Bradford reporter. (Towanda, Pa.) 1844-1884, January 31, 1878, Image 1

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    TEL VS. OP PII3IICATION.
are a tortiving In all cases exclusive ofosubscep.
lions to the ' • '
Vet AL NOTICES insertedat FIFTWXX CURS
per line, tot the dist insertion,' and PISA CINTe
peidne for subsequent Insertions.
Lot' A L NOTIcEs, same sty/e' as reading Mat
ter, TWENTY CENTS • LINE
Al/ E RTISXMENTS will be inseried according
to the following table of well%
lime... T.—l 41i 1 siw 1 zm I am I dm f lyr.
. 81.50 1 1.M115.001 6.00 1 10.00 115.00
2 inche%.:.7.
.1 2.00 1 5:001 8.001 10:00 1 15.0i1 1 tb.ob
-
inche4 1 2 . .501 (80.05120:05
4 Inehe;s..7. - .
1 1.00 - 1 8.50 1 14.001 18.25 125.001 25.00
A colurria . 5.00 1.12.001 18.001 22.00 1.80.00.1 43:00
s column,. fy ALoo ?A sOOO So.is - Ti
20.00 so.oo 160.001 so:(iiif -100:71
ADMINISTRATOR'S and 1E teentnVe Notices,'
Loa ; Andltor's natireiksl,so; Raainesaearda;dira
n ea. (Per Yes*) 14.0 0 . 1 1 144111 0 nal 0.00 eatcX
YEARLY Advarttaamenta sTO entitled to guar
a tly thanges.
TRANSIENT !Advertisements MU!t be mild ter
I ti ADVANCE.
ALL Resolutions of Associations, - Cominunlea.
Ilene et limited or indiVidnat toterestomd notices
of Marriages and Deaths, exceeding file lines, are
e barred T 1 VENTS PER LIEF,.
ion PRINTING,of every kind, In plain and
fancy &dors, dime with neatness and dispatch:
Blanks, Cards, Pamphlets, Bill cads,
statement,s, he., of every variety and style, printed
atAthe Shortest notice. Tux. Rimout/a ottlee is
well supplied with Or' wer presses, a good assort
ment of, now type, and everything in the Printing
lin. , ran be executed tn, the most artistic manner
and at th'e lowest rates.. •
TERMS iNVARIAMLT CASH
Trofessiousl aid Business Cards.
riLLlA:kis & ANGLE,-
rb RXEr g- A 7 , 1, A ill
F ri t E.—Voeinetly Occupied I,y Whit:ins
( ort. 17. '77)
Lb. "8
%. L.
M ASOI c & HEAD,
A t ro R r s -.4 Alr
Pa. Ot8• , e!weillartlett & Trary, 3'faln-at
Mal
o.,F:MAsetx
lIILLI.
oirsity-xT4.Aw.
• An TOW - A% DA, PA,
office with Smith at Pi qntatq e • (nowt t 4
rA•
1'• - GOFF,
:•
ATTO7 . INF7- -AT-LAW.
ain Street of Ward Muse), To
t(.l doors north
r ands, PA. rAprll 12, IsiL
- FL T3OMPSO. N, ATTORNEY
• AT LAW, WX AI,:i!WING: I. AVIII attend
all business - entrnsted his .care In Bradford,
I.lllvan'aitd.Wyornlngs (lountiell. Office with Esq,
or, te r;
r ELSBREE,
VTTORN Ex.-AT-LAW;
( ha 14-75. TOWANDA.. PA
el L. LAMB,
j•
A.l7OltN EY-AT-L A li r .
w 3ACLUE. cA.
•
^,ollections promptly attendrino. Toy
27,76 ,.. ,,
•
•
- jOIIN *. MIX,
ATTORNEY AT LAW, 1 -
A ?i
U. S. COMMIt;SIONTiIt:'
TOW A‘.!4l).A. PA.
Oake--NOZIIII Side Pubilc.Sqnste. .
Jan. 1, 1875
-
•
DA.VIES CAR'SOCIIA:S,
A TTOII.NNYA >AT LAW,
StI“ . PII SWF: OF W NED IlorsE.'
Dee'p-75.. "iftWANDTA , I PA.
HPFS,,T t ATTORN NY-AT-LAW. ' •
dr Is prepared to practice all branches of his
profession.. ....
011 ice. MF:RCIfit 131.k 1 CK, (pntranoe on sontk 1
aid , ) TOWASDA, I'A. (lan6-7C.
._
) n ;l .•
slns.n...l.3u.rgls‘i.°(tgeßotT4 irliNi."'APallini:.
.
rockery Mort.i , • ,
~1 . r
s't
'yowilliis, May, 1 lb. 1 , ,,•. . • ." • '
, . _ . _ _
ADILL ..f CALIFF, - i
-t- ATTOUNIO' , AT LAW,
.
-L i '
.i. . . TOWANDA, PA. ..., •
unice In Wooirs Block. first door soul:i yr the First
Natioo . al bank, op ,, tatrs,
a. 3, M ALMA, 1j:11431y) .1. N.171,121VF. '
•
GIII.M4EY j Ar, PAY NE,'
' A r - ri)n.vr: rs—i T-L.l W. .
..
1, TIcACY NOI1I.1; * 4 111.0 CK, MAIN STFiILIGT
. ' .
TOW A N DA. PA
(D'77)
11=139
JAMES WOOD,
ATTOR 1 . % A W,
--- • Tow,' A A. VA
.1110194 h.
M.
Attorney-at-Law /and NOtary,
will give , etri.rol att , tltlinfto any.Wisl entrust
cot to Min. t.)flice with 1'Atr1;•& & Foyle, "(Over
j„,• ra o/ Ofti,o ), Towanda.. Pa. • (J.ing.:l-77.
JOIIN F. SANDERSON,
•
kvr‘+‘ - { N EY-AT-1. A NV,
”FFI('K.-31eans Building fover,rowelli.Store)
mess -76 " '
Ay: k . Wm. LITTLE,
A TTORNE YS-AT-L TosrAsPA, PA
()ince over Provision Store, Main SI fret,
'Towanda. Pa., April 184'7t1.
1 FORGE' D. STItOUIY ; ' T
( •
N, T O , --
Al' TO RSR / ANA ri)I7,4SE 1.1.0 REA 7-L A TV
oillee —lthost., tour doors North of Ward House
Prurtle s 1u Supreme Court,),(,
t
. of Penns dr anta -and Visited ) T( (WAN lAA . 'PA
S; tato, I:oUrt((1 1 -CrIter7.16. ) -
ETCT STR.EBTER,
.
LAW OFFICE.
' T.OWAZDA, PA
2‘111,20
OVERTON - & MERCER,
ATTORN.EYS.AT LAW,
' TOWANDA PA.
()Mee thrPr Montenyes Store. rmay67e
D • .0 V rAtTo . RODNEY A. MERCUR
WM. MA x7-P,LI„
ATTORNEYAT-LAW
OFT mg 9Vxst D.kitoN's,:itottr, ToWANDA;.P.kI
April 12, 157,6
_
P AVRICK 45.;
- , troRNE ts—,r-rrit.A
9tllce.:'r.-
In Meicur's Block
. .
/
i ANDREW WILT,
CI • ,
..I.T TO R:ne r .t• co trysEt./.0 R.; , 17 . -.4 AMP.
„ni..e over Croy, Book Store, Liao doors Hord' or
F 1..n• fl St Long Tmvanda. l'a. May, Le conmitted
n I. , •rillaii. C. Alorll 12, '1'6,3
fIVEIII' ON -&, 'l.: L SIVR,E E; \ al rroit
r .r - Er-, At t. Aw; Tow.Asr,A.-i'4. flaring en
-1
1,0 , 1 pt .. C,...jinrlTtPrstilp, oirer their profeaatunal
It ro, le” o I be - publle,,,,,L 4 paelal attention given tp
1 , -,1 , -...n Pthecirplta:‘ . , altd RegtFterS 0,111r2%.
E. ,'V mr . rwsr. .3 U. (aprl 1.:70) N.C. EI,SHBEE.
TT. e : WIIITAKEIII
131,V1Y-1 .
THIRD rIO.III,ToW A 'MA
S..I:I3SSELI S
I=l
iN•sunANot AGt;N'C'Y
Mar` , l'fi If
INSURANCE AGENCY:
: t The following _
• IZ ELIAI3LE 'AND FIRE TRIED
orontrinle , rermsente.);
A \ I':•III.I:F.,PIDENIX-IfiI3II;:.3(EIZI7UINTS
marrb 16, !71" , 11. lI.III,ACC.
I NI; t.
f iIk:W4NDS INSURANCE AGENCY
Strr.t opp , ,sitt fht Coat---if" ft it.
W INCE:s.r,
- MANAG
T. B. JOIINSON4
. .
Tll 1.57C1.1.1 . AND .i'IrRO.NO.Y.
I , M , e'oyer D r. Porte r .If . ,Son's Drug store. Miranda
D.•L. DODSON, DgNTIST.
iTl_e (h i and after Silit. '2l,lnay 513 (pin' in the
e'•••,;:tet nrts rrtonot on Not.lloor of 'tilt - . Prat is uew
:..tat ! er Stmt. Business oolletted.
3-71 t t.•
on,
•
01lice
IV • 0 13 ,..r -- Nl -3 ;: j gie l oileh r lf l it, T T lST an .— da,.
'I eetb on Gold. Saver, Rubber. and Ai:.
cto :Wm 100., Teeth extracted without pain. _
14 1 D: PAYNE, M. iD
-
.1.1.
PHYSIVIAN .4.VP SURGEO:Y.
otti , t over 3:toutattyes• Store. °Rice 4ours Crow -10
to 12, A. '
11., and fmni . lt . to Ali P. ~Spec attention
the F..yt . awl Ear.-pa.19.7e-ir,
• TETA WI! & 13li0A
racturer r s of Woolen Goodt' Varna; kc
CARDIN(I,_&: DRE-SSIING,
Done to onler.
Caqi paid fur W4oi:at so - cloths exchangAil for woo
u u4-1m
8. W. ALVORD, Plibllsher.
VOLUME XXXYIIL
A SSIGNEE'& SALE.
The ven.liet of the people is
that M. E. ROSENFIELD'S is the
- .CHEAPEST : ,:',„
TT A_CE 'l l O ITUT
=
. ,
And now iaut again before the r‘eeple with die
• •
BIGGEST INDUCHAENTS
ARTltrli 111 AD
A largc E2I,STEIi,;V'
HOUSE bcin 1 ob7ifjwd to
For the benefit of .Their .ereditors, the
assignee has sent to me • .
Sio l ooo.ooo
WORTH 1 . OF READY:23II'I)E
TO* .BE SOLD WITHIN THE
4
"Sly mkittire tnstruetlirns from rho mslgp.en to
pen them goods for soon- a's litislble,
WITHOUT 'IIF,O ARP TO WIIAT
TUFA COW
•• •
GEXTS' 'FI i:1,8111NQ GOODS
=ME
Come Esry tt You %Vont Itargatos.
Towanda, Pe. 1,.77
.7 WO: •ti A, PA.
SELLING OUT.
Is selling outs his entire stak;k:of
WINTER CLOTHING REGARD-
CLOTHIN6I AND
Until \ you have examiued his stock
Towanila, Pa.
1y17,73
11. ! fGGEST sit .4.1? G EVE R.
IFERE ,IN TO TVAN
• .
j A C 0 B i S
TOWA!CtiA, CA
FALL AND WINTER srtlcK
Which has never been EQUALLED be
fore in this market, either for
• •
,LzHAYSVILLE. PA
EL
Clothing. § , °
CLOTHING.
That have, ever been °doted to the
'
CITIZENS 017 TOWANDA.
And Its siirroundings
I MAKE AN ASSIGNMENT.
RL9THING,
NEXT TEN DAYS:
'We have rilSo.2ll.lTge Sine of
MATS,
M. E. ROSENFIELD:\
J.'DAVIS
' LESS 01'40STe
Don't buy , your,
• FURNISHING. GOODS
J ,
MI
EveryLbotly . says \
hts , aiyrs the
•
Is now receiving his
Fiffn
C L O t T.il I N 6.1
gUALIT
oft
- - •
LOW PRICES. -
If you d bt, call 'and examine.
Patton's. Bloc 2 , \ titin Street.,
Towanda, Sept. 4, 187 7
iritEsT 'AWARD'
J. REYNOLDS 4 SON,
THIRTEENTH AND FILBERT STS., PIMA.;
wAouollT4ltON AIR-TIGHT
HEATERS,
•
Anni Shaking and Cllnkrt-Grinding Gratea , for
burning Inthracite or Bituminous Coal.
CF:STENNIAL
WROUOIT-IRON fIEATERS.
WROVGILT-IRON HEATERS,
Cooking Banes, Low-bown Grates, Etc
Descriptive circulars SENT Fultz 10 any address
EXANI.NE IiEFORE SELEViltid
Philadelphia, April 26:7415
THE GREAT
IMI
WEDDING CARD DEPOT.-
WEDDING INVITALTIONS
Prices lower time any House In tho Cul;htry
PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.
Aprill2, 1E47
Sari a Bost"h lalYStelan, 'has fin equal as , a blood
purifier. fle'arlng of its ❑uelay wonderful tares.
sfter all miler rentedle, had failed, I rtstted the
Laboratory and eonchteed L nlyself
merit. -It Is prepared from barks. roots and herbs,
each of wide!' is highly elrectlVe, and they are
couipolinded ltrsuch a ruanheras to produce Aston;
biting results.",
EN
- VEqETI Nl.l
NV 91 . exttv tho worst cast! S‘rof
VEG ETI.NE
is recoMmended by pilyideians and apothecai hns
Its effected some nenvellmtwettm. t.nses or Can
cer.
EG
Cures the miorst cam,l of
. 63191,
•
•.
• V Et; E . :11 N
.11evls wml. , r '4/Vet,' In•3l,4:s:#ilaletl)zezoe,
VEGE'TINU ' •
SalrlthennifrOni the systm.
VEGF.:II
MEET
IN,;(tiii:rgt•rate..!.:l , 9 s or D t vireias.
\ ---.- ,:•.-'' p'3,•7
V I'': F:TINET .-- .
lietucives l'imples allKll.utimr•Virnictite thee.
V - EGrET NE
I\ \
•
Curtis Cionstipalion anii regula ~
~# \
EL; ET'
a valuable remedy tie Ilvadaelle
.
EGrIJ E
k4steres the entirc, 'system to.? healthfcoutlitton
M
gelll4
•
V
N..
\ Ti
Wilms Fatutni,,
,VEG ETI NE
Err,voiany cure, lifanuy Complaint
VEG tTINFI • '
11l its Nilo of reilmie W6ttless
. - VFMETINE
la the grrat remedy ffir il;;eneral 110.11ity.
J. DAVIS :\
Is acknowledgo4 by all Ci:ISM'S of rweple to be tIo
best and most reliable blood rorlfler In the wok!
vEt:ETINE sciLD BY ALL/ maTtiI:ISTS
G REATLY REI)I7CE EY PRICES!
The underxigned I:42loing
MATCHING, AND ItE-SA*ING
And all kinds of Planing-ndit,Work,
AWAY DOWN! DOWN!: DOWN!!!
Which I am selling at prices to suit the tint!s,.
IfAde promptly to order, at mlew price, for CASII
' IF YOU WANT TO GET ItICII ckICK,
=RI
Lumber brought fiere to be milled, will, be kept
:under 'cover and perfectly dry until taken away.
Good stteds‘for your horses, and a dry place to load.
Towanda: Jan: 180877
TIIE.:IIE'OIIPrE f p, OFFICE
. Does the
or arly'establtsliment 7n riortherureulaiTablik
IMI
ii
mi
==
EM
CETENNIAL
Northwest corner
Manutnetiders et patented
For Illtumlaous Coal
KEYSTONE
The latest styles trr
ORDERS itt.'MAIL
IVM IL'HOSKINS
STATIONER
913 Arch Street, L' 3delphla
“4
4. , FTINF
”
• - Et; INE
Is the great Wood Purifier
VEGET.IN.E~;;•`
the boirels
VEGETECE
curillrpixT,la
. EG ET IN . E
Cures pains In tl:e side
VECtETINE
s the CiilLe. f dizziness,
ETI'CI:
=
VLGE'I'L
Citrus Thins In 11K
VEGETINE
So far you can't see' It
I have also on band a large stock of
SA:4! AND molts
w noW-D LI N1)8
Call and see idyl:taxis and Prices
L. IL RODGERS
BEST JOB PRINTING
TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY PA., THURSDAY MORNING ; JANUARY 31 1878.
1=
lON.
THE DEAD BEE:
Where honeycuchlewseent the way,
I heard thee humming yesterday ;
i.
.Thy little, life crag not in with.,
It gatlietid a tweets for other's gal ,
And Icmuenhere to a dainty cell *'
-Is stored.dellelous hydromel, .'
poet IrttV calm retreat,
grief extracting sweet,
day thy fancy's ' , sings must fold
thou ltc tnotiuulet4 and cutd.
1p prilereit honey then
..totoct of thing amen. •
SOir.
Vf
rerfixpa
31;3 Ire t
=SI
A CURL A LETTER
A letter and a yellarr curl,—
. To call It "sandy." leraps
Who's tills iotnantle. 'MAW. girl
That's taltl to-be or own Doltlait •
For me: who never ea - rtal a rap
. 11 , or mantled waig or taper male,—
ukt i mbom no F.pinater *eta her rap, •>.
' Cupid shoots the ',hafts that rankle,
Niy dear, 7 grieve to Make you pont—
hut still It Is Imprudent, very,
TO shover your golden gifts about
In tiliS way. on Dick; Torn, 11411rirry
” . .Niu doubt you've charms you •
Ur ebte you'd scarce be Adatu'a datighter,
There May be death In your . •
ltut—don't affect promiscuous slaughter;" • •
\t elf preached Imt,:s;nnehnw, don't mind nice,
And letter,' lead to tittle-tattle. • • :•\
Ihluk one ought to give advlie—•
tone Is half,-the battle? • \\.,,'• •
Twoubl not be hard to mafelt this curb •
But should'! like Its Yellow better? . • • •
• • Yon veryyellow-pated girl,
'Who wrote int; Mtn romantic letter?
—Pegar‘o*
J i cell;f a oUa.
THE ARMY or TRAMPS.
LETTER PROM EX-SPEAKER O. 4. GROW.
T5l tsbe . Editor of T7o Tribune
Sin: '1 ire has been much discus
siotOf the Cpiestion, What makes sO
many tramps ? Tn. all of it. the sub- . :
stantia' facts - in the caie. seem to be .
a' fnost wholly overlooked. What'
caused the crash, as" it is called, of
1873, which to so great an extent .
prostrated all blanches of industry,
and, in its effects, filled the. land. with
unemployed labor? It could . .not
have.been eadsed by the fiXing Of a
definite time for - the resumption .of
specie payments, for that was not
done_tintil 1875, two years after the
era Sh. or could its real cause have
been a lack of sidlicient .- careiihtting
mediuM•(called money), for the vol
ume of that f 873-4 was greater
than at any previous period:
In 181;2 the paper circulation (all
State bank) was $2:38;1;7'1.318. Add
ing the gold and-silver coin in the
country at that tinve,.estimated at
$100,000;00(1, would make the entire
,circulating medium for the whole
country in 1 Silf,,) 3S,Wi 141 g; or
round limbers $340,000,000. ' The
.Circulating 'minim, consisting of
legal-tenders, fra cti on n eurrency a
National banknotes, was s in—
Lrzat
,
Frai• 'oal 19 , ,
Cut relies. tank.
t3N762,66.1 44G
33, r 3 , 1.995.nh9 :1114.10.11 s •
317,1,,,0.0pt) • ;Q,767,817
. - 35•0:17.7•07 , 44,7: 2.061 311.320,2 :is
,17 A• 4r t :7 0. 2 - 1m.54 ,4 ,7t 1 2. 8:1 1,173. 15”
0.00 4G,31,n,594 '111.979,474
1 , 70
1 4 71
1m72
1674
1'474
ls 7,
,371,x^" 2t .14,117,0;2
1:6 :I 1',206 291,A71,1=
. . . .
So th:e - total circulation medifitn,
without the silver coin that has been
issued in place of fractional currency,
orAlie gold coin in the country, was
In:to 'C ,,, ,1;9:43,1 to 187.1 • 71 , 4.1:19,&5:1
1471 714,20,507 1,',. - 5 - 11,370,i140
I ~,7 2 • - 14,557.162 t 876 ' 707.95i,947
1,,73 -46,510,T1.4
The entire circulation in 1870 was,
in round -numbers, $682,000,01 1 0 ; in
1873, $l-55;000,000, and in' :1874 it
was $7:',8.400,000: Row then is - it .
possible. that the crash of 1873 could
have been produced' by lack of sta.,
dent oireulating medium, when there
was ;•43,000,600 'more . in 1873 than
is 1 870,. and $13.000,000, more in
18 i than in 1873. and in either year
more ban twice as much as in 1862!
It net In r the fixing of a time to
resume, n r lack of circulating med
ium, causet the .crash and conse
(pleat slognat ri in business, then to
what is that resi t due.? It mile be-
cause production ievery branch of
\
indUstry, . 'except :1_ rieulture, 'had_
1 41
reachnik ‘ a point beyow. the capacity
of the 1 cople . to con4unii. The
ability to 4. depends'npen the
general pro,perity,--:upon ati active,
constant:dem:nut and ready p. v for
labor in all. brandies of busine,s
awl is limited' antNntrolled by tha :
but the ability or - eSpacity to •e - On.
•sume has its limits beYond whibh it
is impossible to go,. no urr whaV
MO be the ability to buy._ It is ut
terl-Y impossible for an ,indivi-dual to
\consume more than a certain aunt
ef“tuy thing. - 11 e nay, waste . and
(.10‘.oy 'ahnest • rithont limit. l'n
18:3, . s a people, we. had readied
that - poi t. Take as an illustration,
the- eonsti icti4;n of railroads and the
production w iron, and . anthracite.
coal. . ,
-
', cos:ill - well( x. or nAmitomis.
Fur film. years, I SO {close
.Of the
'war) to 18/;8 inclusiVe, we builtB,3l7
miles of railroad : which idchnled
nearly all of the Pacific Railroad
and , its brunches. The . next four'
Years, 180 to 1872 inclusive, we
") ilt 24.305 miles, awl for the next !
_f4r years, including 1876, there were
only 8,8(W miles built ;' a slifference
of 15,40 miles in four years. ' There
were .1873, in the. tnited States
70,01 rnifeS oc- . railroad, which had
cost almost $5,000,000,009, more
than half of which ; alhount. re.-
turns nothing to,the investors. Our
railroad system had then been ex
tended till there was on an average
one mile of railroad toevery 575 per
sons. All eXperience. in. railroading
ythereVer the experinient has been
tested, proves that for a railroad to
'pay - anything there. must be on an
average to the mile, not, less than
900 persons tributary to_the business
of the road. In England the average
per mile is - 1;916, and in France
2,940, and yet 'but few of theirrail,
roads ,pay. - Railroad building in
this country, therefore, ceased, or
1 con*aratively ceased, in .1873, from
sheer exhaustion in that line of de
r velopement,, having locked up in un
productive investment over 2,000,-
ODO,OOO. - Its stoppage, in addition
to WeA l ing unemployed-0e labor that
had been engaged in the Preceding'
font! years: in building .74,0 1 .00 miles
of road, put an end for. the time
~,..._•
it io :
...•
REGARDLESS OP DENUNCIATION PROM ANY• QUARTER.
Toth n.
MEM
being to the- great demand for iron
and with it the great demaild for coal.
Hence came the necessity tor the re
duction inthefOree asi well us price
of labor in all three of'these„pcat
branches . orlndus ry. • •
The production of hip iron - in the
United States 18;o 033, , the re
turns of the Steel and Iran Associa-
tion) was 1,80,00;0 tons, id of roll
ed iron the same ;year; 1,325,000
toil.. In 1873 the .product Was
-2,868,000 tons of-pig iron, and 1,0;6;-
445 tons of rolled iron. The fprei#
importation of pig iron in 1870 was
(coin valuation) $2,509,280, and of
TO-
led iron $l-15146,085 and in .1873-
it was W,847,281 of pig iron, and
$27,218,258,0f rolled, iron. Thus
from 1870 to 1873 the home product
of vig and rolled iron. wasl ahnost,
doubed, and the foreign impOrtotion
AlmOst; trebled.- The Increase in the
production of iron . itl . the one year
from 1871 to 1872 was, greater- than
for the ten preceding years, and with
the stoppageiri railroad building it
-as of course.far beyond the cape
it of the people to consume.
i
ER.DUCTION ) OE A:NTH - RA(ISE COAL.
The g,gre ate ptcduction of anti'.
tacite:csal n 1870 was 15,542,380,
tons,•and in, i 1873 it was 21,689,650
tons. The I crease in the produc
tion for one,ye r. (1871 'to 1872)7- s
5,136,486 tons; , jog an inereas in
this one year equa • lmost to the en
tire increase of pro. lotion for the
ten years preceding .1. 70. 'he ag
gre,gate production in 1 74 was
10*885Itons Les's, than in 873, and
the ategate pOoducti n ,• 1876
Was alm kt - 1,000,000 t ns less than
in 1874. ; \ , .
'To mine anthracit coal and distri \
bute to the consnin requires, on an
average, about tbkir days' work per:
ton. The products lln of 1874 would,
therefore, require 7,5? - 13,540days less
than, the production Of • 1873, and
a corresponding reductinn for the
lessened product, of 1876.\ In the
production of iron, it is. estimated.
that live days' Work, on an rivi•ige,
are required. to produce ' k a ton
of iron, including the labor of mining,
and smelting tlul ore. As, the pro
duct of rolled ,iron alone in 1874 was
1241,885,t0ns less limn in '187:3, 63:4-
525 days' work less-rwould be . requir
ed in 187.4 in the manufacture of this
single article. In the prodoetion of
anthracite coal and: rolled iron alone,
over B.ooo,o:6ofdays le.s l'erc requir
ed in 1874 than iu 187:3.
So an every other branch -of . .
me
chanical andinanufacturimr,industry,
production leid - been stimulated in
187.3 beyond4tlke capacity of the
people to con4urne. for there, , can
ne - no question, that the ability to
buy in 18:3, the bear of the crash,
was as great as in' any preceding
year. War consumption and war de
struction gave the first impulse do
enlarged production, and increased
the demand . and Tnhanced pride
of everything. • An expathled cur
rency of irredeemable paper (made
necessary by the war) stimulated's
spirit of wild adventure, and an un
paralleled: eXtraVaiiance. in the hahits
of
The importationrof foreign -mer
chandise in 18704g01d valuation)
was . $435,658,408, or at-the rate of
$ll 30 per capita; of,,populatiou,• and
in 18;2 the ,impeirts,were
077 and in 1873 they' were $942,12j/,-
210, or at the rate _of $l6 03 per
1-•
capita, bellrig i fi:3 per cent greater,
thanthe average for the twelve gears
immediately precedint! . 1870. The
amount per capita of &reign imports
for ..ttventy years' preceding 1870
never exceeded :$lO a• year. - The
• importations ot , ftireig,n nierelprid se
, .
(coin imitation) for four years, 1871,
'to 187.1 • inclusive,. were' $2,356,361i
:313, an amount exceeding the preS
ent,Natidnal debt, and $130,877i301
more than the entire imports for
eight years from 185 ii to 1865./
During this: whole expansion in
everything else, the-~ray 'compara
tively' no increase in agriculture.
From 1850 to 1860 by the census re
turns; the iinproed lands in farming,
were increased . 50.078,108 acres;
being at the rate of -15 'per cent for
the ten years.' Front lB6o' to 1870;
the increase wa5 1 25,81 0;370 acre's, or
at the rate of 11 per cent; while
'the increase of acreage in limns from
'lB5O to 1860 was 45 per cent, it only
inereased'-!, of 1 per cent 'from 1860
to 1870.
; 319g1CIPAL DEBTED:Uss.
The mpnicipal indehtedhes,s Of the
ountry in 1875 was over a thousand
m lions of dollars; more than half
Of • kV Was contracted between
131;.5nd '1874. As a . , people, for
years, w spentuore than we earned,
Human ingnuity flas never yet been
able to dcvis a :-..elleme by which au
individual, or a::-oeiation of
thuds,. whose - -.p. , nditures exccied
thqr. income, t.t, dinned, could be
save from final bank liptey and ruin:
The`s \ toppage in rai %gut building
from exit ion, the par.*sis in all
business, c. used In part by\that, and •
by prodnetiork beyond the ‘.opacity
of consumption tilled - the land,With
unemployed lab r;• ext&ra
pence unpreceden6l, in creating it
debtedness, cripple( \ all individual
and_public ei,terprises.\ \ The• stagna,
tion in business thus tktustal has
forced honest and. willing l abor to
beg its bread. The first rerAe,dy•for
the existing state of things is filyitif
to public and private trusts, thus\r \ e r
storing .conlidcnee,,and securing
faithful collection ;and
bursement of public and private reve %
nues,"and next a rigid economy in
private and public 'expenditures.
The wastes - of war and the prodigal
expenditures• of peace must he re
earned in order to restore the country
to. its old prosperity and renewed
•
growth in - Wealth and power.
• j 011.usitA A. Guow.
GlenwoOd, Penn., Jan, 12, 1878.
THE firm tint gentle hornet - has shut,t
his summer cottage -and gone intO retire
ment for the wintei% Ills laSt words
were, Wake me up when,the first/pic
nic starts out next spring," "•
•
Wittixr.vEn you're out of. anything
let me know,"' said a gentleman to a poor
Chinaman be had been helping. A few
days later the Chinamen sent him word
he "watt out of town." • • -
. „
• "Life is, made up cv sunshine and shad
ow "—about five sharidos toOnetonshineA
E
- :NOW, 00111111.
A
dignillectaiid - delightful old ien-i
tleman'ence‘teld me he thougl.!k the
yOunk, people 'of to=day were • less
mannerly than bf\the olden time; less
deferential, less de‘Orons. This may
be true; and I tried' to \ be sufficiently
deferential to my cOurtlytost,'not to
disagree with him, But \ when I look
upon the young people olNmy - own
aegiiaintance,l recall that
weiii;as a matter of tours, to:put the
ladies in their carriage; Jaude took.
hand luggage as-"naturally. as if he
were born for nothing else ; 'Prank nev 7
r falled.to open a door for them; Ar
bur placed Nfaggie. in her chair at
.able hefore" he took his oivn ; Nelly
and ItUth/citrne to my party just as
sweet and bright as if they did not
know /that the young gentlemen
whom they .had expected co meet.
were . prevented , , from " attending •,
while Lucy will run 'herself out of
i t
Jireath;for -on, and Mary sits and
listen& Wit flattering intentness , and
Anne and • lice . and—well, loOking
over my constituency; I Sind the
young people charming..
It is true that all manners are less
formal, that etiquette is less elabo
rate, now than' a hundred years ago.
Our 'grandfathers; and grandmothers,
—some,. indeed, 14 our fathers and
mothers-..--did wit- sit . 0 breakfast
with their fathea•s and mothers,- i but
stOod,- through the :meal; and never
spoke except when spoken . to2'
cannot say 1 think we have „deterio
rated in changing this.• The. pleas
ant, fainiliat, affectionate 'intercourse
between parent and child , seems •to
the one of "the most delightful fea
tures. or domestic life The real,. fond
intimacy which exists between par
.
nts and children seem a tar better
a - , safer thing than the old fashion
of k ping children at arm's length..
. But casting aside forms ,we are,
perhaps, omewhat in danger_of los
ing with • em some of that inner
kindness of -hid' form is only the
outward expr ssion. . Without ad
mitting that we .• •e: an uncivil peo
ple, insisting even .hat We compare
favorably with" othey i ations, I wish
ekor lx,y i s and girls won 1 resolve that
the \ courtesy of thq.„llci_ tblic, shall
nevesutfer in their" hands .
• Doek \ thiS seem - .a trivial .
those who are their en
lo.attain'a c iiigh standing in "clas, •1.
an d u la th ert 4 es ,? There is perhafe
no single quality that does as much
to make life stric;Oth and comfortable
—yes, alid . successi.nl—as . Courtesy.
No nian can. be agrable Without
courteSk, and every septratii act, lof
. ineivility creates its tittici,or large;'
and ever enlarging circle; oraispldas
ure and unhappiness.
One does iiot wish to go
life trying to be agreeable; but ii.q . r
is a great failure. if one goes throfig
M=
.
. _
Yes, little friends, believe Me, you
may be very`' learned, very /skillful.
very accomplished. 1 treyou are:
I hope you ' will 'becoin more • so. Ydu mixy even have sou d principles
and gOod habits i but if people, do
'not ge:liftally like ymi, it is because
khere issomething lyrong in yourself.
aml Aliel best thing,/yon can do is to
study ottt what iyis and correct it as
fast as pos4ible 7 Do not for a- mo
ment fancy°iys because you are' su
perior to other people. that tricy•dis
like you, for superiority never; of it
self, made/a: per Son unlovely. It is
invariably a defect of - some. sort.
Generally it is a defect .arising from
training, and therefore possible to
overkome. . .
- z Por instance: two . girls in the
eduntry have each a pony phaeton.
One drives her sisters, her faMily,
her ',guests, her equals, and never
thinks of going ontsidg that circle:
Another does the sathe ; but, more
than this, she often takes the took,
the laundress, or the one woman who
(ken is cook, laundress, house-maid,
all in one. And to them the drive
is a far greater luxury than to her
own comrades, Who would- be pliCy_
dug croquet or riding if--the;_ . were
not with tier. Now and then she in
vites some poor neighbors, she takes
i •soine young seamsteess or worsted
worker to town to do her shopping,
Ishe carries the tired housewife to see
her Mother, she asks three little girls
—4omewhat crowded but rapturous
•ly bappy—three- miles to see the bal
loon that has alighted on- the hill ;
she drive's a Widowed old mother-in-
Israel to a tea-drinking of which , she
would otherwise be deprived, These
are not ebarit4 , .s. They ire cotirtc
sies, :inct this bright-faced girl is sun
shine in her village home, and', by
and by, when her box' of finery, is by,
some . mistake left at the station;
stalwart youngs.ler,., unbid i2l)
shoulders it and hears it, painting a nil
perspiting, to her doOr-step, deelar-'
ing•that lie would not do it for an
other person in l town hut Miss Fan
ny ! And perhaps he does not even
say. Miss Fanny—only Fanny. Now
she could get on very well without
the villager's admiring affection, and
even without her box of finery; yet
the good will of your neighborii - is
excetd ingly pleasant.
Another thing Fanny extebi hi is
the acknowledgment of .*OurtesY,
;41.41i is itself his ~r , at acOurtesy 'as
t.l . .pi)rforniance o f' kindneis. It' she
is in 'hod to a lawn parlY or a beat/
lam p s-iiic, whether ,she accept ox
not, slie`iw's . a visit •to her hostc/ss
I
s\d
afteiward . 4 d expresses her plea ure
or her regre '; and she pays it vith
\ promptness, an hot with tar y re-
Itetance, as ilitre a I burden, IT.
she has ben making a we -'s visit
away \ from 'home, Site 11/Aides' her
host.(!sof her safe retu n and her
-en - jayment, of the visit,(3c:in ‘ as she
is back again. If a b (pet is sent
her,—too intlmual f, r a no\e,—she
temembers to\sp .1: •of • it \after
ward; You neveker can reniernbcr?
-No; but Fanny :k.s. That is why
I admire her. is . sice\has' borroieff
e \l
a book, she h . an app,r .ciative word
to say when he returns - it ; and if
she has dTiped it in the Wl,' she
does not apologize and offer to re
/• She :replaces- it Grs and
t , i- afterward, though she IA
ie a much-needed pair of
.on gloves to do•it! ilndeed
t has as little apologizing, to
my, because 4he does every-
;raptly ; and yon ma.* notice
we apologize far chiefly is
delay. • We perform our little social
'duties, only not in, good season. And
...
. . . . - .
I
' 1 " 9 4",
so roll . them of half g cc.. It
takes no longer to'answer a let er to
day than it Will pike to-morrow. int
if the - • letter requires an answer -
stantly, an pot it off day alto
day, your cottespondent N is vexed;
and, your tardy Onsiver will never .be
quite a reparation: \ Remember that
explanation, no. 'apology, is quite
as good as to have done the thing ex
aetly as it should be in the first place.
—Gairitannlion. •
The w•ny to. fame is dike the:wayl: to
eaven—through tiiliulation: • - \
Each dayis a-newlife ; rep t(' it, 'there
fore, as an epitome of 'Elio ~cliole.
A man's own gooll breeding M. the best,
security ogainst ogler people's ill-mounels.
•
.floppiness Is neither *Rhin us - nor
without us ; it, is the union of ourselves .
with God.
The fligh?s cfr the-human mind are not
froth enjoyMeht to enjoyment, but from
hosie to hope.. • •
The mor. happy man is .he - Who knows
how to bring into relation the end and
beginning of his . , • .
Age is not all decay ; it is the ripening„
the swelling of the fresh life within, that
withers and bursts the husk.
There is nothing' that so convinces
man that their is truth in religion as to
sic true religion in• Christians.
The best society and conversation in
the world is that in which the heart has
a •reatcr share tlian the head:
Memory is the only 'paradise we are
sure of Always preserving ; even our first
parents could not be driven out of it..
It is vanity to_ love ,hat 'is passing away
with all 'Teed, and not to be hastening
thither where endless joy abided'.
Discretion and hardy valor are the
twins of honor; and nursed together;, make
conqueror divided make a talker.
WA possessing minds are
,nio
rose, soltann and infleible, cnjoy•in gen
eral, a grOter share of dignity than bap-
1=
' AN I nisnmAN's W 11.L.:.--In, the name
of God, amen ! I - Timothy Dotilan,
of BarrydoWnderi.y, in the , County
Clare, farmer, being , sick, .wake on
my -legs, but of thittud , head and heart,
tory be to God !-do makelliii my.
' and last 'milli-and .ould. and new
Tnt. First,.l ,give my sow! to
Nql it'plazes him to take it--:
thanks. to , inc. for I lean,t
.and my body to bwbur 7
\ l\
indAt klarrydowinlerry
1... my kith and kin
efore Me, are bur-
. C, tt, ies
e.
) 1 ( 1 1
iirsk„
testin,
God, w,
shire no
lel') it thei\
tied in.the.gro \
chapel,. where a
that htt•t'e
,gone
vied, peace to their ashes, and may
the sod rest lightely o Tr their bones.
Ilikrry me near-ray „gym Maher and
my other, who lie separa ed
,all- td
gethM\at the other end of the chapel
yarl. \lave the bit of- ground con
taining, ei`ght. acres, rare old Irish
thwes, to My eldest son - Tini . i .after
the death of hls mother, if she lives
to survive 'him,` \My daughter Mary
and her husband Paddy O'Reagle,
are -to have - the black.sow ‘ that's going_
to have twelve black *ifs. Teddy,
my second boy, that wa,•, ? . \ killed in the
'war in Amerik - 3 - , mie - ht - ha - e got his
pick of the . poultry . , 7 linc as he has
gone I'll lave thern 0. his :wi c, who
died a week - heti - ire him ;. 'I be
queath to all maiikindkqhc „ ffishes, - )f
the sea they can take;',lma all :tilt
birds of the Mt; tfiey can shootll
hive. them all-the sun, Moon, and stlir.
I hive to Peter Raferty a pint of 16-
theen Leant finish, .ind may God 6e
merciful to him. . .
A um. TIN MINTS.—An Iti4l
lady tilled on, a photographer of
have acabinet portrait taken. When .
the art f ist removed the plate - he told
her she nee&not Sit any longer. On
coming *Ont. Of the .dark room 'he
found' her still bolt upright in the'l
chair,)with that'look of Pcts.ilied deS
pair ell her peential to tiiv, pho
togranhic 'pose. " Yon needn't sit
there any longer." said the fri„Oiten
ed . artist. " What's thati? . ? she.
hoarsely whispered, withal
" I Say ydu n4edn''
sit there non=l have lintshetyl- .11
exclaimed. "Ain't Ito pay
dollar?" she inetrregated
samegurgling tone..W'ith - eyes
ed un the mark. " / Xes."
do ye mane to say
dollar • for only/ v
cheer ? ilegorol'd
minits fur the mono
enough in ail eons&
had it.' /
.
To Os.. ..—Ever3
youngmn,afterh/lias onec!
his vocation ,shofild „to" it, ;1.11
not leave it lictfiNe hard blows are to
be - struck, or ,disagreeable work' pt
formed. Tho / k who have worked their
way al p 'to and f etitlltess rlo
not belong, to the shialess and unsta
ble classibut maybe reckoned among
such 0 / took coats, rooted tip:
their i gleeves, conquered their, pr'eji,
dice, 4 against- labor, and manfully
bore the heat and burden riethe day.
Whether - upon the old Farm, where
Fur fathers toiled . (11141 . 61 th; s . triViii+T
t
to hririg the SOU to prOdtletiVenVtiS ;
in..ihe mac:lane shop or factory, or
the thousand other business places
that invites: hOnest toil or skill, ,let
the motto ever be, "Perseverence
and indnstry." . : Stick to one 0114';
boys, and you will have,success.
11E-IjosoltAnt,E.- 7 11oyS and: young
men somettines`-start:out in life with
-the idea that success depends O
sharpness and chicanery. TheY
imagine if a man is able alwltys ~ o.
"get thetest of a bargain." no mat
ter by what dec:cit and meanness he
Carries his point, that•his prosperity
is - assured. - This is a crreat mistake.
Enduring prosperity cannot be found
ed\T cunning and dishonesty. The
tricky and decelifitt man is sure to
fall a i t tint, sooner or later, to the
intinene which-are' forever-working
against-hillis house is:built upon
the sand, an t, its foundation
.Will he
certain tti giveaway. , Young people
annot g ive the truths, too much
weight. The fut e of, that young
\
man* saf, whoess; ws every phase
of dou'Oe dealing, and vs the 'found
ation of\hiti career in I e enduring
principles !I everlasting t tb. ..
1 • : \
I,*' 7 . 1
' '. . . • 4 .
q •
GM
--.1 . k--- , 1 , •-••641110 M-. :
MORAL GEMS.
l=erm=
ti• little
nct she
I=2=l
$2 ,pot Annum in Advance.
IMO
N (INTER
/ EVEDY DAY
4. Time Is 4 1tawIngn7arer,'nearue,
. While our had aro tueitur trey ;
Teirs 'are lalllng on Ilte•s mirror
F:crgdayl
• '
Time Is elo,lng Beauty's p4rtals,
• - 1
[For R1E3911 Er...)
REMINISCENCES AND REFLECTIONS OFTHE
VALI,EY OE - TNE WYSOX 'GREEK, •,.
CONTINUED. \ •
Mn. EntTon_.:•-tri - the forma. ar•iied I ,
have written, I have gone over-the entkro
length of the valley of the - Wysox creek, \
an extent of about sixteen miles, I now
eloge.with.a . 'few general reflections,. I„,'.
The first:settlement was made. in this
valley a little less than 100 years ago.. As
far as we have any evidence, all - throligh
the part Mimefrom
.the first. ages of the
creation; l itikarl'.romahted. one 'continued I
" howling 4wilderness.7- Ilii'Clx' tree had
its hay, but when it passed away its loss
was supplied:ll its successor.. One gen
eration
Of animals . -Issed away but an-oth
er followed.
,Thos mighty rockg (which
..,
for nearly the ln:‘, eent.my) 'have beeri
called the "York r• Ss," have stood as'
sentinels guarding.thutlet of the'Wy . .
sax creek, lo;_dt until time laps on. to. the •
eternity of the past.
.. At ,
• But it may be asked; were not the al.)&.'
riginecs here, and had they ° not been here
for thou Sands and thouiands of years?. I
suppose they were: - Wel1, 1 : why . did not
they fell the' forest and. bring out the.
wealth of the fertile , lands? Ilecausti they
had no Bible, and . not .even a pagan or
heathen civilizat-ion—they were.. savages,
withimt any civil government. But when
the white :Man comes with his
'and 4 -li ite his _how
soon the face of the earth changes :at his
presenecd It is tote it takes but
seethe wonderful change of this valley
in less than one - ,imildrea. years; scarcely
an acre- of forest is left, al - id nearly all of .
the hill sides are now fruitful field's. '
Eighty-ono years , ago- there was not a
settler .in the upper pant of this
that part included in Orwell and Wind
ham, hitt few.years earlier a few_ had
found homes in the lower part Of the val-'
ley, perhaps as early as 178$ or MO.. .1:p
to.that time:
"Tpi, 5.111 d or. a church going heti
Thcrse valley,. and r"elc. , ne,ter.heara.
Ne'or iin:sound of a kiwi):
Or when a Nr!..hatit appea!'ed."
• • - 1 • - .
The enterprise and
. fortt4 of character
of thc * Se settlers is worthy if all admira
-1 b.M.
, Think of N.P.....5100r1y and his land
holder Thayer (ruing troth Shesliettan
in Ilipt through an 'unbroken forest:some.'
twelVc or fourteen miles to what is non
the borough of Rome and then erectlf t ,. a
log cabi4l--clearing land—bringing seed
wheat from Sliesbeiinin—himself ~ bush
/
el, and two of his 'sous a half a
. bushel a
piece on their shOphicrs. I.et,/a monu
ment be erected at the grave of torch l 4
man ! Fora number of- yea v i their near=
est grist mill was Iliuman"‘ *in' * Wysox,
seat- the residence of 3l s al'hibta Lanning.
lihutt. labor ;Ind toil to / bring c:aleint.,the
chang x es u;hich we Belo I
One il4gato us-seetns surprising : long .
before the was a siyinfortalilo dwelling,
or a schottl ouse,Ar a mill, or a chum*,
and but .i.i!ry little grain in' the : country,
vet that there skuld be distilleries erect
ed I .1 - e0 thiy CI!,
\ the , case. - One was
built about tt hundred rodS north of the
,bormigh.ef/Rome, skveiitv if not seventy
liveyears''' • , 1 * n .- .\
- -1" t: . I
ago. _ mon,st mkcat les tee° -
lections/4e the ruins of thisstilf—at least .
tifty-iye . years ago. It had ' t , .11 'Wilt,
`had ,ts nip, and was then iii . a
e.m)plete
stare of ruin. Why it was not kelit up
41 running I do not IctiOW,• ,tinless\the
Ate at.liyersbnigh being built; ,it NN'ik
1'011114.th: t one could. supply tlie; donautl.
Itlis su d•that Silas Gore, wli - o* lii';ed* at
~.0 illei"s - bridge, run' one for a While, ;.., if sn
.within a few
,years in,thpse early days
there were three distilleries in the - valley
of the WySox creek. Think of this, - you
who tlitilt the cause of TOmlierance is
Makin,.; no advancenieUt. The fac,,t, is,
drinking, whiskey„wasu universal thing. ~
i
Men, women and children drank. the thin: . , 1
, . ~
ister. ' tlie deacon . and the' class-leader(
I • \ - ' I
drank\h--Lthe young:molter must'Anive 1
her milk , .punelf and• the new born . l
‘,.
I vaht its. thtlity.— first it t,ook the whiskey i
. , * \ '• • •N. . • -
- frotd : t 11 i! sp.•ll t ben from : its, mother's
breAst, .Andilt„ Sh
go clear to es . heiptin 1
and bri • •g it,l.y tile gallon ot_;tlw,shoultlerl
it was to hard wail - Ite 'valley of the
11•7 2 ,:i. 9, N; must have li of. its own,' anti
it had it.
• -
-In the days-of my hoylMfl, belUg iu
certain blacksmith- sliop- 7 -Bmewlfere iu
the valley cif the WysON,, the of the.
shop Was seiit for a pin('of" whiskey. As
lie entered the 86p -with it.,'he was
loWed by the obi lady--the .I,llaeksndth"s
wife. 1 reineinher, - , Mr. Editoi:;‘, jui4 11(1'w
she looked—she'Was ;t tittle jtuie-lsatl :ui' l
old redish thrown loosely over her
shoulders, IJ a
lorig.stick for•a : cane in, 'iine•,
hatl,aud a teacup in the other, and : she
demandeitheryart bf.that pint of- wills::
ky; the old ufaii.at first refused,• but Mr.
Editor .you know when a Woman4i'lf, slie
idil man tried to satisfy her
with In4f a cur, no, the cup must be
tilled, and , it Was fillid., O r remember
how her eyeB sparkled how she..put The
• blessed nectar (3) toler parched lips, and
hoiv with a triumpliant, air and buoyant
step she left the shop to enjoy • what .idie
had as good 'a right to as her lordly' hus
band had, and why not? • , •_ •
The upper part of the valley for some
reason for the.past forty-orlifty'yearsap
..
pears to have gotten, and. to retain an ad-.
vancc-upon thd , l7er part. Even some
parts of-the 'valley contained in the "Four
Mile NNi f. pecls!' . i•getting ahead of the
er part of the - valley. 'There -has been"
more real thrift aml advaneenient in the
• ilist•farm• above the. old Iteel'S - Tavern
withiii-the last twenty years than seen
from Pillett's bridge to the place where
tlio &tire of Coelbaugh,.,Streeter it Co.
Mots,Vtluring t'ap Same length of time.'
we pass - . down throu Orwe
NM
and, Mane; 'many of the families are living,
in mansions- nearly - all nicely painted,
good ootbuildifigi and fences. We no
ticed some at North 'Orwell, and - as- we
pass along dnirit the creek we conic to the
lit o residence of Rev.:--1%, A. Dimnfickl
and between this and the 'feet of Orwel,
Hill are the tasty - residences 'of ‘S. Rock
well and E. Gritileyo*what wasforrner-
ly the John Dimmock farm. - Just "neloW
are the two nice houses of S. Russell, and - ,
still a little further down the beautiful
mansion house of Dr: Conklin, jist built".
„And all-through Rome the buildings as a
general. thing are good and well
,painted. •
But as'we paii - down through the narrows
to Gillet's bridgewe must leave hope et •
seeing advancement beihind. I think the,.
buildings to-day from here down to the
place above indicated, are worth less than_
they were forty or fifty years ago. •
Scarcely a building built within that po-•
rind will compare with a , large number
built in the upper part of the valley . dur
ing Hu g sam eperiod. _ • _
Therefls a tide iwthe affairs of men, •
who if taken at the good leads on to fortune,: - ,
OmltteS4 all the voyage of their lives - ,
is hound in shallows and in intlyertes..,
It does seem as if this lowt s r part of tho
valley, - daring the last fifty years had
great opportunities of advancing in wealth
the canal was opened and then the
railroad, but still amidst all, it is tuleone
ingdrek.ward. Five diffirent stores were
running . there froM forty-five, to fifty-five
years-ago, and now not one. And here is
a sum iii the "Ruld.of Tlyee" what, will
•bp the debline in fifty years come? -
There is one Store in :Borth Orwell,'and
ite •numbr A- Bee bcs :h. • t
leg! .es; Std gek._
Every dollar laid ouein fixing up thinga,-
•
prndently nice, will adv \
an \ ce the value of
propertylrom three to tive \ dgllars. . - .
. i
fay. the inhabitants of t'h's beaUtiful
valley. live answerable to tb manifold
blessings and benefits .which the ,Father
of mercies has richly bestowed upon them!
''Thus endeeth the Reminiscences and
Reticet:ons-of.the Valley of the Wystiz
Creek. . C. E. TAYLOR.
Whitney's Point, Jan.l,l, 1878:
• [For tholt EVOIiTEII.)
'"BIBLE WINEB:-JE3ITB ON TRIAL ".
." knOcetif to do good and dont It it
ion. to Min it is hint tqn.ls a transgression of Atte
!aw."-it'act... h • • •
Iti is generally supposed tliat-etergYinen
tire peculiarly- qualified to decide seriptu- .
ral questions, espeeially•the question of
the sinfulness of wine-drinking: lint we
are frank to . confess that the. Only class of `
men that have ever met us with Bible ar
guments in favor of medicinardrinking
were eljrgymen. We hive been reading -
an addres'S by.the yey'. C. IL. Fowler;
,D:
D., I)., entitled, "Jesus on trial •
charged with drinking intoxicating
With - much care,thii, learned Doc
tor has collected the opinions of the best
auithors - and Bible Students to prove_ there.
far i e two klinds.d. Wine mentioned in the
all-perfect / BOok. All this is necessary to.'
reconcite/ iii =the minds- of our English_
readers/of • the .Se pt nit% tholte passages :
that pientiee'vine with Praise and blame,
as- a'iblessing and as a - curse, as making
• /
glad. the heart of man - and as a mocker,
a‘an . emblem of the joya'of piety and the
/pleasures of - sin, that is permitted for use -
in a•religious observanciand forbidden to
lie looked upon when it "giveth color in
the cup." We. have carefully: read the
"address," and thongh with others who •
have examined the. Bible question, Dr.
yowler has said muck that will "aid-the'
cause : of teiriperance, he has passed over.,
some of the. fuhdamental prineiDlis
.in
volved in such a manner as teleave it
peSsible for all his arguments to fail of .
ac4nitting his Chilst. " - equal with
, must 'stand [on trial] , an•
e - embodiment.of the - law: "'Natural law is
now 'what it ever has been,'. -.ln-the light • •
of scieece we are enabled to-affirm that
the relation of alcohol to the living system -
,is that Of a,poison. : If the law of "nature ,
is - now what it.ever has' been,' thep it
1, ever has poisoned men to takee - alcohol '
sicknesS or health. • The bOoks of nature
and revelation'were both written by the
I same unerring wisdom. The Bible was ,
11i - et written to teach sciencel ..whO ever
1 thinks a looking Tor a text to teach us
whether strychnine is good or: bad Sci
ence declares alcohol poisons. 'lf Jesus .
was ignorant ; of this law of physiology
lie was not "•tinar with God." If Je.
.
unkerstood the law, and pondered to
1 . emavei ) • 1
appetites by producing an in-,'
toßicating-drink, Ife was a sinner above
\ ,
\Nyiaci,- make' and. sell -intoxicating ,
'Or t otrml of the jaw: - hence in the
Ilight of seiTce,- if the 'Wine at "Cana"
would intoxteate.Testis is'a criminal. Dr. -- •
FoWlerqlefenitkjestis at this -point„ and
the "laws of -fermentation',.'_. are' quoted
in proof. Liu' .the "stomach troubles" -
of ""T'imoth'y" - admits of a - "doubt,"
evidence," tlat - the ,witier was
says it shouiknoti be' "for-..
Pout ordered it aka medicine."'
As much as to admit the "pep n lar delu
that the relatioll of 'elcoli6l, to the
iivin system may be changed when, we
are sick. That the. "stoinaeli :
of the 19th century may be benefited :
the : iise otakoholie liquors. Philosophy'„
tettehes that mattei . exista in two states, N,
organized - and phorganied.. Thq . first
controlled by.phisiologicallawS, , laws of
life, the latter by chemical laws,;as man=-
ifestin particles, die product of decom
pot.ition, analysis, ror combination;'of '
which alcohol is an example--never life
Selkirk
ncn 9.. . - •
\ the liottof science therefore it :ean- -
.not;,he otherwise, than 'a iiolation of a
law Nature to drink alcoholic hellion,
of any sickness or health. Hence •
if -"si isgression of the law," the
drnnl izietzting wino
,under any.
prefer 3 r. is " and total
abstinence fronall that inten6Qateit—in
sicknes and; ilealth, the only true temper
ance platform ' • •
Si. J. tooSwELL,;3I; D.'
• Silvan, ;Tan: 29, 1878.\
-
\
IF' a man eniptieS his purse into his
- • •
head,. no man eau take - it away ('•em
An investmentn .knowledge always pays
tye best interest . ;
:No matter. whether or not the moll,o'
the fu tun happen • te. know your „rilaine \ ;',
if they are rineenseior .
isly • modified by,.
your life it is 'enough. , •
IF at any time you are pressed to do a
things hastily, be careful- fraud and de- .
eett.are always in baste, dittldegee is the
right eye of prndence. ' '
Jr yorri lanaules dpghter is pretty—..,-
You nuiir "tleaw pais tue.that l
b...' 1 1 -
—Shaks
CM
IMII