : -.4 f TOME ra• r At-L.`AIV. Vf1if.,171.4,pA . 6 *.7:ire over i)ent,,e.r•e ' Prorlsinn Store, Mato 817reet, viiU4l:6,, ApitllB.: "76. . , , -Tt. a .....„ic t i __,_ . liE D. STROUD,. 1 Toß.vir AND CO L'A'S ELLOR-4 T-L,4 Tr. -Matn-et., tour doors isito tint Trard House. tees In Soprani(' Court .. t .......,nsylvantm rind Trotted ,TOWANDA, PA. ..% '" t, s Court.s.--ICrert.76. ..... . . a STREETER LA.W . OI7ICr, „ sum; OVERTON Ac; MEOCTIR, - • . . ATTORNEY S AT LAW , OWANDA P. Offlee'over Montanyes Store. • [ may 673 PriA, GoVizirrort.. . RODIEY A. MERCUR M. M4XWEI4L, 4TTOBPBT 0722C2 0 ; rr1 DArrox•p inii 12, 1871. pATRICK & FOYL ArraßirsYB-A Qface, In ifetenrs Block ANGLE: ATTORNBr-AT- Oftica*lth Darin & Carne jan4,"77. MASON, - . - k+rou (Mice first date south of C pnd door. • • - p 4. L. 111 N. LIS,' • ATToalm °Moe with Smith & Montan y j ANDREW W}L .ITTORNIir & COUW • °Mee over Penes , Book Stan ti.vetts ak Long. Towanda. Pa Gerjnan. 12, 16.] :AFPHERSON & • . • A TTORSS,F6-A 'A W, TOWANDA, PA. 011N9ein T ;1-Noble's Block, Towanda, Pe..., Jan. 10, 1876. 4 1-i. E. F. GOFF, ATTO.RNE :1"-A 72 Tr. , . Matti Strotd, - (.1 doors north of house), To utla, Pa. pril 12, 1877. - ir H. TITOMPSO;S/ittonszy V • AT LAw, WTALust NO* Will attend to air Witness entrusted to his in dtradford. Sullivan anctWyoriting Counties • . 1 reOvith Esq. Porter. •.; rhovl9-74. EP MZEMI ATTORNEY-AT To IIdME! C L. LAMB, • ATTOIiNA-AT-L &Mittloas promptly attended ( ) V . !, T I'tiTON S, E L SB_ ; tend anartnerstifit. Offgj t4l. ido ru ,I , c al 10,111,,S It; the Orphan't awr Rcip E. 4.)V F. ItT o:ft v) R. (aprl 4-70) As & CALIF I ' • .ATTORNEYS •• - • 0:1^0 • VOOd's Block, first door Nati oil tk, up-stalrs. Hi. J. k AUBE.. daliS-73131 tIIVAEY & PAYN: . NET'S-AT-14 IU. u 'N ODLE'S ULOCK, STIZZET • . s - TOWANPIA, 1. . (. 1117) • _ PAYNE Toitx 'tz. - mi.x, V . A4ORN EY AT-LAW, ... . .: AND • - • ... t ,3 U. S. COMMISSION i TOWA Z. Ottlec-j!ioniPido Public Square CARNOCHAIS', 3 : , ATTORNEYS AT LAW, • ME nipUR BLOCS'; DeR '; ' !XOWANIIIA - - , 1.1 11.1131 ATTORNEY-AT-LAP • Is preastbd to practlee all pranehe pro IcsaiOn. i tifllce. 3f Earl. -81.061{, I (entiance on O gld,) TWANI,.)* A; , . - 1 - :;. f Oita 1111 S. 3,I;;WOODBURN, p, clan end &oilcan. office over 0. A. it mockery store. 1 Towanda, May I larnye. ~ , . . 1 - 4 1 _ •D. PA4g,-..3.-D, -.,... . . . % .4* - Plll - slG , itx A...cp. SUROHON. r ()Mee over Nonfat* 'S.to , Ottice ' lltoltra rtond to 52, 4..14,, and ten '2 to , r. M. tiprel4attentt. given totits ,- enses of, a E o ardi.Ear;-0ct.19,:16- FEW PHYSIC, (plea over Dr.Parte" Jll:ntr. .I\l4.C!u and steer e rottnitt of ~ T estate Street. i I 3-74Lf -13. K .11ter M. E. • rr,...t4i itiFt•ited ./ 11 * liese.. Teeth ;34-72. M C. M". ST itaxinc remov6l . l uTp ro e's ucices .ts itow , repad' to do if 0.'.1131,111* , , put to a ue • 11,0:v1375. MEM BOOK itt:l . ol:Tk:it Ili: I LDING NNE IKSUR C starzs4ott 134;4. . 1 1876. riWANDA p i s LNCE AGENCY. 1 . '4 in &rift, ' Court:W. l M NOBLE & INCEST, mix; TNSU4ANCH .il ....... . -• The , ItELIAB,LE. AY • - • CompanlM I. sic:siting, mum' fir,:h vr.tott, Asr 30.0 k 46.00 S. W. AlLiforki, Publisher. 75.01) lie. Kent & Bliss Kent & Br: Kent, & BB . : Kent & Bliss Kent - & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent:A Blis - Kent & Bliss - Kent-& Bliss Kant & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent .& Blitis Kent & Bliss Kent & Blies Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent A; Bliss Kent &. Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss ' ent &„Bliss ent &; l ies iKent & h iss rent & liss Kent & Bliss Kent & ,Bliss Kent 4; Bliss, Kent & Bliss: Kent & Bliss; Kent & Bliss! Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss" Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bilis Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent &•Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Blis. , Kent & Bliss' Kent '& Bliss Kent & Bliss' Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss , Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Rent & Bilis Kent & Blissi l Kent & Bliss' Kent & Bliss Kent & Bligs Kent & Bligs, Kent & Bliss Kent & Blissi Kent & Bliss. Kent & Bliss Kea' & Bliss t Kent &„ Rfissi Kent & Bliis Kent & Bliss Kent . & Bliss; Kent & Bliss! Kent & Miss . ! Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss Kent & Bliss TiIOANDA, PA MO TowANDA, PA anda, Pa.. jIYI7-73. ToWanda, Pa. • AT LAW, WANDA PA. etv.h. VAq.. !we EIIIILSM -LAW, • AI4DA, PA. - [n0v1.145 OR-AT:-LAW o daois north of ay be consulted MI rso !ZEE July 27,18 ATTOR- Having • en nmte.a.m.i Ilea given t( Courts. THIS WAY FOR Emma I .AR C ALi DA, PA. .the First ali=l AND WARRANTED TO' FIT 3U . ERCHANT PALLOR, CLOTHS, • GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS, HATS, CAPS, Tie te prepared to furnish to order. tnado to ineasnre, • UNSON,! AND SURGEON :Sono Drug Store, Towand 'SON, DENTIST. pt. 21, may 1 found In L._ • of flut' of Pratt's new usiness solicited. • DEsTlST.—Office • afield's, Tow;iada, Pa. , Silver, Itulwr, and ratted wittiont path. 'LY; DENTIST, Dental eftiee lnto Tracy r Kent & 11111as' - inure, kinds of dental Work. aparatue." 1221 'DER, FLOOR: TOWANDA /i, I GENCY TOWANDA, Pk ENciy. FIRE TRIED Tented: OM faiIinCIIANTS. P. /4. X ACL • ■ ■ NM VOI:131.E XXXYIIT Esai, k Miss ' \ MAY-=Strlitkir k it I 45-L 1- • MEANT & BUM Usy4 OW day opened a fall II y, • OV LINEN SUITS, DRESS LINENS; PIQUE, .Nebo DRESS GOODS FANS-FANS=I O ANS PARASOLS, PARASOLS, PARASOLS. Elega Ina of • I 110,,S1EBY, HO ERY, HOSIER G.LOV.ES, GLOVES, GLOVES: Bealitlitri SUMMER 'SHAWLS Beautiful SUMNER SIIdIVLS, Beautiful SUMMER SHAWLS Don't fait to call and See our SILKS, SILKS, \SILKS, ,SILKS, SILO S, We have opened. In eonnee lon with our Dg tided& a • MERCHANT TAILQBING DEPARTMENT, Where will be found a complete/ i amorl men t of CL 0 THS, - CLOTHS, CLOTHS &c., &el ,//1 KENT/i BLISS. Towanda, May 10, .1871 merchant Tailor. 4, SPICING SUITS Made to ordoe, J. L. IVIcMAHOPL OrrOSITE COURT HOUSE SQUARE, H 4 just received NEW AND s COLIpLKTS STOCK OH &a, &a, &o NM PRING Asl) SUMMER SUITS, .T QUALITY & LATEST STYLES, era the tneft reasonable Of any eatabllihment vanda. eail sad examine my stock. , • .1. L. McMAIIOti la, Pi:; April 8, 1877, REST AWARDS!' CETENNIA4, J. REYNOLDS £ SON. Northwest corner MAYO YILBERT , STB, PEILA., anntactarera of patented T -IRON. AIR-TIGHT: HEATERS, oz, and Clinker43rinding Grates far Autlirseitio-or Bituminous Coal.. _ • czwriessmea. .T -IRON HEATERS. Rot Bltufftous Coal. Kkrwrome • fin-IRON HEATERS, Itazgoo, Low• Down Grotto, Etc. ambits Boor NILO to sn7; address INS Bsroux sp.EcTiNg. • II Aron Il i "1!1r, , Desc { .~a.~~. . TMMENSE 131 I\ o4. I ' \ APRING AND 81ThfliER\C \ LOTIllip Just apesied at the old stan d all • Agreeably with atutowitecascad t • DAVIS 'gasified the stow Ia occupied by Solon= & Son with the-most complits assortawat of • READY-MADR CLOTHING! ily e sZe r V eseri prrig n er7tg r ti l aa l !cr et ". made Clothing for KEN'S, T0171134' AND cmurantislrssia. FURNISHING GOODS \ HATS, CAPS, TRUNKS, • VALISES,i UMBRELLAS, CANES, &a. • , ME 2 - I desire to announce 'to trult,tleoPle Bradford County: that I have pennanently tecated In Towan da, and shall endoovor, by close attention to nesa, mall prate and fair dealing, to merit and secure my share of patronage. ...; _ ,_ My stock Is NEW. having been parehasent daring the past tiro weeks ter 04811. .. , . . • • AND Towandigi April is, 1671 DON'T YOU FORGET IT READY-MADE CLOTHING HIS PRICES ARE LOWER Ii THAN ANY OTHER ESTABLISHMENT THIS SIDE Pr TUE OLD'COUNTUT! BOUGHT FOR CASH, AND GUARANTEED TO ItE•SUST ' 7 WHAT THEY ARE RECOMMENURD: IN THE CLOTHING LINEI PUOM YHE CHEAPEST TO - 1- TUE MOST 'COSTLY-13 AUMEHT !FEATLY ,AND SUBSTANTIALLY MADE,. AT ABOUT THE COST OF MATERIALS: SPRING HAT;,\ SPRIIteOTERCbATS, TASTY UMBRELLAS. • - BEST LINE OF FURNISHING Goonit EVER . OFTEILED IN,THIS mat= PERMANENTLY LOCATED IN TOWANDA, , And they therefore run no risk of Leine cheated AI In cases at merely transient dealers, .who never continuo long In one place. • .• .. Tpwaiida, Mirth 22, 1877. RENOVATED! RENEWED !`l • . - • . REPLENISIIEDII - • , • 1 .:'' ' 'Dating the rut winter I have by close applloo k than to bealneaa. . ,-- `CLPANED- OITT . - . r i e, og in st y ak of ul t ri ery-Ma4le Clothin g. snit acrir AN ENTIRELY NEW ASSORTMENT, Purchased with a speetat stew to the wardaot ' TOWANDA AND VICINITYI `By long experience in trade here. I believe/ SM. derstand what the people dealrein the CLOTHING *LINE, . And feel sure that my stock, now being opened, CANNOT TAIL yo SUIT PRICES WERE NEVER . 80 LOW_I • And I can offer everything IN THE LINE OF CLOTHING And - GENTS , FIIRNISHING GOODS At pthr.whlehlety e?mpllttol4 I • WE WILE -NOT BE UNDEREOLDI . • RemeMber.iids wkia' of Clothing 7 - z 11. r .• • . I • . ' . , , \ , = M. IL SOLOYOZ t BON. J. •DAYIS: WHAT .I II Why, the tact that M. E. BOSENFIELD Stilt ca nttnoes to seU 'AT TUE OLD STAND Also, that lils goods.ara . always Ills stock comprises ofverytitirtig , ♦ dice assortment of BOYS! CLOTHING, And the My customers know that I am M. E. BOSENIP/ELD. IL JACOBS. if • _ 1111 TOWANDA t t BRADFOitiI fOlitTr i. ?-I\TORStiAt, MORNING, '404 2; Si*Ad iikote- . • - ' -.. LOVE AND BEASON. ~,:', ' Young Lave went Minos witheutteir Upon alotuileaf, - . . . .." , . . - Though Reason laid, " Pray lei me stair, Or you Will come to grief." ' •i Then langherithe - sauey god and oiled; - ' - "Irewlopk too grum.and blue;' . - • Go walk along the rivers ilde,, - , 1 . 111 paddle my Own canoe." ' . --. / •Bo Realan, pioddlng . on the shore. r: . • , 4 : Watched tare's f rail shillop eitlatiag. ' And th v height..."Thou/sh Walkine hid borer ' • - \ It's very risky boating.. / . ' - • • . HaiiirOmung Imp, you will he wrecked, • - Your livery livery frail/ - -. . . .... mit Lov esi!ang !MI. " 1 xPeick • • ' - '-' Tolukve iijolly sail:" f . s• ' •• •' I : " __/,_ Kep off the melts r d ..tara c ., . . . They oft be g lib c , stsanger.r) Quoth Love—" A ; nee to stupid WU! • - • ' I rather like th danger. , ' The stream Is ooth,the sky is clear, You need - no Dome to ensure ' • The crystal ps through lileh I steer, .111, pliOt sliall.be Plenum; " . . On with he tide did Cupid Orli4 ~ Ills h nd at Reason 10614, .. , \ To where those sun-lit waters swift Reiff, down the rocks went - hissing ; •,.. ~ A Warning scorned, a danger spurned,. ' • Of 'Which he mit no token; - 7' f.orre , s lotus leaf was overturned, / His fairy rudder broken; - • • ' The gnsarner , srdi was tcnn to strings;_ ' Ho selled on Pleasure, erylog : • , 1, "Come, let us rise': TbOugh drenched spy vino., TlierAi light enough for dying. • Prom yonder hark—to ruin Whirled.— 1 • We hall escape in season. I'll fly with Pleasure through the rorld, And leave my -wrecks to Beason." • —Reitz rertner Jeffrey. ' = A STRANGE DREW. . As illustrating the manner in which impressions:sof the past may emerge from the brain, -I Shall here furnish an .instance closely on the supernat ural, and , fairly\representing the Most marvelous of 'these psychologi cal phenomena. It• occurred to' a physician; who related it, in my hear ing, to a circle. whose conversatiOn had turned on the subject of person al ,fear. ,"What you are saying," remarked, "maybe very. true; but I can assure you that the sentiment•Of fear, in its utmost degree, is. mud', less common than you suppose'; and -though yen may be surprised f,o heat . me say it, I know from personal eX periefice - that this is certainly so. Wheo I was five'ot six years . old', I dreamed that I *ea passing' by •a' large - pond of water in a very solita-• ry place. On the opposite side of it there stood a great treatliat looked as if it had been struck by lightning, and • in the pond at another part .an Old fallen trunk, on-one' of the prone limbs of which .there -was a turtle sunning liithself. On a sudden a' wind arose, whibh foreed-me into the pond,, and ire . my dying struggles to o extricate myself from its, green and slimy waters 1 awoke,•trernblind with fear. • " About eight years subsequently, while recovering from a nearly fatal attack of searlet - fever, this . dream Presented itself to me, identical in all respects,. again. Even up td - this time 1 think I had never seen'a 'W ing tortoise or 'turtle, but I indis tinctly remember that there was a picture of one in -the first spelling book that had been given ine. Per haps on account of my critical condi tion, this Second dream itkipreased me more dreadfully than the first. " A dozen years more elapsed. I had; become a physician, and was nowi actively pursuing my profess sional duties in one of the Southern States: It, so fell out that one, July afternoon . Z had to take a long and Wearisome ride on horseback..lt was Sundly, end. extremely _ hot; the , path was solitary, there was not' a house for miles. The finest had that intense silence , so characteristic of this timeof tile day; all "the wild animals had gone to their retreats to be rid Of the heat of the sun. Sud denly- t one point of the'road I came . upon 'alcgreat, stagnant water pool, and casting my eyes acroseit, there stood a pine. tree hlasted-by light ning, and on a log thatwas nearly even with the endue -a turtle was basking in the. sun.l The amain of 'my infancy was upon - me; the bridle fell from my hands,' an unutterable rep- hadowed me, and I slunk theaccursed place. business • occasionally inid have_ drawn me that not summon resolution 1 1 to go, u_ _Jtilallar have taken round about paths. At seemed tome pro foundly ainazinithat the dream,that I had had should \after twenty years be realized, withoutrespeet to differ enee of scene, or climate, or age. A good clergyman of my neguaint anee took the opportuni yof improv-. g the circnmstahce to my spiritual Vlirantage, and in his kind \enthusi asm—for .he knew that I had been more than once bronOt to, the \ point' of death by fevers—interpreted my dream that I - should die of marsh , plasm. - \s 1.1 'Most persons have doubtlea Ob serVed that they suddenly encounter events of a trivial nature in their course of - life, of which they have sfillndistinct recollection that they have dreanied before.: - Tor a long time it seemed to meltiukt this was a case of that kind, and thatit might , be set down , amongthe mysterious and unaccountable. ' ROW wonderful it is 'that we so ofteki fail to See the simple explanation cif things, *hen that explanation is •actually intrud ing itself before us And so in this case; it :was long ,before.thetruth gleamed in -upon me i - before my rea soning poweis shook otr the delusive . impressions /of my senses. B u t it Occurresfatlast; for I Said to my self, Isit more probable that snAh a, mystery /is true;\oi that 1, have dreamed for -'the .third time Vint which 'I lout idreaky dreamethbf twice before? Have really seen the blasted tree and the sunning-41r= tle . 7'Are wearyyjde — oilifty miles, the ,noontide heat,' the - silence that could almost be felt; no ProieeatiOn to a dream : ? have ;ridden under such circumstances many a mile test aticep, and have - awbiteandimosv . n, it; and so resolved ;half ever cir cumetascofferirried me.tothoso parts • again, I weal *Misty myself - as to the mattok; • • . RICGiiinfESS Orprara* 110 4 Yllolt ANT TIMr/3,11 K Accordingly, after when fnddelir la 10 -there t t rents ted the well. scene.''' There was'atill pool, but the blasted , gone; and after - I had , horse through the marshy.. far as I could 'force. him; and then distabtulted . add pursued a:elose in vestigation oil foot in every direction around the spot' I was cleatiy nen vinced that. no ,pine -tree 'badever graven there ; not a' stomptor any token of ita remains could be well; and so now I hare concluded that at the glimse 'of the water, with the' readiness of 'those whO are ,falling asleep, I had' adoPted an external :fact - into a dream ;. that it bad allitla• ed the • trains of ' thought 'which in fortier years had occupied me,. and that, in the, the mystery was all a delusion, and that I had been fright. ened with less than a slualotr.” - The instructive story of this phy -skint teaches .us how 'readily and yet bow impressively the' remains of old ideas maybe recalled ; how they may, as it were, be projected into the space.beyend us, told take a position among existing realities. . For this all that is necesiary is that there should be an equalization of old im pressions with. new sensations, and `that may be accomplished, either by diminishing the' fOrce of present sen sation's, or by increasing the activity of these parts of , the,brain in whieh the oldtpressions are stored up. _... Thus,/ hen we are falling 'asleep, the organs f sense lie longer convey their 'specie itnpressioas,, with, the clearness and elree that they did in our waking hours and this_ gyres to the traces that. arostciped up in the brain the - power o \ f \,. drawing upon theniselreathe attentten of themind. Harper's Magazine. . . LIMY PEOPLE. \ The belief thatparticular in ivid uils are attended by a good fokune which' makes thcm desirable asscai ates in any enterprise of untertaiit success exists not only among those who take part in. political and Mili tary, projects, but in fl uenees all joint action of commerce and affairs; and a conrespond)ng assurance in the in dividuals softlistinguisked ttits and justifies the expectation of others by a boundless self-tr Met. "1 ha e ' a lucky heed, Sir," said Napoleon to his lkesitateng Chancellor; " those, on, `whom .1 lay it are, fit for anything.' This faith is familiar in oneform— ' that often a certain abdication of prudence and foresight is an clement of success; that children and young persons come off safe' from casual. •.ies that would have proved danger to wiser . people; We do not . think the young will be-forsaken, but he is fast approaching the' age when the' sub-miraculous :external protec tion and leading are withdrawn, and he. is .committed to his owe care. The young man takes a leap in the dark and alights safe. ..As he comes into manhoodbe remembers passages and persons that seem,..as he lobks at them now, to hive been supernatur ally deprived o 1 'injurious influence on him. - His eyes were holden that he could not see. But he Icarus that such - risks he may no longer run. He observes With pain, no that he incurs mishaps here and there, but that his genius, whose, 'in'visible be nevolence was a, tower and shieldto hint, is no longer present and active. In the popular belief ghosts ire -a selecting tribe r —avoiding inillions, speaking to , one. In our traditions, fairies, angels and saints Show the like favoritism;: so , do the agents and the means of magic, as sorcerers . and amulets. This faith ip a doting power, so easily sliding into the cur rent belief eerywhere, and in the 'particular of lucky days and forte, nate persons as frequent in•Anerica to-clay as the faith in incantations and philtres was in old Rome, or the itolesoine potency of the sign of the cross in modern Rome,—thia sup posed power runs athwart, the recog nized Agencies; natural and moral, , which science and religion explore ! Heeded though it be teeny actions and partrierriliipa, it is inialie power to which'we build churehes, or: Make liturgies sand prayers,: or which we regard in , ,passing leivs,i or 'found college professorships to. ex pound. It would be easy in thit - po z W 'eal history of' every time: to fur nish ,examples of ,this irregular suc cess, men having - a force which with out virtue, ,without ,shining talent,- yet makes them prevailing. No equal appears . the field against them. A power goes out from . them which draw" all , men and events to favor teem. 'The cr;ine,s they. commit, -the expoSnres which follow, and which would ruin" any other man, are strangely. Overlooked, or 'do more 'strangely turn - to their account.. 'I "set-flown these things its I. find them, 'but, however poetic these ,wilights of thought, LlikedaYlight,and I find that, somewhat willful, some play at blindrean's buff when man as wise as s Cioethetalk mysteriously of the dem °ecological. The insinuation is, that. the •kriown< eternal latvs of morals and of matteraie sometimes corrupt..., ed- or evaded by this gypstprineiple, which' chooses favorites, ' and works in: the, dirk tor their behoof; as if the laws of the Father of the universe were sometimes balked add eluded by a meddletiome aunt\ of 'the .uni verse foiher pets. You will observe that this extends the populer idea Of success to the very gods; that they' foster a success to you which is, not a success at all; that fortunate men, fortunate youths exist,, whose gOod is not virtueor the Public good, but , a private good, robbed from the rest.' It is a midsummer madness, corrupt ing all who hold the tenet. The dem onOlogip - is only a fine 'name forego "- lista, an exaggeration, namely, of the individual, whom it :. in nature's Set tled purpose to postpone.'; The race , never dies, the individual is never spayed. ," There is one world eme mons toAll who are iwake, but each sleeper betakes himself to and of his own:P . Dreams retain the Infirmities of orir \ eharaeter. , The..good genjus may belhere,or not our Ail geld= is sure .to stay. TIM EgO - partial makes the'dreata ; the Ego total the interpretatiolu — Lilh is also a dream oti.the same te.*,.....kNorthk American AlWood-airving is the chief oft:curt- Lion of many ammuitain village both in the Tyrol and in Switzerland; but in no place hasi it leen carried to t e to at r:l r orrfl ec ortti hl o ; by entered is than at St. , lrich. One branch, oit;, indeed; the _manufacture .of Wooden toys, partieularly dolls, may be Considered almost 'a specialty of the diktrict; for the• little, town of St. Ulrich is the great storehouse from whichthe ,chief toy-traders of Europe, we uiiglrt almost say of the world; driiw those rich And ineihaust tible supplier'. 'Which, brighten so many nurseries nrid gladden - the leans also many little. ones. The art is said to have ben introdrieed into the - valley about the'beginning f thelist century ; since 'Which time it has been the principal erriPloyment of the Inhabitants, male andfcmale, young and old alike; fijr ancient grandfathers, and grandmothers may, E be seen steadily puravng the vo6i tion that has been theirs from their earliest yearti; and as soon as the little boys or girls can be safely trusted with knives, they begin their rucleandeaVors to carve .the form of some animal or toy Which is the pe culiar line of their , family: „This is one of the odd things in connection with the trade, that, as a general rule; each family, or group of families - has its• own special department,\froin, which they do not deviate. Some parve, some paint, some. gild ; the painters Often working only in one, particular color; while' ttie carvers constantly stick to' the manufacture of One or two, or at the most of half a dozen animals, ' of, certain ,toys 'or eernin..portions of toys and dolls, and so on - through dl' the endless ramifications of their Lili 'titian in dustry. It is Al most curious mg t to watch them at work. They use no models, and work entirely by rule of thumb; long practice hating made them soperfect that they turn out the tiny article without the slightest hesitation, every one as precisely alike as they had been oast in a mold. In this way are manufactured the \varied collection of animals foundia Noah's Ark. Some families will cutout lions, tigers, camels, and elephants[; others, sheep, oxen, and deer ; others . ; chiefly birds; while ;m -other groin) produce the wonderfully; dressed little Men and iwomen popu larly supposed tOreprerient Noah-and 'his seven tiumark'epmEtaajoils• The coloring of these prod options is quite another branch ,of the' trade ; and whilethe carving goes on at all times with unabated fegularity;\the paint ing of the various articles \ is only' added as they, are requirelk \ that is, when orders come from the toy,deal era •, and this frequently variek \ ae cording to,eircumstances ; so that the cotoring :Mil gilding business , is net, on the whole so steady and" profit able as the carving. There are sev eral stops and warehouses, where the articles thus manufactured are sold; but there are two leading merchants who act as wholesale exporters, buy= lug the carved work either from the people theinselves, ? Or from minor agents, who realize, ,a small pro fi t by acting as middlemen. Permission can readily be 'obtained to visit those establishments ; l and it is a curious and amusing sight to walk through their. vast , repositories, and inspect the extraordinary collection of dolls and toys gathered tegether under one roof: The dolls are in themselves a very" wonderful exhibition. There are , rpoins upon rooms quite filled with them, of every make and style, small and large, painted and tinpaint ed ; their size _varying from tiny atoms scareely an inch long, Ur huge figures of early a yard in length, nest of them jointed, and the great- _ erpart, uncelorecl, and just a.s they Came from the' hands of the earl:er.' They are carefully sorted according to - their various `sizes; and great \ shelves and cases iwevery direction are crammed with them. Some sizes Are more popular than Others ; a very favorite length being abent'two inch eaLot, this size one of the great doll, merchants of .St. Ulrich buys thirty thousand every 'week during , the while fear The makers of 'this kind can turn out about twenty dozen a day, each skillful worker;, the painting being quite Beater con cern. with which the carvers have nothing to' do. Here also .are binS filled with wooden', animals, also of difierent sizes and ° different degrees of excellepee ; for while some are merely roughly shaped and the pro- duction often of very young children, others are, carved with very great care and dexterity, and are faithful representatiens of the creatures they are intended to imitate. All the nu-- me.rous toys, with which we are famil iar in ,the shops t or which we have played with in childhood, here first spring into betng. Noah's Arks, empty and falf; armies of wooden Soldiers. on horseback and on foot; farmyards of various dimensions, stored with every artiple needful for the juvenile agrienitmist; dolls' fur, intim of every shape and pattern; sets of tea-cups and saucers, and all kinds, of domestic utensiliT little wooden horses, little wooden carts.. In short it is toys, toys everywhere; and even with all our experience of the capacity of children for acquir ing such possessions, it is really dill cult to &edit the fact' that this enor mous manufacture and unceasing distribution go on, like .the poet's brook, "for ever."- Chamber's Jour nal. THE MOoIaRG BIER IN FLORIDA. \, A. line mocking bird (Afisnus pg- Wolitts) is king of the' grove, but' his_more immediate dotnain is in close pi oxitnity to the house. Near 'the hedge of Spanish-bayonets is a small -cypress (ntkPletely covered by a na tive gra6a.ylue,..formiag a pyramid of living green., This is hi# throne which he mounts, and wherein eclip ses ail theiimpterapf the groie with his' iotiderful , and irbried - music, and at the same time, liesan overlook the hedge, -which he consdexs bis (min sive propetty. The •finit of the Spanish bayonet biabout the size of the banana, and growszin a large cluster at " the plant. When fully_ripe and :Kent;' and highly. fel TOY.LAPD MI many birds. The cardirud grosbeak, long-billed thrush, and the cat .bird . a well,as the mockingbird,;are all fo d of the fruit, and sometimes at; tem to.plander; but while this ty : rant ocking king is on guard, no bird eicept ,his mate is atone& to touch it. \ ' ''.., '. j ' 'His thrlne - forum •`a *ery pretty. arbor, where\he retires at night and,' during rainy d4s. When he is away from hornet ofUn step in; buthe is seldom - so far awaithat his keen eye 'sees me ; and I hear his scolding note, which I aliVays*omptly 0/eV. Nothing will so quickly4Oake a bint familiar as to show 'him Illat he etug drive us, and following this \ up with patience and care; he will son con= . 'fide us, and learn our voi and manifest delight' upori meeting us. This is specia ll y true of the wog ng bird,' and ;his cousin the. cat bird\., But the mocking bird of East Flori da is less confiding than our northern tat bird. for the very good reason; that he looks upoa man as an enemy who robs him of His young," and this shyness or distruskr.upon . the part of 'his glorious bird of song is in a Itirge part attributial. to the rapacity of northern visitors, who sometimes ,pay ashigh as fifty dollars for a good 'singer: \As long as this continues we.eanncit expect the birds to confide in ns without mucli`careand labor. Nearly twO' x weeks, with the great est caution. tipon my part, were ne cessary' before I`could approach this ktng's dominion vi,thout hearing his threatening,cry. ' lie seemed deter mined to keep at it safe distance un til he found he could drive me; then lteventured nearer; and now I have gained'his confideaceaufkkently so -that ho •listens to my donsens e . ,Re turns'lliE head In a comical m; first one side and then the othf looks down upon me a a ITiffOlitiii — r - way - as if pityi: poor attempts at bird' . l language. Then he raises' hiMself in a dignified manner, and pours forth - such a strain of music. that I am humbled in his presence. This characteristic ruling power of the mocking bird/is made available by good obse7ers. A Methodist clergyman; residing across • the river,, in the rieight,rhood of Mrs. llarriet Beecher. Stowe, informs me. that a walking WA saved his'grapes.- One bird ^ willdp.comparatively nO dain, "age in ‘a/VineYard ; tie.4s.a light feed er of fruit, arid haw a habit of return ing to' the same' spot. in the . great' cluster of fruit of the Spanish --bayo net he works systematically; he does not peck the whole cluster indiscrim inately, but takes, one berry at a time, and this 'one la'sts him several days. S 6 among grapes, he has a particular spot when lie feeds, but he overlooks and takes . care of all • within- hie -do minion. If these . birds are unmolest ed by man, they will , reghlate their own affairs so as to assist' him. ' - \ The clergyman above Mentioned had near -neighbor, who, •=flad in`g\a mockinci bird eating his grapes, shoe eawlegsness' now reigned. among birds, 'and the neighbor kept on s opting until a large nuin ber were slaughtered; The result was he list 1..017 his grapes.—Mrs. Mary Treat. - . E. :qq. Most persons are familiar with the fact that the sounds wiiicli we hear with, oar ear are in atiwdifferent in their nature from the colors which 'we see with our eye. .13oth\are Pro- . \ duced alike . by the vibrations\ hick they cause in the air,"•and both are, subject to similar laws. Soft ore a tic .substantives give way easily' t sounds ; while hard and rigid sub. stances return them more or less per fectly. 1 The echo, dwells in the country as, well as in: town, and' hence the "daughter of 'the voice," as the ancient Hebrews used, to call it, strengthens the bond that unites man With nature. The woods and the tOrrents, the mountains and the rocks, all repeat the voice - of their Master, now in,spert, and now apparently in terror. \Who but' has had a hearty laugh at the IriShman who boasted of the ,EMeraild Isle that it had an echo superioito all others oil earth, .bemuse, when \ you asked it "How do you do ?" it answered politely, " Very well, thank you." .1.11. a place near lMngen, where a. small river empties itscillnto the Rhine, \ it word is dis tinctly\ repeated seventeen times, and- What if perhaps the nidSt curious feature, the echo does not sound each time ilike,bufis now loud, now ion , —now near,.now distant, anddiffer= erent persons .fancy they hear itfoin different sides. \ At Rosemeith; near Glasgow, the banlis, of the Clyde re• peak a melody three times very clear ly, find, if there is no\fnissappreher.- sion about this .eircutastance, ea& time in a loWer key. T7B of the. MOO famous I. echoes prodiaced. by buildings belong 'to Italy; \line is caused by the famous tomb of ,Cecilia MeOla. The other, more fre'spient ly mentioned, is found id the Villa Sinionetta, near • Milan. The sound, .of al pistol shot fired from a certain window in one of the wings into the vast court yard is repeated forty or fiftyl times, and a. lend spoken - wOrd mayl be heard distinctly .at least twe ;ty times.-4-.Apptetan's_ Journal. . . Bel cool, If yea get heated, strive-to get cool; you will succeed, and eventually beconm a;coob man ; that is, 'a man of judgment and selfpossession, which will keep} you , out of many things that, you would regret. . - do not please God, more by eating bitter aloes than by e,ating hooey— A. -cloudy, foggy,- rainy day is not: more hey enly than day of sunshine. A funeral hiarch is not so much like the music of angels as the so - • of ;birds mr-a 'May =awing. , • • Wri never heed e constantly-repented truth;that, though we arc reminded of the Punishment of wrong, : we are: constantly Aran ing, because it' is'so - easy. to transtresa, and itepPerirs to beso hisppy to do glut is forbiddett, when punrsh: meet Wm:in-tint!! makes,up foriti. Yet:we go oultrespassing. , - - Nati is designated for an tretiee, belng, em plc upon and sprit; ever restless, if not em worthy anddignifledObjekte, wil often ratber,engage in mean and low .ptiraults, thin suffer the Urbane and,list. W.. [tiding Connecta(' with indolence ; and Itnowled, go innotess nfomirmfreittrength ening Fibs wind than Veserving the' purity, otptirlotiqpikanq the Nom, ';4O Ait • sue,T!" - " • -t.s. ' • Wivt.` , , ERE e~.. . ~ rr • 112 per Annum In Advxmoe. •Dmoalorta,DO:robt. trt W TA811$17: (*!AD A? *Will NAT ic1;1877.] Again the seasons, e s traltng deet;.. • . ..44 11111 Ittik And want er IMMO since we meet • _. As Pattlettot to tOPOY: • With grateful hearts, the debt we ewe - Thy - brave who These own -white monuments below t .. • 4114 green ttuttrarietioll 'Fun )31Livit Wins sump I . 107,65 t higher tribe . Coupi'bilt troth toogao or iron ?".. _' -I / Tbey c - tited; brit wilii ittinnottl lanai, ' Porch, Aare. but ay as mast l+ ' ...- ~ , liai t.4lory gild tbotr =toes, who tell / , - - With faces to the foe !' . ' ',.- , ' ' - Mid flashing steal itid tierear4lll/ ettill;‘ . .A!1(1 sights nod actottaa of woe., Seise fell beneath the leaden hail ' • • • Poured-down front battle height, .., ;• ; - 'white some in lonely ehapparal . , \ Wore veiled front . friendly sight t. ~ .., -' if Still others went the &Irksome WAY • ;: s .: •., •A\here tierce bullet sped,— • ' , -.'• • " - Thelt\efatcheis, stars With silver-ray, .'. . , "., The Swamp, their dreg...hid' ..,- • ' , . fair What pen stukil testis their record i ',.. .• "., _ On Illstorri‘deathless page P— .../ ,:' . The patriotic diti -which tortu '' ' .' :' - .. " .. A nation's beiltse ! - , • , .' ' • .. . The Honor, bright, tat husw - oe gala, 1 • ' . • The - Zeal that never Werved, ,' • . .. And love of liontelandi—atet of Gain— •. , . f, Which their attopg sin nerved. : . c. 1 _ . .thillls '. , . . -.. ~ .-- ) e, . : ' O wild War Time Your mem( `Our pilses oneo again ! And terAle fancy now reill;ta Our streets with armedOen : Froin . wortehop and froni farm thej eo All eager for the tray And bugleahlat•eand.roll of-dram With glory light their way .'" They've gone! • •• • and left 'the -vacant chair At ataay a sad licarthatone, - Mltlkmother,•wire or sweokheart fair To Bourn :as absent ow, The seasons roll their ceaseless round, The Winter yteists . to Spring;' 4,4 from that one nor sign - our sound Ireezeg bring: • )3 , sleep: the honored brav'e; Mayday sun ! the you they died to sare,—', . Their duty tiobly done I 6 - friends Curers above them strew,: Besprinkled wit.l6rotti s tears ; And guard, as now, the Braydand True • Through all tho 'future:le - in . ! .• • :RASE OP THE FLIGHT OP BIR.DS. • 's It would Seein at first : sight that ndbarriers limit ill , range of birds; and that they ough \to be the most übiquitous• of living\things. This,lOWever, is far _from being the case many ' • groups of are al most as strictly limited by barfriers as the mammalia. The petrels •-afid the gulls are among the greatest wan derers; but most of the: species are Confined•to one or other 9f the great 9ceans ' to the arctic or antarctic Seas. The sandpipers and plovers wander along the 'shores as far as do' the petrels over the: .ocean.. Great numbers of them breed. in the arctic regions and migrate as far as India and Australia; or VoWn to Chili and Braid ; the species of the Old - and New Worlds, - however, being gener ally distinct. In striking contrast to , these wide ranges we, find 'many , of the perching birds, with some of the parrots and pigeons, confined 0 small islands of a few square miyes• in extent, or to single valleyi or Mountains on the' mainland. Those groups of birds which Ppossess no powers of flight, such as the, ostrich; cassowary, or apterys, are hi exactly the same position as the mammalia as regard's their means_ Of, dispersal, or are perhaps eyed inferior to - them ; since, although they are able to cross rivers by swimming, it is doubtful if they could 'remain so long in the ,wit , r .ris most land. quadrupeds. la e number of short,winged birds, 'sue, as toucans, 'pittas, and wren's, are pe haps :worse off, for they can fly very els , ' miles at.a time, and on falling in the water would soon be drowned. I,t, is - only the spedrei thkit can venture to :cross any' great widV sea, and even these rarely `do u Inless in, by necessity tO migrate In search of food, or . -to a moreC genial climate. Small and weak, birils' are, however, often carried accidentally across great widths cf oceans by violent gales. Tills isL well- exemplified by the large numbers of stragglers froth North America which annually.reach the Bermudas. NO less than \ sixty nine species of American tiiiiks \ have 'Occurred hi Europe, most of theni Britain id Heli,,aoland. They conbitit ehietly of migratory birds' which- in' autumn. return along - the' -eastern cost of the United States, - and often fly from point to • point across bays and inlets.. 'They are then liable' to be blown out to sea by stiirms; and it Is almost always at this time of the year that their occurrende hail been noted' on the shores of Europe.''Birds Which Trequient forests and. thickets are Beelike from Such accidents, and are restricted in their- range by the extent',.et the forests they inhabit. Mountain chains, and 'even jarge -riv ers like the' Amazon, limit the range of_many birtis----Ifarper'is Magazine. • , \ A MYS(..pIiY:OF PERFUME. . No \tme hss yet-been able to analysze or demonstrate the essential action of perfume... Gas 'tan be _Weighed, bet no scents. . . The smallest kniiwn crea tures—the very monads,of lif s esn be 'caught by'a miem'scope lens ,tind made to deliver the secrets -of their organtzstioti; but what 1.4' it that, emanates from. \ the rtOuch:Of the musk deer that 6115,a whole spice for Tears witii itik,penetuging odor -odor tbat illitn4Able number' 'of;i3Abitanees cu"t curry'oti' without diminishingits 'size and -'iteight— and. what - is it - that 4he.,' warm Y sum mers air •brings to us 'from the flowers; no man has yet able -to -detei , :, mine. AO fine ' io antitle,, se, iMpon derible; iti t ulued Nth our most oats Weights; and measures and, our strmigeat we mine to 'the essence of each odor, we should have made as enormous- ski: W e forward . bothin hygiene .' and in chemistry', and none would pp:attack& than the inedieal.profeseionifitiould be as emmlisalyely'demonstratO gist :such au &kir Prcoeeelo, 4reM such and siieh r a'eituse, lis'sceUliiquliknow Of Sulfthativ'sulpliUtate - hydrogen, am. amnia,•ond'the ME INES _..r ... , "' Is EMI kt:',P , ;.- - -1:11/1 - ^. ; 4., . , CIE NUMBER 1. IM 111 1111 ThrsAttledesciilles. the Temp:int of STgoid&oniiertutherous, warlike, and peererful„ and` the legion where they .songht.,s,,Ofcgs. centturies , _ ago' from ' the conquering arms of the Germans. it 131,4ntkied,,the.only-.colenly which retains any thing of the ancient SPeech • and - habit& --Raw - here the., Wends accepted the Aermairrelitien,`)an go*, alid - Wvo, - findlifiduallY • lost t4teir diiitinetfre‘ 6 hardeteil -as - Nitteiniihy- /itecklenbtli* and other\ Provificei as in ' the 4.ark of Bindcnburg - and.. in Lausitz, they fought alnanstaci the point; of' exter mination, and offered e . moral -resist , 'twee when that _of :.arms ;no- longer availed. The Northern = Wends ao- , cord ingly -cease to haves history of their own after' one or two centuries. Those of are • Ellie and the Spree alone ,survive in the little colony of the T. f aiudtt swamps, and in the brave but nseless struggle for altar and home. Their strange repugnance to the hew eivilizationithe brave, pro- • lobged, and despetate warfare which they 7 aged against it, the sullen and apparently organic incapacity to, dig card their peculiar habits and char- Acta even after they have ceased - to defend! , then/ by force, suggest _so many points of resemblance to, the 'North American Indians; and in the fate of both peoples there is the same element of plaintive' and romantic Sadness which appeals to every gen erous heart. • The Wends were -carried •into Northern Germany by ,the vast move ment of.peoplea which-took place in the fourthand fifth centuries of the .Christian era: As fast as the Suevi, Franks, and other German tribes swept over the Rhine aid down upon the fair domains of the Roman Ern- , ire, their plates were ,filled by other barbarians from the vast plains of ' Asia. ;In the adjustment, of theSe races in the West, it happened - , that the-SclavEs - or Selavordans acquired - nearly the whole region from ,the Elbe eastward, including Silesia, Po lnnd, Prussia, and much of what is . now Russia. These were not; indeed, all Wends. This term seems to have , been ..given. by the Saxons . 'to such Selaves as were their immediate::. neighbors in North Germany,' and: was hardly derived from aby' corre sponding .d;stinction made by . the claves ' themselves.' The Wends were also further , divided into local faMdies, such as the 14itritans and .Abotritans. • - 1 • ' , By the fifth' century the Wends - were liirnly settled in - their new , hothes. ~ culture and refinement, • in .the arts d conveniences .of life, .• in agriculture, trade, and other in- dtiatries, they were not ••behind the Saxons, their neigbors. They lived intowns and villa g es, and possessed - , a. rude system of et 2 government. Their domestic iiiitit tiona revealed • but too often . their - Ori ntal origin,' and in no respeetinore - pa . fully.than 1 the position, given to wo an: • She was little more than a . men I. - Po- ' ' lygamy prevailed. 'Mothers often strangled-their female infants to ,ye - i them from a more p4inful life; d in the same way' l decrepit pares • Were put to death by 'their sons, •an in Moore's Utopia, because they were burdens npon the public, and a vie- lent end insu l ted a happier life -be yond the grave. putthey were a re- , markably honest people, 'abhorred a thief or a hit; and were kind to the poor., ~ . • '. ' . • '-• ' They were no less warlike' than their Gerinan-predecessors: 'On land or sed, .mounted• or .on foot, in -,• the open field;-'in:the swiempS, or 713e7 . hind their fortified•towns, they fought clumsily:, but braVely and desperate- . I . Y. ,Their viea,pons, were not *dike ' those of their neighbors in style-and quality. ' / - 5 ... Their religion Was a specieS of po lytheism. They believed, indeed, in . one. Supreme Gael---- - Belbog: ' but he' seems/to have a Seltivie Jove among, lesserdiVinities, such as Ciern-, hag, the 'evil spirit, 'and Radegaat, ;the god of war. Other branches of 'the ,Scla.ves had other _gods, fox no universal system existed. The priests enjoyed great honor and power, and they were the moat regolnte`in oppo sition to-the Geri:Mins. That which the latter.first demandedwas conver sion to Christianity—a demand Which could not be agreeable- to the - inter pretei•a of the rival religion! ' -"'` . During two, centuries the • Wends and Saxon:4 liVed at pQACC,.a.iId even in friendship; The commerce of the former, which.begs n with a petty lo bsl traffic, rose to &scale almost im posing alobg the Baltic coast. 'lt, is said that:three hundred' shipswet. e sometimes 'seen in the harbor of We 'nits' . Traders flocked 'thither from Dtsrimark, from Germany, from other. Sclavonic lands, 'and even from the Orient#, , bringing metallicwires, cloths, jewels, - and• coins, and carry. ing3 away - amber, funs and similar gocidi. In the middle of the el ..ventli\ century the city of Wenita was Cap lured by the • Danes, and Wendish commerce rapidly 'deemed and died.. --114.rper's Afagazine. r . NA.II9;,,EOS . 'S 0i'1N103,4 OF gllftiBT- r -z I IthoW . men - , rsaidi'N'apoleon, and I 'tell you. that: j . esui is not" a _man Alexander, Cresar,. Charlemagne and. myself founded `empires; but upon • what did we rest the creation of .our • gcniUS•? ITpoP force. jeans Christ alone—founded his empire upon love ; and .at this hour millions of men: Avoid& die for him, It was not a day or a battle s wliich• achieved the tri ninphOf the Christian . religion. in the • world. Nco; it \ Was ..a long ,war, - a contest for three Centuries, begun 'by th 9 apostles, thei •"rontinued by . thc . flood of _Christian' generations: tins war all - the kings'and potentates Of earth Ivereorvoneside;'• on: the Pther-I see nO•arniy, bat a rnygteri ,cms foree:.---eome men - i Mattered here. .and there in all - tarts'. of the !world, and•who haven° other rallying.polnt than it comnion faith in the•mrkteries ofithe ,cross: I .die .and,ray.bOdy will' be given baolc,-to the earth, to become toed for worms: Such is the fate which so soon awaits . him Who has been . ealled the' . great Napoleon_. - Whit an abyss. bi. , tween 'illy , deep Mystery and eternal hing-. dbin, of „Christ, whiCh is prod adored, anti which is ex teuciing whole earth! Call : you 'this dying?: Is itnot living, rather?. The death of Christ is the dea.th or.,a (4.kNL .: ••• . • - • Horn - leans on. imanchot, but an anchor mast have something tti hold-by and hold \Tu . osz wliblgo to a public holm& to find happu)esa mica, as' 'well climb- a, tree In &arch . of fish. • •• - - A:4 ism'oaf pan. thintri - a Purse' full of other people's -: nioney worse tttait 'an empty one. • \ . • BeIIitNECTAZIT justice- of the wow decides that a "verbal contract is not gOol..laithout TiiosE people , that tattle( to you aboua otherk dolierid Upon it 4 hay will' !MAP wally avid, 15 13 Pi
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