TERMS OF PUBLICATION. • -l irrAerertising In all eases excluslse oL•subicri . p. ..-„iinnot to the paper. SPFCI O. NOTICES Inserted'atetrrlitKetitTs. r nue„for the first insertion, and rivs CINTF per :Inc for subsequent insertions. : •tr`CAL NOTICES, same. style as intulltnig mat. t ,r, Cllnin A Lint. Ali ERTISEMENTS will be Inserted acid ding t. , the foltossizik table of rates: -. -Tini. 174 W . 2ml-105 I6m I lyr. 1 I 61.6 . 1 - 611:i I - . 5:60 . 1 - 6:66 ri6llolii:fie '2.00 1 5.0 . 1!, I 5.06 . 2.101 10.00 I 1.3.60 120.00 laa:6o, 4 tnehe. -12. m -8.56,1 14.1101-18.25 rolmiln. I 5:60 1 i?..60 18.001 rii.oo I 80.00 1" ~..: I 10.00 j 20.710 1 I 40:661 - .i3.00 1 - MO4 I caltimn... - ":120 (10 A I 56, - 1 cc,.q9 Bo:66 I tiSCiflca. r ADMINISTRATOR'S and rterntnett Notices. A0(11t0e, netleets,V.Ml; Rap:lnes* Card% five 1 nel. (PeT rear) ad,llllnnill Ilnek $l.OO each. YEARLY Advertisements aro entitied to guar is rhstsms. ritANSIENT. adrerttsements 'must bo paid far ALL Resolutions of _Associations, Communita ct°r,rsot limited or Individual InterestAind notices o r ac cts., grid ileatha. exceeding five lines, are c reod TF:N ENTS PER LINE. -. JOB of every 'hind. In prain and imicy color•, done with neatness and dispatch. listalbills. Ili:inks, Cards. Pamphlets. Blithe:Ms. '•tatements. kr.. of every variety and style, printipt at the -shortest notice. Tint REPORTER office is w .supplied with power presses. n ENO moat of new int.. and everything in the Printing lino can he executed In the Most artistic manner a'i at the lowest rates. TERMS INVARIABLY VASIL - - Frofeccietal Cards,_ 4LLIA.ms& ANGLE, I TTIA NE YS-A T-I, IFFIC E.—ForinerV occupied try Wm. Watklor, (net;l7.*T7l F. t tl. ~:. \ct i.Lj•\V~ - NI AS Q N TTEAD, A TTORNE YS•A T•LA IV' Tonanda,Pa. ptilcc over Bartlett dr Tracy, 31aln-et G. ‘F.WAsaN 1 - 4 1.• -1,4 • ATTORNEY-AT-LA W_ TowA:4IIA. tAs o:ce with SmlilCkalontali7P. F • F.(O - FT ' , • ATT 07:NE r-AT-1, A IV. ADTVE HEAD. . • ,I.l‘tilo Street 0 doors north of Ward - (louse), To !" Wiilt.i a, Pa. t April 12, 1877. - 1 AIT 11. THOMPSON _A_TTOILNEY I T Ail Al' LAW, 16'3.0:SING, PA. Will attend to ;VI 4F o tsine-cs carrted to his care in Bradford, 't—tli , iyat and Wyarning Coon es. Office With Esq. .E,rlerr, rnovl9-7-1. IF ; ELSI3IIEF„ 7 •.- • . a ..44) ATtOICNEY-Ai"-tiAW, ... ~., 0 .1.14.75. p , ' ToWANIkA:rA. - t liN . 14. L 4 13 , .- . k_,.. .. •., . ATTOICNEY-AT-L A"\Vr . . W I I.K ES-BA Itlfß. PA • Collections proniptly :Wended to. 5 ' I.OIIN w TORN EY • AT LAW AND NANSION ER, • •1 . CAI,I TOWANDA, PA. MIX, Offlee—Noun Side Public Square IVIES et CAI:NOM AN, AIERCUR BeOCK DC7 PEE T., ATTOR 7CEY-AT-LAW, Is prcpareil in practice all branches of ale profession. (Ifac,, •IIL9CK., (entrance on Routh itt•le) TowANDA. rh. Nan6.7E. S. .31,. WOODBURN, 5 1 7 Clan anl 'Afirgeoa. 02ica crer . Mar AT4DIETH - Sz , CALIFF, A TTUICSLYS AT T..% w. T 4;« kNI,A, P.A. In IVreei'a r;lock, deer stett=:l of the First -1.•. I. '.l! A ITT f. .T. N. CATAFF hi r PSYNE,_ TTr FS-_i T-1..1 Tr. Tu.tcy iILOI IC, MAIN . STREET TO if AND 1., {.11'77) MEI= • IAr0(1), =0 • 111.1. \l. fkALI, Attornay-at-Law and . Notary, e :Itteintlon to :tor 1.114/11‘, , e141114 e- : to him. ll - 1111 l'Atilck ((Over tql C0:1 , 1 , 4.1.4:0w Nluti,7`-77 TWIN F. SANDS SOX, • ATTZ 3 !iNEV-AT.I.AW „ . Building (over Polvt,lßeiStprel, TWA: NP rA. fh ,11( 114,76 0 Iv. wm. LITTLE, r zpn.vE rs- A T-L A IV,TQWASDA, PA, 4 414.44 f.v4;r S't44re. 1.1.1!‘ Street April 1, E sTitoup, TIP TV,V4Y .1.V!) I'.vsr.r.l,ol-.IT-L.111% otir rcorili of Watal •rir, -.river - 41w Count of I••••iirria r lar %ilia aria. V Tow A s DA, r A /i.at•••(-1 lIST REETP.II, P • . L ATIV 0 F TOW rA ME Nth.' It ) 11 ATTORN EYS VTI. A W rt)W ASIA I'A. gtni,,, , .‘ ; ‘l , .ntanyes Store. r tnAve.7s I)•%.llWF.it'r , vN. RODNEY A,. NtElterit VM. MAXWELL, TToI:XEY,A 7-LA IV art tar j OVEI• DSYTON'S SToIVE, I T” . ‘VANDA:, P A. Aprll 12. 1fw.16.I f w.16. pA TRICK & FQY rf T 7 1. AW. In Metcnr's Mork ANDREW WILT. j • 1. .4 T T lel" r r sELtf) 4 s •, r , , 7wll doors north of Long 'F , .wanda. Pa. May he consulted i,• !MAU. : %prll 12. 'itL2 -1 I 011ERSON& KINNEy, .1 T TOR NE FS-AP-L AW, I t' , " A Nt , A, PA. °MeV in Tracy S Noble's BlOck =IIEMZI EitTON & ELSBREy, ATTOR- V 7 S',Fry;: Arl.A TOW ANDA: P. .1 . 13(.1ng ell: • • i t . ...liariiier,4lll), offer their profev.iiindi I'. ••1. Xl,l the P:11.1111. ',Spel . l:ll 11111:11/1011 1:11 . 1.11 to •, 1110 11:111:Q:, Wll I:.•gl.ter's Courts. F. rrn x. J?:. t-74 , ) N. C. ELS - lilt F:E. C - . 11'111'1':11 111, t, ii• 116 , ,A7 BINDER. I" It ISrn. DI S.:, TillicDFLOGit, TOW A N'DA c..-. nu6sELL.:,B r ENERAC - , I N S,t I A N C E 'A , 014.1 N C Y gowANDA,PA: • Ns I: RANC E AGENCY. Gas_ - The following , - TEEAGLE AND FlItE TRIED 0 . ...1'11.A.EN - I.X. 114.1Mkt3rEI:(91ANTii, '7I • 1876 r 1 )Nv AN DA. INSURANCE AGENCY 7,:rrrt • hppostt, t?e Court 114ust NOBLE .4, - , VINCENT; M kN AGI. DR. T. B. JOHNSON, rsi s rrA s Asp SURG.EO:I ilr.Porter. Sc Sou's Drug S wre,..l' ow ands. ~. ... NI 1). L. DODSON, DEsTrwi. .... , + ..P,: and aft....r .' , 44a. 21, luny tw donut In the /,;", ••••tt 1 :...V . tooat• on Vol floor of lir. Pratt's new c.,n.,,n State :4[n:et.. ltualneps sollcltt4 p.. 3..7.1tf, 2 W . B. KELLY, DENT tse - •=- Office • nv.r M. E. Itt.eutic!,l'A, T , .‘cluldl4 Pa. T•••ti. nwit,.4l "ii Stivur. Itut.ber, aul AI- T. , ,,th extracted volthiAM rain. 34.714 AI). I). PAYNE, 31: D., A Jai P/IrS I ciS 4'D-S-U4d-EON • Slf..ttanyclo Store. Ig3lrx !lOM'S from In A• and from to 1, r" . . 11. Special &Motion t” doca.e.4 of On rye and_ Ear.-0ct.19,'711.tf: ALVORD, Publisher. VOLUME iXXViII. THIS WAY FOR AND WARRANTED TO FIT ! J. L. NIcMAi4ON, , MERCHANT TAILOR, OPPOSITE COURT .110USt SQUARE, NEW AND, CO MPLETE:STOCK OF - CLOTHS, 7 •- • GEII7S%2.KB.NisHING -poops - , 11 - 4.7;§•: - • • • • • Re Is prep 4rdilir,-. mad to measure,. - Nrii - alsh to 0, ar,..d' to SPRING' AN)) SVMSIER • OF BEST QVALITY k LATEST STYLES, At prices the most reasonable of any estlldtshment in Towanda. Cali and exadilue my stpck, I , 9wanda,' Pa., April 5. 1877 July 27,1'6 liardrare. • .. ILE . :IRAPEST , ---' ' . lARDIVARE STORE IN .TOWAN • Ic . IS IN 3I\EIICUR BLOCK! Jan. 1, 1875 TO*),NDA. PA Farmers ein buy t SOI7FIES, NATIIS, • GRINDSTONES, FORIS.S,' FIXTURES, RO ES, Cheaper Than at Any Other Place! I hava . always "'Chant! Repairs for the YOUNG IVA 'mune awl Cii.t511.14/S: Mowing Machines. S. IL. PAYNE 6=I!!EM I'ERRIGOS SIDE HILL PLOWS, • Best in Use. . ■ All kinds of TINWARE On Lad, and Tin work of all kinds done at lowest price • I Towanda, .Inne 28, 1576 =I HI G EsT AWARD S ! cEp3NNI.ti. EXIILIAION. TIIIitTEENTII AND FII.IIE4T STe., PIILA, 'Manufacturers of patented WROUG Err- nox AIR-TIGHT HEATERS, ' With lklial;ing and ('tinker-lirluding Grates for Antitra,lte or Bituminous Coal. . -f CENTENNIOL WROUGHVRON HEATERS. For Ill: ominous Coal. i:'I"TOICE y RrROL G I:T-IRQN• HEATERS, Towanda, Pa. ' Vy 17-73 Cooking Ranges,. Low-Down Grate,i, Etc. cut address circulars SENT FREE to r.nyaddress - EXAMINE BEFORE SELECTING. Philadelphia, April 26, '77-IT. G REATLY REDUCED PRICES! PLANING, MATCHING. AND HE-SAWNG, E. • And all kinds of 19:ming-mill Wiprk, AWAY Do WN : DOWN DOWN *bleb I am selling at prices to suit the times • M. de promptly to order, at a lots price, ter CASH .*.e. IF YOU WANT TO GET RICH QUICK, ; ' • Call and see my Goads and I'ldeet Lumberbrought here. to be milled, will he. kept nn opri eover and perfectly dry until taken• away. tiabd.sheds for your lloz.,es, utpl a dry place to load. g Towanda. Jan. 18, 1877 I\TEW STOCK ,L l l • OF -GROCERIES ! FINE ' 4 .TEAS 'AND - COFFEES ! for bale cheap Cash pall for all kinds of . C O L IJ - 1 4 0,T R I' .R.O D 13. C.EI B ^ Towanda, dint b, irrf. Merchant, Tailor. SPICING}: SUIT liade to 0110, 1/123 lust received a. .~' , .. _',f. ~, ~ J. L. itcaii, . 11. T. JUNE. INI Beater:, J. REYNOLDS & SON, •Northwest corner Planing, The undersloied Is doing So far 37.1 j can't see 14 Mil I have also on hand a large stock of - SASII AND DOORS «-INuOW-fLlays j L. B. RODGERS Choice fielectlons of At the old stand of C. 13.-. Patch. ' w. U. HECKER, Ju. Veetin e. VEGETINE PURIFIES THE BLOOD, RENOVATES AND INVIGORATES THE Ni,lioLE SYSISEIL ITS MEDICINAL PROPERTIESARE ALTERATIVE ; TONIC, SOLV ENT AND DICRITIC:. . • .-VEGETILNE is made exclusively from thii . juices of carefully selected herbs , roots bpd herbs, and so siroglrconcent rated. that It yclitelfectually eradi cate from the system' every taint of SUROPU'LA, SCROFULOUS lIUMOn t TUMORS, , ',PANCEti, CAN CEROUS HUMOR, EitYSIPELAK,V SALT Uncut/L. STI . IIII.ITIC DISEASES. CANKER. FAINTNESS AT TIIE STO3IACII, and 111) diseases that arise from im pure • blood. SCIATICA __INFLADIEATORT and NEI:RAM/lA.:GOUT AND SPINAL 'COMPLAINTS...Mk only be 'effectually cured through the blond. 'For titextts and ERUPTIVE DISEASES of the -SKIN, PUSTULES. PIMPLEA, BLOTCMEs, BOILS, TETTER.SCA;b • HEAD and Ili milvonbt, VEOE TIN E has never failed to effecttii permanent:cure. For PAIS;fi IN Tun. Saca. KIDNE T Cox. PLAINMS, DROPSE. FEMALE WEAKNESS, LEO. ConlclDpA, arlslrg (mut. , internsil ul , eratlon. And uterinordlseaVs and ENicat AL ,DBISIL t rv. Et; TIN E *eta dlrectly 'upon itlat,cauttes of these com platnts.' ,liAttilgOratea:and - stioutthehs the w,hnle .systent, act's l'ultott th.. - secret IS-e :organs, allays4 - n , }lamination, cures .tilceratttny'istnt ~ negulates the Di.PMESIA. TIADITE AL. *CO'chl TIVENENS, - PALIITATION QV TILE IIEART;IIKAD , , NERVOUSNESS AND -GENERAL PngstitaTittst' '• Tilt; N EttirOVO Stsvitsb• IQ •Dl , Drine his - given such.pecrect satlsfaction,as the_ l'lmut then the bincsl, eIeaRSEAEII Of the Irgaus, and possesses a .6n/rolling movie olriM . systo:p. 1. • • the- inATE able- cures effected .by VEGETINE 'ltavd; Induced' litany pilYslrlatis and aritithecarles wifomeire•airolillittearrleo aud .ttalAt'la their Own " • '• • • ' . - .;;;;J:n fact VEO ETlNF;lS : :iiie'beitt.tttn4y yet.dls: coveted for the ihosit - titiritens, ninikis7the on:y re- Medi. BLOOD PUltllkl.Elt yet placed he public. Prepared by It. It. STEVENS, Boston MN WHAT IS VEGETINE ? rlt 11a compound extracted from narks, rtits and iherbs. It Is Natures Remedy. It Is perfectly harpleas.from any bad effect upon the system. It Is nourishing, and strengthening. It acts directly npon - the bloonl.` It quiets ilia net - eons system. It glees yttu good. sweet sleei. at night. It Is a great panacea;for out. aged fathers and mothers. for It gives themstringth, their nerves and gives tflam.Nature's sweet 51.4 p., as has been proved by n s tany.a;:.eU...rson. It I, the great Itlood Puriffer. It Is a soaking ;enmity for our children. It has relieved and cured , ' thousands. It is very pleas tot to take ; every child likes It. It rolleves and cities all diseases originating (nun t.nputv blood. Try the V EtiETI N E. Give It a fair trial furyttur com plaints; then you will 143 :VA yourtfrientl, neighbor and acquaintance, 'lry lit it has cured Me. VEGE*MiE for the complaints for whleh It Is retnanniended, is hiving a larger sale throughout th•• riffled Sjates than any othrr one nie4leine why: VEGETIN wiLL CcitF, THESE: CUM• PLAINTS. CANNOT BE EXCELLEII. (711/littAsTolys, MASS.. March 19, 1869. Mr.. 11. H. Si tr'l' ENS ; Lear Sim—T[llo.ls to cer tify that I haye used your •• Blood Preparatiou "lii my family for several vears. and think that; for Scrofula or Cankerous Ifti - OM, or Rheumatic A t feetions, It cannot ix. excelled and, 00 a bnxkl purifier and spring medicine, It is the hest thing I lints ever used :91:d I hare used almost everything. I can cheerfully reccomend IC to any onti need of such a medicine. Yours respzetfully. MRS. A. A. DINSMORE: 19 Russel Street. GIVES 'HEALTH, STRENGTH AND it PP .ET I l'E 01:1112It1or has reeelved Meat henefft =rum the `the VEt ET IN F. Ilex deetning healte n - as or or groat anc . lety to , all of her trirs.l.. A 't es of rd "A Ne V E restored her health, nd appetite, . TiLDF.N: 1 nsuratice d Estate Agent ). 49 Sears.litailding, Boston, Mal's. t ,•Irl \ /1.14 Net' ECM . • . Prepared_ by If. R. li - TEVEZiS, Boston, Mfrs. -..,—.- d VEGETINIP IS SO D BY ALL DRUGGISTS. , , --- TIFF, C()NII"ND OXYGEN x TitF.ATMF.NT.—Th .Is no system of ratn eatittlt.e4ql::lied in I:S.:let:MI to narrow limits. Be ing' ILXYGEN lIA.GNETV. :1), It Is the most woticiTtil•Vitalizerof the hum. Id dolly ever kaown. \,_ Therefore' It ,Itniii.l eun e a grea et. vdrietv of Ills atm a larger proportion. of pattent. than any other :\ agent. Eight years of es p- fully confirms Ids capu. lotion. The subsorlber unite their forces to make, kutrali and avail:did:Lb the sick the wonderful vlrtucil of the CumputitutOa. - refl. It is the , afest, snrced and cheapest rtaned: in the wortd. I.et all' ConsaptiveF„ Ity.peie I F. Para -1)1:es ( re'eent). and ;di oven dli:tcourag, d iv talids, •11,1 for our Brochure of I it: pnes,whieh cot tmie,. :1515 uotab:rful bat true statements, 1.e.,: of ..,:i --oLLIs, atl'uor terms for thew and office tre t r:et. it *ill be mail: II freo or charge. li. E. P.t1.1.: s:, 11. Pit- Ms D., G. It. STA SIB EY. A. M., M. IL, sT.% RE:EY A P.% LEN. LIIII Girard Street, Phila. I= A ; I , : NT S WANT I: I) $5O TO '2013. PEI: MON.TII —A new, clear & eonelm.. NIVEI:S.IL HISTORY Conoinencing with the earliest periods. closing Mar h. 1 , 77. Three colones of the' World's great,. Crawl History in one. A Nye L.NT, Mii,t .K AOZS. MootoCaso. inclonling lolsttory or vet& nea tut t r hil, , if fi 'limn nentina e,' President flatter, and Turkish difieultieg. A leak of thrilling inter est aud univermal need. Solos (Aster than any other.• ILeanilhJ Illowrations. !ow prices. quick italook, ex trot trrms, circular. I' roe. A (Wrens J. C. NIcCIT It- DT oro; I'o.. Pa.; Clueloonati,l!..; Chi cago, Ill.; St. 1.4.111 N, Moo. rioslylo-131.) $()(1(i CAN"r MADE BY every agelit every - month In the busi t we tarnish. but those willing to work ran eas ily earn a dozen dollars' day right in• their own localities. {lave n” more renal to explain here. lindne,s pleasant atoj honorable., W.-mein boys and gills do as weal asflnon.; We will furnish you ehnipl4te outfit free; The business pays better than anything else; We will bear expense of :earzingrymt. l'artlelilars fire. Write and or. Pa rllliT4 : ,i 1 nmehtnies, their-sons and daughters, and all class's iS 1,4 , 61 of raying weak at memo. .slmtld Write IMm, and learn til about the work at once. Is the time. Don't delay. Address Tact: &len- Augl•tn, Maine. . Jan-25,17. ET THE BEST MO ! LOOK „ MERE! \ Why do you continue to pay : • HlGHyincEs I • I:4r READY MADE CI:OTHiNiI Allicn you can.go to DAVIS' (,torn fwirivrly oczupled by Solomon) And.buy at. prices . , that will astonish all who hare-been in the haidt of buy ing of other dealers. MY STOCK IS ENTIRELY NEW Xint consists of FATAL AND WINTER OVERCOATS!' OVERCOATS! • OVERCOATS! • Cheaper than you ever saw them! SUNDAY SUITS! WORK SUITS! • BOY'S-SUITS! And in fact everything in the line of READY-MADE` CLOTHING AND GENTS': FURNISHING GOODS. REMEMBER! that having just com menced business, I have no old-fash ioned,. Moth-eaten, shoddy goods. Mrf — Call and see for yourselves. J. .DAVIS. Tomsk,ls' Oct. 25. 1877. • B Thoromsih Prgorationfor akther.sl . o , BRYANT &SIRATTON USINES.B UOLLECE.: - And Ttleirasalle Imatutos 108 11. Tenth 13phltadelp114.P810;' hummed.re.ra facilities. oble Dept. in c acne of the .11faeogar ...1".-tsicas of . Atbsatleased lan 21.1 c C ,proph nk -Fur • iit puticn.u. call ( foe hue circular. J. K. fl oma oUUL Pm" • . • • _ - Clothing. OWAND.k-BRADFORD COUNTY, 'PA., THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER\2S, 1877. Rrfferred rota ': El.itEmnT~tt : Our country is chang ,ingPwcinderfully. ' I was - particularly inv. -pressed with this fact lately While passing through a portion - of your county. You remember, 1 erhaps, in ,the . days of iyour childhood of hearing of the "Four !Mile Woods." They commenced at : Tavern" in Orwell, andter 'rninated at Doane's, In Windham. About . in the middle of these Woods are the headwaters of the Wysox creek and:Nud creek, the' latter a branch bf the Wapp.l - creek; both heading spring called Shoemaker's spring. ~The latter running north.-and emptying into the Sustprehan nalrivr at Nichols Corners, the . former running 'south an d emptying into the same - river about three miles below To wanda. But the eleyation,.is_so, 'slight that Ali eArayeler would :liard I y:'" flank tlat;:, 'he jait'..9: - riivg , :.;.66 -Where,' two EfCit‘anis -*re: formed; each ruiiiiirk lit op. tVosite l d ireet . . . Fatlntitry years therew4.s, not ..allught: house Willie Wholie';distance oty t tbe road. which 14thron1.111 these welds, bait 41 - I . S one continued howling wilderness. A' traveler Passingothrlugh one day, saw a deer cross the road, rauning at its hottest speetli . lolling with ,its tongue out of its Mouth; : in - a few moments; .on . time a wolf in full chase; soon a second one; and Close behind this a third one—the latter yelling at every jump, while the two for `Oer . oneslept perfectly quiet. This,. by 01 . hunters, is saill to be their -usual Otis tit o k . f pursuit. Such things were} coin- 1 Mon 1 the days of our fathers. But 1 w the Woods along - thisioad s have entirely e - appeared„ and evol the steep, - t\ rough side- ills:are nearly ail cleared up. The land as A :general thing is .poor— . rather below t e'- average. But culture makes a- wonder tl change in • it. The farm of ELMAII Sin EMAKEIi: is the best on the route. , Althot gh it embraces "the summit," yet; it is the b ost level of any one in the witole distance; and gives evi• donee that thei - iihn who li 'es there, not eply knew how to choose a flt p, but also how to, work one His ' bulb ings,.,his fences and- his Gelds, show that l .is no; afiraid of work. lie has . "made t -.,-wit derness and . the solitary place to bud nd . blossom as the rosn." Some of t e ether farms, give evidence of thrift am comfort; while otheirs;look :IS if it would' takOinany yeats of hard labor and much capital to make them any way desk Mile . the " Four Mile Woods'' is a thing of the past It oirly. lives in memory. The Woodman's axe has leveled the for ests, the strong arm of man, with his faithful team, has!removed the fallen 'tint bar; the roots of the once majestic. trees are slowly yielding-to-the corroding tooth of time,—tlie orchard, with its rich fruit is , there and there waves the golden grain, inviting the reaper's sickle,—the sheevand ox have taken the, place of the v4-1' and the .deer,—the song of joy and - Oldness is now heard insteitd of thebov:l - - ing+ of wild beasts, and even the log hou.ses of the first settlers have aTN•dblappeared, and nice cemfortahle homes appear in their stead. , . The "Heel Tavern," long singe ceased. as suchi.anq tie " Beaver. House NAnce known. as the 46 V.illey Home") of mu c h later date, a mile or so north has also "gone where the woodblnc t wineth." It died a natural death, for the travel on this road now is scarcely anything to what •t wtts before the completion of the Le hi di Valley IlailrOad. , 1 hint: that there isoot now one Knoll' living in , what . ;vas the ` * Four Mile Woods," that was living there fifty years ago. Tht ItiiKl:s z the Weksyni - usc, and the.. il OnENE‘Q, have all either "gone to that bourne nit whence no traveler re turns," or are , coking their. fortune hi other places. The " Four ' 31i es Woods," with its corduroy bridges,. tTible thud-holes, deers and wolves, its drictiess and gloom, with no human hahitation, c —dread of the traveler, how .hast thou el tinged ! , And what shall be illy changes •ii the next fifty years? C. IL Avboti. Whitney's Point, N. Y., Oct. '',- 'Tr. '. . TUE COTiNTRY GENTLEMAN.—AT *MI- I'M ANNI'.I,/, TO EVERY IiF.ADER.--t 7te Country Gfhtlentimis published weAty 'on the folloWing terms, when paid strictly in_advi.nce : One copy, one year, $2.50; four coptes, $10; and an additional'eopy for the year free to him - sender of theolub; ten copies; $2O, and an -additional copy for the year tree to t4ie sender of the clut. 'For the year P.+7B, these prices include a copy Of tqe • Annual Register of Rural Alai% to each subscriber—a bOok of 144 pages and about, 140 crigravin?rs—a gift by the publishers, in honor of the eomplctimi, in its present vcrekly form, of the Country ciientlenzare's first gtiarter century. The Con far y. Gentlenio n possesses an unequaled corps of correspondents, regu lar'and occasional, among the best farm ers of all parts of the country, and con stantly reflects the practical eUndition.and progress of the hu•.baudry of every sec tioff," of the United States and civilized world. 7'he CiHintry :Gentleman gives in its Hort:cultural Department a continuous variety' of - information and suggestions, "equal or supeiiorin the aggregate to what is Obtained in the Monthly numbers of most magazines de,voted to Horticulture. The Country Gentleman has probably done as much as all other " journals Com, Lined, to introduce and disseminatelm proved Stock of every kind through . the country; and commends, to a greater de gree than any',..contemporary, die confi dence and support of breeders•_and pur chasers. • The Country Gentleman contains un usually full aio trustworthy Market Re ports, and devotes special attention to them and to the Prospects of the crops, as throwing light upon one of the most portant of all questions—W . lien-:.to' Buy and When to Sell. The COO tory dezillemrn embraces nu merous minor departments Of a practical character, such as the Dairy, the Poultry Yaid, the Apiary, the Vineyard, etc:; and and weekly presents a column or two for the housewife and'an interesting Variety : f Fire Side Heading. It contains a well ediffd Ile% iew of (,'lirretit Evelits, and its advertisi. g paws furnish . a directory of. all the principail agricultumland horticul: tural establishments of the contitry. l Specimen copies of the paper free. Address, . I:VT[IER TI/CREIL & SoN, Publishers, Albany, -N. Y. REGARDLESS OF DENtINcIATIoIi FROM ANY QUARTER. THE PROHIBITION PARTY Two years ago,,some of our temperance friends in this county litecoming impatient •at the slow prOgress which . / the temper-. ance 'cause had made, ;forgetting that moral refttlins move slowly, that .Christi anity itself has been preached in the world for more than eighteen hundred years, and still does not cover the earth as the Waters ciiver tlieSea; organized apolitical party for tho •sole, purpose of obtaining the passage of a law prohibiting the sale of intoxicating drinks. After an active 'campaign, in which meetings were held in all parts of the county and documents scattered . as plentiful as _leaves in Au tumn; they Succeeded in polling about four hundred and sixty votes. Whether they were disheartened by the result, as not being commensurate with the amount of time and money they had expended to ,proctrie .s it,l3. whether it was owing to - produced ,by over, Wiirk unit, the necessity of a long rest, that ,thpy allowed their party to sleep for two years : re not informed. We can-only ccAffXttiiii' , tliat the leaders. in the -move ment, after lookingAlio field over las fall and finding the Republican party 'United, and tearing that instead of , making a re spectable increase, there - would-be a fall ing off in their irote,wisely concluded that it would not be"si good:time to call their party out, Intl - . se have 'permitted it to slumber for Vwtyyars. may:zbe. that such a ionU repose has giVen it a vast store of energy which _now- demands exereise,. ,car it May be they thiak ;,the divisions in the 114publicati party (the piirty into which they expect to make their inroad) afford them a favorable opportunity. It is not pleasant to be obliged to differ from friends With whom we hate labored a • !- good. many' years in the temperance cause, and whont we believe are actuated' by conscientious motive-but we trust - .hey , will read these lines in - the friendly spirit OE in which they aie written, and acconi us the same honesty of purpose and free (14m of action which they claim for them "wives. In a 'circular prepared and distributed, two years ago, by the same men who now lead the prohibition party in this county, they . say : "The Democrats controlled Maine when the law of , that State was adopted, as they did the State of Ohio, when the pro Vision against license was iu-. sorted in its constitution. To the Demo ( - atic, , Whig, and American parties, 'are_ all ur present prohibitory statutes attlib utab ," :According to our recollection, the lot% as it now St:lll4# in Maine, is the \ll Work ( — e . priblican Legislature and s ,Governor, . \ ndwocannot remember that tlip De mocra oi , eVer inserted any provision against license 'II the constitution of Ohio, but granting for the sake of argument their statement is tie, it proves by their own showing s that th pr+ibitory laws in Maine, and all the Sta s where they have had any, were passed wi ,bout the did of any prohibitory party, ariifore the pro hibitory party had an existence. The iii-' felMice is inevitable that a 11ollibitoi'3,- - party is just as_ unnecessary now as it was in the past, the, even the.Democr4ie par ty, under the pressure of . i. strong p\7c sentiment, will lass such laws. If the Democratic party Was the father of the Maine law, the Republican party for twenty years has been its nursing mother, and has giVen it a kind and care ful bringing up. With the power to re-, peal it 'at any time, it has improved, maintained, and enforced it without the assistance. of any prohibition party. We find on the statute book laws prohib iting profane . swearing, Sabbath-break hog, horse racily., lotteries, _. tippling houses, gambling houses, brothels and sillier dens of iniquity.. Did it require a prohibitory party to obtain the passage of a.singie one of these laws? :Nor, at all. They were enacted and have been main tained becauso the moral ovntiment of a large majority of the - Icople demanded itt and jilst so soon as a - large majority of the periple are convinced that a prohibitory rtjuor law is necessary, larch a law will be enacted andwill stand forever afte,rWard. TIM difficulty with all our temperance legislation has been that it was in advance of the piffilic sentiment ill the State, .it did not have the majority of the people tO back it up, and just so soon as the li mao interest s rallied its forces, the laws. beige brushed as id e as easily. as cols.webs io I , the sweeper's' broom. The local 01)- lwas a fair law, anti shoal have been. alto ed to stand in the forty-one counties where 't, had been adoptc(l, but the ag gregate 'cote showed that in BM whole \ State therwas a majority of more than thirty thous. nd against it, and this ma.: e x jority soon niaffir its influence felt in the Legislature, wh s ich is, the . great, political zhermometer to iiidicate. public opinion The Republican party, in passing the law, had knowingly incurred the hatred of the liquor interest, it had.risked its po iition as the dominant party to secure a good law which temperance men had ask ed tor, and it had a right to expect the gratitude and snpport of all goad temper ance men in return. By' reason of its temperance action it lost its State ticket, it lost the House of Repres s ehtativeS, and would have lost the Senate had not a ma jority Wits members held over:, What did it' gain? • In addition to the hatred e of the liquor "interest, it gained the ill will of some of the very temPeranco men whose prayers it had granted, and who were so, unrea sonable as to be angry at a Repu'dieari Governor who could not conscientiously "veto the will of a large . majority of the people. In the address of • the committee of the prohibition party in this county, they say : -" The .man tv4 supports either the Republicanvr Denis keno ie patty, votes for the 'license iYstem," and again " we could not conscientiously stireort a- party that data notexpreis its cdnitrfnunition of the license system, and thifs : giiiikwrong perpetrated in the rePearlif.:thillot-4 1.1 4 :44 , lion law." 'ls it possible tin; Warned com: . :* mittee have forgotten that the last Re publicaiourity Convention,. which as sembled no longer ago thanlast May, and placed in nomination their candidates rot. District ittoricy and County Siirvoyor; passed, without a 'dissenting voice, titr; .following preamble and resolutions : W tin rtEss, The Local Option law, which gave to the people in. each county' the, power to control the liquor traffic therein, was beniticial 'in lessening' intemperance, was in accordance with the foundation priueiples of Repablicangovernment, and of the great Democratic doctrine that the majority shall rule; aid Ititiputam; The said law was enacted when. the Republican party had' control of the State government; and Was resifon 1)r ~‘„, siblo for its existence and was n repeal ed until the Democratic pattyb obtain ed a popular majority in the Sta and the full control of the popular inane - of the Legislature; therefore, • , .. • ' Ri'oioed, That the general welfare:..f the people, the prowritc of the State, and the interests of the Republican party,, alike demand its re-enactment at' the ear liest practicable period.. Whtt we bear in mind that, these reso lutions were passed unanimously. by a full convention, in which every district in the County was represented, and that they wore published in all the county papers,. 'w.e are astonished that the honorable men who compose the prohibitory committee, could find it in their hearts to say : "The man who supports either the Republican or Democratic party, .votes . for the. license system." Unles s they are able, to sho w that the local option- law is the license sys tem, and that the Republican convention Mendorsing the ene'eild*ed flu. - .3.00; •- • they will have: a- - .diflictili. :task_. to, Make . .iteople believe ; - their asseitioys . , so far :Iy . 'regards.the liefilblican .- party is tine: .If temperarice.legislation IS -- irbat they really . watdrie're h4.a strong,party Well organ ed, ready to help ,them 'and willing= to their help, but instead of-helping, they make war on it and are trying to, de feat its candidates: Can it be -possible that these 'men . will never be Suited with any' party which they. do not lead :them-• wives, that they care more, for leadersifip tkatifor local option, and tliattheywould net.liaVei.ViesteredtinieSs' itr ; Can be done by' Oiemselies initheirfeWn party and id their own way. Their attempt to defeat. the Republican party in thiit county, after it has 'plattt-,d its feet firmly ou the local option law, seems to us ill judged and ill timed, :Mil their effort to strike do r . n Mc- PirEnsuand SEwAnn whom the n knove to be :reliable temperance men, well quail ied' for the ,offices to which.they have been nominated, merely beeausq they are the candidates of the 'republican party, is heartless and cruel. This committee of de/prohibition-party arc naturally kind hearted _men, wo do not believe they intend to, dc: wrong,. nei ther did SAisr, of Tarsus intend to do wrong when the hold the garments of tbOso it who - Stoned • STE PHEN. Ile ti ght - he was doing Gun service'. Instead. 4 bold ing garments, this prohilition. coniniitti o are attempting to bold Republican voters while the Democrats, slaughter !denim:: SON and Si.:wAnn. • . Temperance friends, let us stick to the Murphy-*ovement, Which . 11 are Willing to admit , has , done so much good, and where all eaa \ work together in harmony. 'Let us contiUtte to preach the gospel pl temperance until\all good men in the state are zonverted.to tho. wholesome doctrine of prohibition, as N''tw ! DoWc 'converted the people in Maine, then •we will have, the law as *terror to evil doers, and it will come as easily and surely as the day daWns. • CisTELA-It. ELECTION • MOWN. For the benefit of election boards ana the public' generally, we insert following digest of.election.lqws : Every . fitale citizen, t wenty-one years of age, 'possessing the folliming qualifica tions, shall be entitled to, Vac at all ekc tions : 1. He shall have been a citizen of the 'wiled States one month. ). He shall have resided in the State; one year; or, if Iciv i ing previously' been a qualbied elector or native born citizen thereof and shall have removed there from alit ranched, then ho shalLbave re sided therein six months . immediately preceding the election. ..t :t. Ile shall)mve resided in the district where he inter is to vote two months im mediately prce,eiiing the election, instead ~ , often days, as•ior ncriy. • , ' 4. If twenty-one , - ears , ,of—ap r e, or up, ward lie shall have ir hi, %Addy' two years, a,St ate or eounty . tax,\which shall have been assessed at least twiemonths previous to the election, and paid atleast one month previous to the saine, \\. 5. PoreigtW horn citizen s\ muse have been naturalized at least one *nth before thu election, and must conform t the ni quirements contained in Section 4, preced ing. . The election will be held on " - the Tues day next following the tirst 3londayf November," being this year the 6th day of the month. \ • • • The above date should_lfe carefully remembered and acted on 'by all Vol- . THE last will and testnment of the late Archb',shop BAYLEV was filed in '.he Orphans' Court for probate;and the following is an exact copy of the same: . In the naihe of God, when, I, James Roosevelt Bayley, formely of Newark, N. J., aid now of Baltimore city, Md., being in oiled healthand -sound mind, but con sidering the uncertainty of f lifet do there fore hereby revoke all former wills by me heretotbre niade, and makb and publish `this and none other as and for my. last Will and testament, that is to say:, First and ,principally, I commend my soul to Alinighty.thxl, and my body I reCiign\to the earth. , SecoMl item. give deVise,' and be queath all of my estate and property of every kind s :whielimay be in New . Jersey at the time of my death_ to his Eminence the Most Reverend Cardinal .1. Megleskey of New York, and to-the Right Reverend John Laughlin, of . the city of Brooklyb, sand the .Ri,gnt Reverend Michael A. Cor rigan, of the city of Newark, and to the' survivors and survivor of 'them; their and • his heirs and assigns. Third item. 1 give, devise and be= queath all of ,lie.rest, residue and remain der of my estate and property, of every • kiud ,and . description whatsoever .and wheresoever _situated,' inclittlidg • wh'at I now have and may acquire, unto \tihe Rev. James Gibbons, of the city of Rich mond. Va , the lit. Rev. Thomas A. Reck er, of Wilmington, Del., and the Rt. Rev., J: J. Kain, of Wheeling, W. Va., mid to the survivor of them, their and his heiA, and assigns. Fourth and bit item. I constitute and appoint the said Ja.ues Gibbons,"Thomas A. Becker and J. Kain, and the sot- Vlvors of them, to be the executors of this my last will.. Witness my hind and seal, in the : vitrof Bultinwre aforesaid this ilth - ,44y,' LS Vi. • A --: -. . . (Signed) JAMESROMEVELT lIVY - 04F . ; Witnessed by Thomas S.. Lee Williare E. Starr and A. A. Curtis. The will is written on a sheet of letter paper, and is in thq . handwrit l , ing of the ArehhiShop. A viStron to a private lunatic asylum, who found a, distinguished locking man -sitting moodily aloue, - w•ent ttp,aud said to him, " flow do you do? I think-I have seen you before. May I ask you name?" " My name !" returned the man &lively 1 66 a . m Alexander. the Great "Why," ,said the visitor,• who suddenly remember ed having already had. a. discussion With the man, "the last time nvas here you were' St. Paul!" "Yes, of. course,'" the man rejoined. 4111141 y, "hut that was by the first - • - 4 ) • ""•\ _ ~,„+ A NEGRO SONG. i• Now do rata ant code at laid, Air de long itrOut time Is past.. An' do grans .in combo' fast In de shower An' de mornln•-glory brier, Au' do peelers grtadtv higheir Etery hour. '\\C mount—Oh, dallies, mind dos warnia ' ,., You . won't hab long to play , deco Yor de glories In de menthe , . Brings troubles all de day. Ob, do Cabitage - laughlo-day„ ,-. An' de squaAkes slug and play, An' dent Later!. grow away - Oui, de row: c ' . But do urkleburs am springlit' An' de debll's seed am bringht , . - Work anti wo'. - ' . Now, dirties, shore's you born, :Massa Itouben's early horn . call you:ln ti4t. corn , 1'.31 . 011- fie plough - f,; . For de r , ag:Weeds . .kn"tletuMay,pops Taolx ou no* ! ' • •-• Oh; do rtin:Ofone eallifd, rain, • . 'tar de white go,nl,hild gisiu, But de darkliOrsserk lik - 41u. Vur do ruffize-weedAntisii' Au' 110. c;jcii . su:ii.:lll ;4ric , ssiiii ri . , w r ;cti, Tank de'',l-;or 4 ;Ile know-d 6 best; Fur do parehlu'erop siu West, Au' de darkles 1126 some rest, ' In de ,:horrer; • - •Butdat :nurnin•-glory prier, An (Ist misters grc"nrin* higher beer. ' —Center! Gtor2itt trulay. " WONDER WHO THEY'RE FOR?" •• My ma's heen wfwking very•hard, • And al . so iery And keeps her : sewing out of sight Whenever I am nigh. I ask - ed her once what made her stop 4 lierAvork wherrl Came In; the sahl she only Atortl to get A needle, thread The Inireaudmver next to mine Is locked both night and day, And vrhen ma wnnts to open it • She Sends nie.olT to play. 1 sidle a peep one afternoon, Although It Iva.: not right lint, oh ! the tittle thing's I saw Were such a pretty sight The cutest, deeSt little clothes-- Just big enough' for dull ; But then I know they're not for her — She needs them not a: all.- I know they're nut for ma nor pa, Noritne nor hrot her " Ifor," For we can't wear such little'clOthea I wonder who lhern , for? l.~cclllrtrott . .~, A SPARROW'S POWER OF REASON ING. A . curious store•, illustrative of the intelligence and reasoning power, and ,perhaps of ' the Characteristic rascality also, of the little twittering miscalled "English sparrows," now so common in all dr Principal-towns and cities, is - relatecl•.b}• a 'friend, tvlio had it from! the Witness himself who saw the occurrence. the'frentleman. , who resides in New Yor, had.erect; eklast 'spring' in his back yard, a large box for sparrows' nes4.• It was divided into three rows, each contain ing rout - compartments. These were all speedily taken possession ot by a dozen pairs of, sparrows, and the bu;iness of 'making nests proceeded amidst -the customary . chirruping din of these . fussy and pugnacious feathered colonists. Sitting idly at the window one Sunday, watching the birds, the gentleman saw one cock spqrrow come flying co his place witha ftne, „soft . white feather in his mi. Thetiox was so placed that he coubUsee into.thc aplrtmentS,.and he saw - this bird fii . the 'feather into a complete nest, and then fly aikray. . • -NO sooner was .he, out; of sight than a female sparrow from the .ail joining apartment, who had evident ly seen that proceeding, !ipped into her neigliboe,s house and pulled . out arid carried. off the coveted feather. Becoming i n terested, the , observer watched the, performance, .expecting to See the little thielclarrylpr stolen prize to herT3wn nest; but here is where she,displayed an undeniable reason- ing Process, and acted on a clear per cepticin of cause and effect, making a prudent . use of her knoWledge of the ,Character !and - . disposition_ . of her plundered neighbor. She flew off with the leather to a neighboring tree, where she secuKely fastened it in an . inconspicuous lilace between. two twigs, anti there kit. Pretty soon the bird. she had deem . uded Caine \ .l\ back with a straw to dd to his nest. Discovering' .his loss,. le came out with an angry chirrupin g that boded no good to the despoiler.o iis hearth and home,- ,ii could only find the rogue, Hislirst demonstrati iii was to visit his next - door neighbor, with \ out ,any watch • warrant., ; In that abode of ~ peace 'and innocence found found no trace of ,the stolen feather . ;\ and as for actually guilty partyhe was hopping innocently about and loudly demanding—as far a bird'. tones could be -understood y the man at the window—what w ,s meant by this ungentlemanly - an very kil l , polite intrusion into a adv's bed- chamber, and inSisting - .th:it she was no such kind cff a woman. The cock • sparrow was evidently puzzled. Un ahlep after a minute search, to find the lost feather,. he at :length apparently gave it up, ehafged it to profit and loss, and flew away- in search of an other. She • thief demurely waited till he had o•nt, well off, and then flew Ito the tree;Secured•the stolen feather, 'and took it; in triumph 'to her own nest.—lfarylird (Con n.) Times. JA:l:ts has strict ideas about equity in When she first heard tile Siviour's u.iracle in • feeding with the few loaves ani lisilmAiollained from the young lad's lids- Ret,' , ssifeivp awed'itrpr thoughful and &d -onut a \ mazement. Imo time •afterward, in the Midst of a talk about other,- mat ters, she Suddenly paui.cd, and asked with special : " Did they giv4 back tlie ibasket t tit. t boy?" - • A Nirsts•rt: . that he NO bt.ei for many *cars. lected- all . religioi st t anding this he 'lope:' The tieing incanwhil strongly oflique him it was time much value upoi preserved in whim WE touch not eternity, and-tin porta not at the Poelczi. ME 11111 EZ EMI $2 per Annum In Advance. lA:tiplikk:oll4l:o4ol:Ttnisl ,Who composed the .following, de sci•iption of the Bible we may never :low.. It was found in Westminister Abbey, nameless and dateless,-but nevertheless it is . invaluable "for' its Wise : and wholesome counsel to the r'aa: of Adam: ' A nation should be perfectly hap • py if it were governed by no other laivs than those of Vila blessed book. It contains . everything. needful to be known or done.- It giveSinstructions to Senate, and directions toa magistrate. It Cautions a witness, requires im partial verdict of a jury, and furnish es the judge with his sentence. • It sets the huslAnd as lord of . his hotti - ehold, and the. wife as mistress of the table; tells him how to and" her how totnanage. •,I eptalls. td • p4feiiiii4_4`o4 , . enjoin obedienceeon children . ;;:,;;'P - . of. the .'t,he_ : ,ol4.-ahil the authority of the . .._rn,ister; commands the subject to lionnorud 'the servant to obey, and promises the protecton . of the Al mighty to all that work by this rule. ft , rives. directions for weddings and b urials.e Tt promise's food 'and raiment and limits the use of both. it points out 4 faithful and eternal . Guardian to the departing 'husband' and father.; tells him with . whom'to leave his fatherleSs children,- Sand -whom his widow is to trust ; and promises .a . kind father to the former and a husband to the latter. It very implicitly forbids a guardi an to steal his ward's honest money, aml never urges upon him".the dark picture of mother earth. , It teaches a male to set his house in' order, and lior to• make liis will; it.appOitas a dowry fox: his wife and entails the rights of the first born,. and shows)iow the young 'branches shall be idt. • • It defends the right, of all, and. re-z -veals vengeance to; every defaulter, overreached and trespasser. It is the first 'book, the best book. , It contains thel choicest matter, gives the best. instructions, affords. the 'greatest degree of satisfaction and 'pleasure that lye have ever joyed.. . . It contains the' best laws and most profound mysteries' that were ever peuned,'arld it brings the very best comforts to the inquiring and dis consolate. It is a. brief recital of 1111 that Is to come. , It settles all matters in debate, re solvessolveS all doillAS, and eases-the . mind and conscience of all their scruples: . :It reVeals she only and trim GOd, and showing the way to *jai, sets aside all other gods, and des cribeS the vanity of them and all that trust in such; in short is a book" of laws to show- the right arid wis dom, that condemns folly and makes the foolish wise, -a book of life that showg" , the way from everlasting death. It contains . the most ancient an tiquities strange' events, wonderful occurrences, heroic deeds and unpa-i -aleled wars. It describes the. celestial, tetrestial. and infernal 'Worlds and human tribes, And the &wills!' legions: . It will ins6uiet the most accom plsliedLnleclrmicians and the inogt: I, k feo ti+ scholars. It teatthes the best rhetorican; and exercise ev - erk power of the' most skillful arithnietician, piizzli , s the wisest anatoml ; sts and confounds the subtlest '. • . • .. * It is 'the best covenant that ever was-agreed: on, the best that:was e'vee sealed--.the best - that will ever be signed THERE arc 146000 drinking sa loons in'this country, , amt: 128,000. schools. Maniffacturers . and.Sellers of stroplr,drink, 560,000,- or about four times the...number of teachers. .In these saloons there are 5',600,000 daily custothere, one•in eight of 'our, whole population. Of these, 100,000 are an nualiv imprisoned for crime, • at \ an expense of $90,000,000, arid 150;090 go down to the drunkard's grave, leaving 200,000 beggared orphans. Orasp . these figures... file of men silty miles in length marching stead= ily doWn to the grave ; more than 400 every day throughout the . Yea:F. AS this year's 150.,000 go down, another' 150,000 is' pressing in .to • fill' their places, ,another back of that, • and-an other, pouring ilown froM every ham let and hillside in the country: Many' there are who would turn aside from .these ranks in horror, and reform, but for th6seeminghopelessness of the effort, so firmly arc they held in the inexorable bonds of habit. :---"T".111M-4.- ...- -STAND by ! yourjriends, let come What nay, is a good motto. If you don't stand b - them. you needn't expect them to-stand . by •on. So whether they 'be 'friends of high or,low-degree i in influence or po+)er ty, sti dr to them and don't stop to inquire whethe ~will pay or whether it will be popular. Whenever you prove traitor and desert.thos.wlio hav,l, stood up .for you add helped our battles you will tind \. yourself SN itil\ ut any one to congratulate' you upon your achievements, or comfort you in an 'evil hour when misfortuneS came thickand f:4 -, • . . .. . Tim .man-, who \ doeS nothing' don't amount to much. ItfakeS but little dif. / .7 ference weenier he - is it millionaire or 'pauper. lie Only a sta„,nant pool, with-. Oct energy enough to start a ripple. : / /lle . diffuses a moray miasma- over everything around him. Do something i\doultstand on the corner gaping, with Your bands in your pticketst - like' an idiot.. The world was made to wcirk in, and if ken sill your -hearts - with - good angels, the - ;bad Spirits will keep out, beeause there.is no won .for them., -• ' . A N ' f AN'S temper is 'most . valuable liiinself and -he should keep-it. • A eIIEEWFUI, face is _nearly as good for an invalid as healthy Weather: AN old rail-splitter / in Indiana put the_ quietus upona.young man who efiaffed him upon his bald / head -in these Words : , •Yonng man, when my head gets as suit as yours, I can/raisehair to sell. • *-:.. • -. . TUROUGII }}voe wo are taught to reflect,. and wo gather the ' honey of , worldly Wis dom not from flowers, but thorns.. - * , ' A 1.1..N:e13 misfortunes may.always bere trieved,if he has retained habits of sobri ety and industry. • . . • . _ • IT bet . the beautiful no. on that smiles down a soft encouragement to the lovers leaning over the garden gate, is ' the saran old reprobate, that provides iltu ruination . for • the Midnight cat soiree. and smiles the samo•sMile u.tho smuldsof woo are wafted to his'. esr front the - hap less denizens below' . . - Bum Lams entered the cc llar of C. C. Jadwin's drug, store in Honesdale one night last week and carriedaway a quan.. ity of oil and liquor. CILARLE* A. DIXON, the new President of the Permanent Exhibition Company,' is a•young man of thorough imsinesa quail. fications. He feels confident that the Exhibition will prove successful. Tun'harbers of Wilkesbarre have. de cided to close their shops on Sunday. THE celebrated Chew mansion, at Ger-. mantown, Itas.been kindly dealt with by time and still - remains intact. The lineal . descendants of the chief justice still occu 'py it, and - the .markeof cannon balls and bullets (re still ,visible. The house is two stories in height, with an attic ;is built of-atone and as about 110 years old.: ALLEGHENY Cl* has 404,700,23 sur plus money deposited in city depositories. . OF 600 persons committed to the count tyjail in Pottsville, Pa:: last year, - 25 were incarcerated for murder, and 24 for conspiracy to murder. N UMBER 21. , Tue. troops at• Mauch Chnnk will be witlidlawil as soon as the weather be comes too cold for tent life. TIIE Pennsylvania oil wells aro estima ted to have yielded 88,000,000 , barrels, V 00,600,000 on the spot. * • - AV I LKESBAIIRE_ is to-be illustrated in the Graphic. The "Valley City" will, no 'doubt; make a good "strike" out of it. Tun Scranton Free. Press states that the bond„pf Jt H. 3tillipaugh, the default ing and absconding Treasurer of that city, has beau stolen from the Prothonotary's office in`tiVilkesbarre. ' Mas. L. DUNCAN Ross, of Philadelphia, was bitten on the lip by a fly last week and has since died from the effects of the bite. It is supposed that the fly had been, eating some pepiortou.s:Aub - s , tauce..„. • Tug Odd ',relibisicif..tiiiii - j Sfate v _haWW-.... Moiement-lookituf.tkoWrd - oe.itrorporatien in.. - theii Order, •or - a•syVii te:o at 413 1 16 ra; • Ntife . ,3A Al.n , ty,..arieqbgr.Atti - Aue4.shati:„ . getwiouo. THE rooN4ialieresideace*of Hon. C. D:Eldred, in Nutley Creek township, has been on sixty-fOnr years and is not a bad': roof yet. .RICHARD SHOEMAKER, Of Upper tou'nsliip, Montgomery county, planted fourteen acres of potatoes, and the yield is 3,000, bushels. • • JAMES TURNER, father. of Martin V. Turner, recently sentenced to be hanged in Clearfield counts,•bas beep arrested for perjury 'in the trial .of his son for inurdel.. THE hall of the am* of Representa tives has Wen renovated; and is now ven tilated in an linproved manner. NEARLY four millions of ~d ollars have been spent on the :new--city buildings in, Philadelphia, and eight millions more will be needed. TILE last oil discovery is located at the niouth of Chartier's creek, a small stream flowing intolho Allegheny at Chartier's Station, on the Allegheny Valley railroad, about twenty-two miles. north of Pitts barg. TnE Centre county fair Was a great sue etss this year. The entries •reached two Thousand, five hundred more than at any previous - eihibition, and on Friday. the attenitance:las estimated at eight thou sand. . . GooDExouon of the tansfield Ad .rertimr, has been tendered 'a .position on the Detroit Free Preya.. Caft. HATrlxos-, Paymaster sth Regt., N. G. of Pennsylvania, was mar ried on the-4th inst, to Miss Rankin. ofd Bellefonte. Hastings is -a brave soldier; and a good felloW, but when we saw him last on-the "tented field" .(at-the Logan House) we little thought that he wciuld:so soon be captUred.• Who'll amuse the Jiidge and Spangler now?. . TIOG.t county hae thirty-seven lawyers. Tut: post office at Rathbone, Lycotning, • county, has been discontinued. TIE pepole of Potter county are to vote on the question of a; poor house at, - flip election nest month. • " 'N • i • • THE old wooden' bridge spanning the Susquehanna just above - Harrisburg is ,licing replaced by an iron structure, with out interfering with the passage of trains; The bridge is three quarters of a mite in length. NEWS PROM ALL NATIONS. IcZ, three inches thick, was seen in thy ; Niagara river last week. • , • -- 1?0w.7.7 east toy men say 'bukinessis bet ter than for three years. < Tun capacity, of the " new process -cotton factory at Memphis is to be doubl -ed. A:s . international congress for ,the ad vancement of good „morals is tp meet in Geneva. , • - 1 .A SAN Fit ANciscn clergyman says that only one,:tento of. the men in that city ever go to church.: \ . THE heart of Dr. Winslow, who was cremated in Utah, is buried with his pa rents at NantuChet. -A CoLum Bus society 113 A been fer Med. in 'Valladolid, Spain, to keep alive national admiration for the great discoverer. COLON El . 'HOBERT G. IN 6 ERsoz,of will remove, to Washington this winter to practice law. • .A.l.niinT Ibtorms hai retired frOm tile editorship .of The .Washington Nation. hix continued. ilbhealth compelling him to engage in 1(.14 laborious literary work. 1..15T year the value of the eggs im po'rted into England was V;610,?31. I:Ntos City, n.l;, is to haVe alard oil factory donsutniug 1600 hogs a week. IlAurtsionE employs some 30,000per si ms in catehina., and preparing Oysters fcM market. • . MRS...s.clistFrEu; of Greenwich town ship, Berks county, is 96 years of age,: / andis in . good Health, and can boast that / she never took a ride on a railroad train., 1 i . uE survey for the. Olean, . Bradford . alit 'Warren road' has been completed. T ie company advertise forlal•Orers,,and - the ; work of construction will begin at once.: ~ X t KilasTwiitten, a. letter to the miners of Western Perinsylvaniaadvising them to break the strike and gO to work in order to save their families . from.su-ffer- II .o • A KENTUCKY Judie has/"electiifled"- the State by confessing- his unfitness for the position and retiring/from the btinelv. • 3lns JANE GREY wt. snEt.st champions. Russia through the cotimins of. the Pitts burg Telegraph, and doeS it well. • A NUMISEII of Chicago clerks, male anti fetualck, contemplate establishing a co-op crativekdry goods' store in that city, with ty capital of fifty thousand dollars - A BALTimont: firm recently red by cable fkom Yr:life+) an order for .190,000; basilels -of- wheat, Om commissions on which footed up* the handsome. sum: of $7;000. / • • , • . A "not altogether voluntary," of GenerM J. C. Fiernont's books, pictures, and / hrie-a-brac has begun in New Cork. / CLARA, Monitti\is so far. restored' -healtli that there no longer exists the f 4lightest doubt of her ability to fill her engagements this"seaton. , . ACCORDING to. the Paris Omariis, tha arniuzS of,lime.. Adelina Patti bare been two and . a „half million dollars since she.began her operatic career. • .. . . , BISHOP GiulioNs, of Richmond, Arc- - bishop Bayley's- successor in the Ameri can primacy, is 43 years oid, and tha" youngest archbishop in.the country. . . • lIEv. Da. STEPIItIN 11. Tv;vO, of NeW York, has recovered from a severe illness of several months' duration, and has re sumed pulpit services.' Ile is i 3 years old. • - , 'rut.: car works at Milton caught tire the . cat k.,,r day, and the Matonian.says but for , \ I the , xcellent system of water worki in opera ion they would- have been destroy ed. A.. it was, little•damage was done. i• ' Ilcis. u.i Dsvts, who sat as a repro- - Sative• in gre e s from the BUcksidistrict \ front 1839 t 1841; mid ' was surveyprof , % the port of P iladelplija under - President Polk; is living ..t Davisvillei Bucks coun- ' ty. Ile is in the, p'netieth year of his age, 4 and his ment.ll ac ivitv is Still 'very -re-• • inarkable. - ' . • i A..lYsysE C0u1d...? - . mot." -left h (. is"trest • hanging lupin Of tho pockets Were ab.mt a (4 - e ll llttlicimino • . pills. : Ills two, little-child en diseofered - \\,. •thero, they thptu airy wt. 443 candy anti` ate them, = Pllysiertis v.-,.re •Alled and; I:ntidates adtninist , iva... 6" nth . 4 111.0 within an bony.; :' . .-- 1 ' ' -_ ..- -• STATE rate.