Taus a rtriimemeza. The lisamfdierr Sardwriti * panelled evilly Thursday Morning by GOoDniCH IIiTOBBOOL, One Dollar per annum, In advance. SR/Advertising' in all cases exclusiVis of sub. scription tatbe paper. - "-- SPEClA.t.frorlcEs Inserted OM= dill% per line for first Insertion!, and snot Carrell perline for each subsequent Insertion, but , no'hotice !Minted dor less than fifty cents. YEA.ItLY AIWEILTISMIENTS will be insert• de at reasonable rates. Administrator's and Executor's Notices, II2; Auditor's Notices,f2.so: nt16111665 Cards, Avelino., (per year) et, additional lines ei each. Yearly advertisers are entitled to quarterly changes. Transient advertisements men he paid, for in advance. All resolutions oftessociations; commoolcatiens of limited or individual Interest, and notices of marriages or deaths, exceedlugfirellnellastecharg ed FIVE c veva per line, but simple notices of mar. *laces and de sths will be published without thane. Tne 11111.011Tliti hexing a larger circulation than any other paper in the county, makes lt 'the best advertising medium In ;Northern Pennsylvania.. JOB IntINTING•_of every kind, In plain and fancy colors, done with neatness and dispatch. Ilandldlle, Blanks, Cards, Pamphlets, Billhezds. Statements, /Sc., of every variety and style, printed at the shortest notice. The REPORT to Office 16 well supplied , a ith power presses, a go o d assort ment or new type. and everything in the printing. line can be executed in the most artistic manuar and at the l o w es t rates. TIM MS VAIIIABLY CASII. • Vustness gab; AIADII ? L KINN.tl,r, - ATTODICSTS-AT-LAIN. Mare—Rooms formerly occupfed.by Y. N. C. A. Reading Room. 11. J: MADILL. _ 8,18,80 • (o. D. K17P.`41:1% AIRS. E. J, PERRIGO, TEACH= Or P11.1:0 AN-I:0'01141AX Lessons. given In Thorough Bass and Horn:nay e•ultivation of the voice a specialty. Located at, A Snell's 'Main St. 'lnference: Holmes & .Passage Towanda, Pa., Bain": 4, IMO. JOHN W. CODDINO, AftolllC ET-AT-LAW, TOWANDA, PA over E.th),y's Elitx-(Store TIOMAS E. MYER ATTORNET-AT-I.AW TOWANDA, PA ,Mee with Patrick and Foyle. - Sep-.25,19 isEcK OVERTON, - 1 ATTOBNLYS-AT • • TOWANDA. - CI. D'A. Or EuroN, BH.N.L. M. BECK ODNEY A. METWUR, I. .A..TTOUICKX TOWANDA, L A... Solicitor of Patents. Particular attention : paid to business in pie Orphans Court and to the settle ment of . estates. once In Montanyes Bloc); OVERTON dr, SANDERSON, ATTORNEY-AT , tAW, TOWA3,IIIA., PA. E. OVERTON. Jlt. JOAN F. SANDERSON TIT 11. JESSUP; 11' • • ATTORNEY AND COVNSELLOR-AT-LAW, VONTROSE, PA. • Judge Jeseuplitc;lng resumed the prartlee of the lar. - In Northern Pittutsylvattla, trill attend toany legal haslnossintrtoted to him In Bradford county. Persons wishing .consult him, ran roll on H. Streeter. Esq., Towanda, Po., when an appolntrnent Can be male. ITENRY STREETER, ATTOtt\ C6CNSELLOR-AT-LAW, 1 1 '0YA,..N . 1) A, PA. . lIL. TOW.NEXI, M. D.,* • 11031EOPATITIC I'IIYSIciAN AND SPRGiON. ttli..itostdence and °Mee Jost North of Dr. fi)r- Inn'', nn ]fain street, Athens, Pa. . Jun26-4ttn. E L. HILLIS, ATTORNEY•AT-LAW, TOWANDA, PA. F. GOFF, kirfORNET-AT-LAW, • *VAIXSING, l'A Agenry for the tale and purchase of all klndsof tecurith•s and for making loans on Real Estat e . All, IM , luess wlll receive careful and prompt attend m. l'Julb 4. 111.79. . v. ;,T.i. AIW' 1 1 m 9 ,, N , 1 L P , , S , 0 , n N i ,. A fiT m T l O ll R S attend EY tol, 11. busttiess etttrumeTh to his sac., It tiradlutd, Sullivau nod Wyoutitig Counties. 5 - Mee with Esq. 111=2 'IMAM E. BULL, SVAVEVOR I:NU:1 , 1E4:1111.M, SURVEYING AND DRAFTING. Wlth G. F. !ita,hn. over Patch & Tracy. Stain N:roet, ToWanda. Pa. j i 4.15.80. 7 1- ANGLE, D. D. OI'EIqTIVE AND MECHANICAL DENTIST 03ieenu Statg Street, second floor of Dr. Pratt's 0:3 r:e. apr 3 79. E iABREE tt-soN, A TTORNEVS-AINLAW, TOW A N DA, PA. N. C. Ei.siircKn 11l - 31cPIIERSON, ATTOILNLY:AT-leJIW, TOWANDA, PA. Dim't .Itt'y Brnd. Pg oliN • ♦ntoENEY , A 4 Lecc AND IT. S. COMMISSIONED., Ti)WA NI)A, l'A. Utnce—'North Sidu Public Yquare FIW9 ATToI e Y F: r-A 7-1-41 r, To IrAND.I, PE X'4 0111..e—South side Poplar street„oppoBllB Ward House.• Nov. 13, 1879. D AVIES & CARNOCII AN, A TTolt!itl"si-Al-I.iw, KILTTFI . 6/./ . 1: OF R' Ai 11 1101:SE DPC Z 3-75. ANDREW WILT, SI ATTORNEY-ATILAW. (Mee—Means' Ilh k, Va1n.10.....v0r .1. 1.. Rent's, stow, Towanda. May be cour.ulted In German. &April 12,16.3 IN • 1 YOUNG, A TTOTIN ES'-A TA,AW, TOWANDA. , PA. Offler—aecond door south bf the First Nal!nnal flank .sl%tri St., up stairs. 1,77 WM MAXWELL, _: .. - . i . ATTOUNEV-AT,LAW. 1 • TOWANDA,. PA. • i ()Mee over Daytiin's WIT. •A f.rll 12. 1876. . V„. .. An. '9. M. - WOODBURN, Physi 'll,wl rgoo a Sun. Once at reaAteiice. on • 1 :: i., • s.rvet, Essi of Yktjn. T,A, - ,,:_ia. May 1. 16:2 ly` • , • vtr B. KELLY, DEsrlsr.-office T • ortcr ST,T..ltosetifirdd's, 'Towanda. Pa. , T.,,, , thitukerte4 , uu liidd.44l,lser, Rubber. and Al. hmturo hosts. Ti•eth extracted, without pain. 34-72. • , • 1 1 D. PA YNE, M. D., „ • : • , • ,• ! A . itliti - Alcl AN AND StritGEoNt".. i , ft:-, ...,rer MontanyeN' Store. Office hours from 10 ~ to 12 1 A.1a.. 4ntl trout 2 to 4 P.M.' Special s4(eution given to I , I , EASES PISV.ASES ~ • ,o. Will OT TiIF. EV E.' , 1 THE EAR RYAN, COr . NTY SUPETtINTP.NWK r'.,... ,1,..r.1:,..4 sni unlajor each M{n, 4 b. over Turner a G.prpoive Drug Store, '4lvauda, Pa. 'f Avall.L't, il . idi l .,2n, Ink 1 ' ±/ 1 . S. RUSSELL'S 'l • v• 'I GE' PRAY.{ rNSIT ‘ RANCE AGENCY TOWANDA, PA. M 121-70 It F IRSTN,A:TIONAL BANK, TOWANDA, PA ( .APITAI. PAID n Bank otters unneual'reellttlee for the tram zt:,ll of a general banking business.° N. N. BETTS, Cashier .1 4 VOW F. I. L, Prestileid. 'AI RS. If. PEET, LA C Mt: It OF PIANO WV'S Icf T F.: it .St to per te rm. • street, tistiward.) i.v.3lltta. Jan. y. GET YOUR PRIX TING Ikrec at the REPORTER 071/CR. 1 / 4 444 ,_ " NI "..;•Irt }kcal; Towanda . Col o re4 Ram sfrBWlB4l COODNICH & HITCHCOCK. Publls&ers. VOLUME XLI. In a little ICI Churchin the State of Virginia, Sonternegroes had gathered to worship the . Lord; And after the service they had a clam meeting, That each for the Master might utter i word. Their leader exhorted, and apcdttof the warfare Which Christiana timid wagelimtinst error el way, And Anlshrd by asking the following question : *Which way Is your teustet a-p•lntln• today?" One after another they gave their experience; . Some brothers were happy, some lukewarm or cold; • One . saw his way clear to the portals of glory, . Another hid strayed like a lamb from the told, At last Droller liarkia—a renegade member, ~And Satan's companion for many a day— Arose, cleared tile throat; though visibly - nervous, He folded his arms and proceeded to sty: "Dear brudden and slaters, :I once wain Christian I once was as bappzatiany one here; at for de church like a battlesscarred soldier, ' And stood by her banners when traitors were neat." " Hold on, dar," the leader excitedly shouted ; "Please answer the question I axed you, I say I've given you credit for all you lit den, sir— Which way Is your musket adoliktlng today 0. The, Democrats talk of the glory of 'Hancock, And boast of the record of English as well; Then glee them due honlif; for Judas was loyal Till money was offered ; he took It., and fell. I would liken their boasrto the bout of old Rarkis, And then, with the class leader, honestly say: Hold on, dar, my , bmdder, dat isn't de question Which lay Is their Musket a-tointln' to-day 1.",' Shall men who are tratntAg . writh Brigadier Gener ale, - • Who fought to destroy oVlational flag, And rise from their seats In e Forty-sixth 'Con gress ; To eulogise traitors like Danis and Bragg? ' 'than men who bow down In Confederate caucus • And worship the masters they humbly obey, Shall they rule titillation by Washington founded? "Which way Is.yoUr musket a-Djlntin' to•day?" litay 1, 19 The question, my friends, Is of vital. importance; The nation is waiting In anxious suspense ; Each 'timter can wield a political musket, Then wield it, I ask, In your country's. definse. The issue afore us Is Clear and uncloUded: Shall the. nation be ruled 'by the Blue or the Gray!' I candtitly ask, fellow-soldier and - voter, wails your musket a-p•lattn,' today? TILE TIDE AT THE TURN Feb 27, '79 ISX THE AUTHOR OF "JOKY HALIFAX, * There Is a tide In the affairs of mere Which, taken at the turn, leads on to fortune. " Why, this is like a bit 'out : of Cranford," said I to a friend as we came out into the clear winter tiri light, from a house where she had taken ,me to pay a call. " Yes ; Mrs. Gaskell: would havev made a charming picture out of that cosy little parlor, with Miss Sadh sitting alone there, so round and fat and comfortable-looking." ("Pretty. too," interposed I; "she must have been pretty when she was young.") "That parrot, too, it is as good to her' almost as a child. andas trouble , some." (My friend does not believe in the delightfulness of children ) "And Miss Plains makes as much of the parrot as her - sister. I wish you had seen MissYhillis; but she is al ways out of afternoons." Cnovll-75 [norl 9:74 And then - I. learned how, at the othqr end of the town, lived an old gentleman, very helplesiand whom Miss I'hillis for'.-years had gone to see every day, l epending,an hour or two in reading dr talking to him. In summer I often tiSed to meet her walking beside his bath•chair. She is not at all like Miss Sarah, but very tall and thin, and decided!y ac tive for her years. This winter I hear poor Mr. White cannot go out at all, but Miss Phillis never misses a day in going to see him." Is he a relation ?" E=M! tfel),l'7B • " Oh, no; only a very old friend. An old bachelor, too—quite solitary. People do say—have said it any time these thirty years—that he' had bet ter have married Miss Phillis, and that she , would 'not have objected ; but one never knows the truth of -Neese things. They have been most steady friends, anyhow." Here, truly, was a chapter out of Cranford," or out of human life generally. Once I had myself chanced to see ,Mr. White—a funny little old man in a brown Brutus wig—it was difficult to Make a sentimental hero of him. Still— Jan. 1,1875 TOWANDA. PA " I have always been rather fond of Miss Phillis," continued my friend. "She would, have made a good man's fireside very bright Perhaps Mr. 'AV was one of those who ate al ' aysinissing their chances, Who can not take,-the tide at the turn.' If ( so, it was a pity. So many let hap piness slip by them and regret it when too late. IC ot.that Pam aware of Miss Millis,' regreting anything. She is . a very cheerful-minded woman; and is invaluable now to old Mr. White." We were neither of us in a mor.t . izing mood, being also cheerful-min' - ed women, and bent on enjoying as much as possible our. brief winter holiday—" kehtly but kindly," like our own advancing age—so the con versation dropped- Since, hoirever, it has often re - curled to, me, in noticing bow very common is this fatal peculiarity of not being 'able to '" take the tide ht the turn," especially in love affairs. That of , MisslPhillis and Mr. White may never haVe existed at all, except in the imagination of their friends; but I have known several other in stances in which.a little honest yash ness would > have been the beit wis dom. • One case especially: a young couple—play fellows from childhood —all their ,friende agreeable to and expecting their engagement, nay wait ing- somewhat anxiously, for the gentleman to "make up his mind ; and say the final word, whiCh from pure shyness he delayed doing. At last, one Sunday—the young lady wag 'going away on Monday—he de termined to' speak during their usual evening walkj home from church. "I'll go to church with you to-night," said an unconscious, , well intentioned friend. .Alas "l "two is company, three is none." The pro= posal was not made—never made. Three days after the lady accepted a lorippersistent suitor, who years be., fore.had made* his Mind—and de clared it, Wall, no hearts were bro ken apParentis. She married, but her old pla7fellow is a bachelor still. Zde comes now And then to , see bar, -.5125,000 60,1004, Aril 1;187., A PARABLE. I:ME!MNI GENTLEMAN." EMI romps with her children, plays chess with her husband, and does not look at all miserable f But perhaps, when he goes back to his handsome, empty house, he wishes thingsad been a little digerent. - I t - However,love, if it be the heart of the life, conktitutes only a str.iall.por tion of it extern - to man at least On many other matters beside love-matters, this *Nifty to take the tide at the turn is most fatal. How many a man owes his whole success in life to the faculty of being able to see the golden moment and catch it ere it flies 11 " All things come alike to all." Inuit is (With very rare excePlions). every man has a certain number of chances—the distinction between success and fail ure is that one grasps them, another lets them slip by. An unanswered letter o an -- appointment broken, a train missed',lmay for all we know change the color of our whole exis tence. Alt the more becaOse we do not know ; until, looking back, we see upon what trivial things—mere accidents apparently hinged the most important events of our lives. A situation applied for at once, and gained "juiit at the nick of time ;" a first invitation accepted, not neglect ed ; a business letter answered with out delay; an appointment kept with trouble and pains, yet still, kept; these small things have many a time proved the'key-stone of the arch on which a young man has built his for tunes. "-Only a quarter of . an hour !" said an old man to a you ng one who was apologizing carelessly for having kePt him waiting thus long. "My friend, to that quarter of an hdur -I 'owe everything in ift• 1" Between the courage which siezes an opportunity and the sanguine rashness which ',snatches at every thing and grasps: nothing, is as wide a difference as - between bravery and fooltritrdiness. .Sometimes one may make a, mistake. A lady once told me how she stood before a post-office with a letter in her hand—a moment ous letter, written on the impulse of the moment, and with a strong' con scientious desire to do the right—all the more because it was painful— how twice, three times, she seemed to*feel some invisible hand restrain ing her ,own, how she looked help lessly up to ie silent sunset sky— then with a sort ,of desperation dropped the letter into the .box—and regretted it to her dying day. • But these difficult crises seldom happen. On the whole, far more harm is done by irresolution than by precipitation : ewe, as I have heard it- said, and I agree thereto, weakness is worse than wickedness. At any rate, it is more dangerous. The man who can - never make up his mind, who lets chance after chance go past him, is always a little too late for everything, and never knows that kindly fortune has touched him till he caches the last sad sweep of her garment as she glides by—forever the misery which this man creates and inflicts—for it is a fallacy that any one can be nobody's enemy but his own—is, in the aggregate, much greater than that caused by the strong bad man. Him we recognize at once, and against him we can protect our selvesta little ; against the other we never can. - Our very pity takes up arms against our judgment. For, alas ! we know the certain end— " lie that will not when be may, When he would be shall have nay." Only for a single hopeful minute is the tide on the turn; when once'it has turned, it has turned forever, and Leaves blm at eye on the bleak shore alone." All thorough business men and women—for women require to be good " men of business," too, in this our day—know that the aptitude for seeing the right moment to do a thing, and doing it, without rashness, but also without delay, is a vital ne cessity of success-success in any thing. Ile who puts off till to-morrow what can be done—or ought to be on e—t oday , is most hopeless as a clerk, a servant, or in any position where regular systematic work is re quired. More fatal still is such a quality in a master or mistress—for the real heart of a family is almost always the mistress. If the cannot take \the tide at the turn," judge the fittest moment fur domestic de cisions of all kinds, and carry them out, woe betide her ! There tnay be no actual shipwreck, but,her house hold hark will be a very helpless, helmless vessel at best. This habit of diliatoriness and in decision is so much of it mere habit that - children cannot be too early taught,'first the necessity of making up one's mind, and then of acting upon it. The trick of "hanging about'," of wasting minute after min ute, hour after hour, in work _as in play—for idlers never even play con scientiously—is often acquired in mere infancy, and too often, alaallin imitation of elders and betters, never to be got rid of to the end of life. What is in the boy, or girl pure care lessness, becomes in the man and .wo man a confirmed peculiarity, which haunts them like a curse, causing no end of misery to themselves and all belonging to them. For, we know our gains -and achievements; our losses, our fail ures, we never fully know. Big we may dimly guess at them, by our despair over some application thrown aside and neglected, till the lost chance of benefiting ourselves or our neighbor can never be recalled ; our remorse over an unanswered letter, when the writer has suddenly gone whither no kindly word can teach him any more ; bur regret over cor dial visits left unpaid, and pleasant meetings unvalued, till friendship, worn out, dies a natural death, or burns Itself to ashes like a fire with put fresh coals.' Then we may lay the blame on Providence, luck, cir cumstances ; anything or anybody except the: true sinners, ourselves.-- but it is too late. " We cannot help it," we plead, and after a certain time we really cannot help it. There is a disease called paralysis of thelwill, actual physical disease, though its results are moral, and every one who cultivates, orrather does not saliva with all his might to eradicate, the habit lade• TOIT.ANDA, BRADFORD COMITY , PL, THURSDAY MORNING, AUGUST 26, 1860. claim; lays himself open thereto. A baby—even a dumb infant who "knows its own mind," and stretches out the little impetuous hand, quite pertain whether it is the,doll or the agon which it wants tor' play with, and eager to snatch it, without wast ing a minote--is a person not to be despised, but encontaged. The gift of being able to enjoy tirday, not to morrow pr .next week, but today, which alone is our real property, and also (the one faculty involves the other) of doing resolutely each day's work within the day, is one of the greatest blessings that can fall to the lot of any human being, Let us, who are parents, try by all conceivable means to secure it to our children. For the young can learn ; the old seldom can. '" Redeeming the time because the days are evil " is very difficult when the days have become ;" when the glow has gone out of life, and instead, of the rosy flush of hope the gray. twilight of , endur ance settles overall things; when we smile at " taking the tide at the tur6,7 knowing that no more tides wil er turn, for us it least-:-but y may for our children. „ Let us teach them 'di' tier or not we have learned it ou Ives, " what soever thy hawd find h to do, do it with thy might." Ond do it at the lime. No"t - --4.tosuacrioir or the day after, or "by-and-by when I am in the mood for it," but at once, at the moment when it presents itself to be done. For the tide will turn, and you never know the moment of ita turning. Be first clear-sighted, cau tious, prudent, and then be decided. Make up 'your mind ; ' , but having made it up; act upon it. Do not— ,6 Linger shivering on the brink, - And tenr to launch sway " but -take the tide at the tarn; plunge boldly in; do your best, and trust the rust. There"is an old English verse - part of a love - poem I think; but it ap plies to many another crisis in life besides love— " He either tears his tate too watch, Or his deserts are small, . Who dare not put It to the touch,. To win.or low It all." And without defending either fol ly, recklessness or rashness, I think we may safely say that the man who dare put it to the touch " is the man most likely to prosper through hawing taken "the turn of the tide." The Mountains of the Moon. When one looks• at the moon through . a powerful telescope furnish td with a prism eye-piece, he seems to be suspended in mid-air and look ing down upon the -lunar plains and mountains from an enormous height. The falling away of the surface to ward the edges of the great ball ametimes produces the sensation thSt is experienced in standing on, the brink of a., Viddy pecipice. If' the, magnifying power used is 500 diameters, the effect is about the same as if the observer were in a balloon 500 miles above the surface of the moon. Below him lie moun tains greater than Mont Blanc and Chimborazo, looking no larger than pebbles. Ancient sea bottoms are spread beneath ( him like smooth doors, dotted here and there with elevations that 'may once have been islands, and surrounded by table lands, plains and mountain chains that show where the old seacoast was flat and -marshy where it was full of harbors, and where it was iron-bound and perilous. Great naked plains stretch out in various directions' as smooth as our prairies, and in other .plaCes there are reaches of hilly country, and then tremendous moun tain masses The great topographic al features remain, as in the days when the moon was 'young and full of life like the earth ; but the coasts' are silent as the mountain peaks, the seas arc empty, the fruitful soil is gone, all that ancient, teeming life has vanished, and the whole land is void of air. It is only' the rocky skeleton of a dead world,And picture of what our earth will be hundreds of millions of years hence. ~ With a good three-inch telescope, and a little practice in the manage ment of the magnifying powers, one may many see all the famous• moun tains of the moon, and most of the strange looking objects that have at difTerent times been, taken for- fortifi cations, roads and other works of man. There are a number of ex el lent maps of the moon, by whose aid every conspicuous object may be re cognized. The point of greatest in terest-to the observer 'is \the long, jagged line, called - the terminator, that. marks the sharp ;division be tween day and night. If you watch - that line for an hour two you will be astonished at the changes that take place under your eye. You will see the sunshine creeping down the inner side of a ringed mountain, until the ' floor of the vast basin, whirl had be fore been perfectly black,. looking like a hole right through the moon, is reached and lighted ,up,,( while the rocky flanks of the central peak, or cluster of peaks, come into view,, and begin to cast long, spiry shadows over the crater floor. A lefty moun tain, whose summit,• gilded by the sunlight, has been visible for an hour, Shining out of the dense obscurity that'covers the region about it which is yet steeped in night, like a little island lying off a sunny coast, gradu ally swings into view, •and the line of Sunshine goes sweeping t , up its craggy sides, chasing the rehadows .and. revealing rocky spires and pre cipitous gorges deeper than the vall ley of the Dior de Glace. The vast dark plains, which were formerly supposed to be real; seas, but in which modern astronomers see only the bottoms of seas whose waters disappeared ages ago, retain their old romantic names. , Th‘re iB , the Ocean of Storms, covering a vast region Irv' the Eastern' hemisphere. Witb is equatorial situation, and sin , rounded by some of the most gigan tic mountains in the moon, it- may have been, before its waters was stolen away, as tempestons as its name implies. On the south of the Ocean of Storms projects a large bay of a• remarkably green hue, which ' is Called tb e Sea of Moistureofhilt .„ I I : - _ • REGARDLESS 07 - DEMIRCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER. on the north the ocean runs into the narrow Bay of Dew. Then there is . the Sea of Showers, the largest of the_mcituVa seas or sea bottoms. 2 Be tween the Sea of Showers and that brilliant portion of the moon called the Land of hoar Frost lies theßay of Rainbows, which , as the celebrated observers'Beer and !darner thought, furnishes the most; magnifiblnt land scape in the moon:. It is surrounded by, lofty, shining cliffs. In th'e centre of the moon arelhe Sea of 'Vapors and the Bay of Tides., In the north are Plato, or the Greater Black Lake, the Sea of Cold, 'and the Marsh of Sleep, the latter being remarkable for its reddish hue. In 'the east are the Sea of Serenity, the Sea of Tran- Auility, the Sea of Fertility, the Sea of Nectar and the dark Crisian sea. The last named; judging from its no -usual depressiot., was probably the deepest of all the lunar seas, although its greatest length is only about 350 miles.. • _ Around all these seas cluster ting ed mountains, craters and mountain ranges, whose shadows are thrown upon their level surfaces, varying in length and shape and number with every hour. The whble southern quarter of the moon is occupied by the great mountain region that has the tremendous crater for its centre. Here the amateur telescopist may' spend hoursamong the glittering peaks. It ie l ike looking down into the heart of the Adirondacks, with the mountains increased ten fold in magnitude and a thousand fold in riurnber. The , mountain wall that 'surrounds Tycho is a perfect- ring 1 fifty-four Miles in diameter, and three miles high.. Exactly in the centre of the great flat floor,' inclosed within the ring; rises .a mountain peak a mile in height that shines' brilliantly in the sunlight. In a good three-inch telescope, Tycho is an object of sur prising beauty and, ever-varying in terest as the sunshine creeps up its 1 outer wall, leaps down .the terraced slope of the opposite side of thelrink, and, sliding across the broad. level floor, climbs the central peak, and throws its long-pointed shade* clear across the crater. For hundreds of miles on every side of Tycho the whole surface of the moon is broken and upheaved into jagged mountain masses, in which are many peaks loftier than the highest Alps, and some that can equal the mightiest of the Andes. The spectacle of the sunrise upon these mountains is mag nificent bey° d description. Some of, t e highest mountains in the moon lie along the edge of .the disk, and are seen in profile against the sky. Such are the Doerfel Moun tains and the Leibnitz Range south of Tycho, which rival our Himalayas in height. In the telescope they give the edge of the moon a broken or scalloped appearance. These are but few of the wonderful objects in our satellite that are famil iar to astronomers. Any one who is not an astronomer may spend many pleasurable hours in studying them with the aid of a small telescope. REST FOR TILE WE.say.-,,What a strange thought I All thisiirestless world is seeking rest. Those who drag their weary bodies home, night after night, and fall down upon their restless beds, worried with the anxie ties and cares of business, are yet seekingi'rest. It is not found in pov erty ; perhaps it lurks under the rich man, all the while that he lies, groan ingapon his. couch or stands with: wrinkled brow perplexed with care. Where is rest?-What is rest? It is the divine principle 'of peace within that comes from 'God': As well seek roses upon the pallid cheek of death as rest out of God. The needle rests not till it turns to the pole.. If a little child is frightened at play, he comes running into the house for his Mother. She takes him to her bosom, presses ,Itisses upon' his, broar, and while she sings some lullaby of love, all fear fades from his face and he sleeps in peace. God wants' to fill.a mother's place to 'all the world. If it be misfortune, or poverty, or gloomy foreboding that makes one unhappy, God can give him, rest and breathe a lullaby of love about his tempest tossed soul that - will still s its, raging. Rest, peace, - is a principle that lies within us and not'without. some possessing it, have found a crowned bead uneasy. 0, that every anxious, longing heart would look away to Rim who walketh' among the golden lamps of heaven! " Take my yoke upon you, and ye shall find rest to your souls." LAUGHING OFF A Rum- 44 Speak. ing of the Cash-Shannon duel," said an exchange fiend, putting his feet in the waste basket, "we need -a few men like Judge Dooly. Ile laughed out of duels with an audacious wit that compelled even the admiration of his enemies. You remember he said, when they threatened that if he didn't fight, his name would fill the columns of a newspaper, that he bad rather fill ten newspapers than one coffin. Once he went on the field with a man who had St Vitus' danCe. His opponent was at. his post. his whole frame jerking nervously from his malady: Dooly, in the soberist manner, left his post, and cutting a forked stick, stuck it in the ground in• front of his opponent. "' What does this mean ?' asked his opponent. "' Why:' says Dooly, 'I want you to rest yynr piste' on that fork, so that you can steady your aim. If you shoot me with that harid shaking so, you'll pepper me full of boles at the first fire." " Then there leas a laugh all around and the duel was 'put off without a day." WE have our opinion of a female per son, nee lady, who enters the water under full press of jewelry.—New Fork Com mercial Advertiser . "J. A. Fauna"—We cannot print your story ,coalmencing, '" The blue Aranlt of' heaven looked down upon a young man, and across its azure depths lazily drifted fantastically ► haped cloudlets that looked from below like .a lot of second hand pillow*, just out of the laundry " because we lusve• in the hopper a 7xo poem, commencing # • w'rtis soMmer birdslnAled their merriest lays, Toe immapppiu•lommui; the VW." A , NIGHT WATCH. '"lt Is not morning yet?" Prom aide to side The sick girl, hot-browed and heavy-eyed. And moaned With feverish breath when I replied, - * ' "It Is not ihorning yet." . . "It Is - .. 4.0 ot morning yet?" The clock ticks on, i The ds fell slow. n 4 half the night is gone; Agal ilaswertdithat restless moan— • - -1 , i l ) 1 "lilt not morning yet?" It "Is I ot morning yet ?" If abe could sleep, ... ' It thus tired lids those burning eyes could keep i God knows the thorns are sharp, tie:v . :tad is steep! !• It Is not morning yet 7', • • " 1010 t Mgt nlng yet r coming aear," Atul, while I speak; the shadows press mere near, And all the room grows colder with soy fear, • •• It Is not murnlbg ,ye 4?" "Is it'not moral% yet?" Mow faint and low— The piteous arenas Do not fremble a); My heart, nor fall me, While I answer, ",No 41. is not morning yet?" . "Is It not morning yet P. , I bow my betuf; God answers, while the eastern sky red glow And smiles upon the still face on the bed, r Yes, Ills morning now i" An Irish Miner's Speech. `olty Workkingmen Support the Re- pitblleans. Campaign Hall was the scene of- a very successful demonstration last night, fully 1,500 people being in at tendance upon the impromptu meet ing at which members of the - Irish- Anierican Republican Convention were announced to speak. The pro ceedings throughout were ; character ized by unbounded enthusiasm, every point made by the speakers being greeted with loud spontaneous applause. The meeting was. called . to Order by..ThomasNcSheeny, and Prank Ryari,tof EvariSville. who was calfed to the chair,'was making the opening Speech, when the Hon. Al bert G. .Porter the ,hall. The arrival of Mr. Porter was hailed with great applause, and there were calls from all parts f the hall for a speech from " the people's candidate" for GOvernor. Mr. Porter had, however, come to the meeting, simply as a i tener; and .after gracefully thanking the audience, for the hearty reception accorded him, stated that it .would give - him much greater pleasure and be of greater service to the Republi can party for the - gentlemen in charge of the meeting to carry out the oriai nal programme: The - speakers of the evening were Messrs. Ryan. of Evansville ;'/Matthew Gray, of Bain bridgei Morrison, of Woods,- of Warrick county, and Masterson, of St. - Louis. The feature of the evening was t ch of Mr. WOods. He was i roduced by the Chairman as Jim Woods, the Irish Hoosier, of Booneville, in Warrick county, and his remarks, stenographically report ed, were as follows : " I have been a life-long Democrat. I have worked faithfully for that party. But I just want to say right here to you laboring men,for it's you I want to talk to more especially--- , you mechanics, that have been work ing in the tout dries here for the last two or three days when the heat has been enough to , kill you--we're no bankers nor bondholders, you know —[laughter !]—that th 6 question you have to think about Is whether the laboring men and the liishmen should vote for the-Republican party or the Democratic party. [Cries of That's it,',and cheers.] And 1 have come to the conclusion, within the last two weeks, that we ought to vote the Republican ticket, [loud cheers,] and I am going to tell you why. Now what I tell you is this: That it is for every honest man, no matter where he comes from, or who he is, to see that be does not go t orrong on this matter, and that other people do not go wrong. feel that I have got a little honor-thd„ manhood left, altho' I. know the Democratic papers will give me fits, [laughter.] for I am known everywhere down in' my part of this State. Four years ago I was interested in the election of Tilden and Hendricks. They told us that their election meant economy and reform. f Laughter.] 'But one eve ning I beganto look at it and think about it, and , when I began to I look at it I began to get weak-kneed, [great laughter.] and I haver 4 got strong yet. [Renewed laughter and uproarious cheers.] Can't you keep these people quiet, Mr. Chairman ? [Laughter.] If Alley, don't mind they'll get my Irish spunk up:; [Re newed laughter.) Now, ilbout this economy the Democrats arc speaking about so much all over the hind. They tell you they have saved over $40,000,060. Tliey say they are the party of economy and reform, and that they have ,saved 'any amount'of money. I telt you" what I thought about it when had fend a - little about it at home. I read what, they were doing in Congress, and I found that there were vessels of the Navy that'were built during the ivar, and that cost =the coiintry, millions„tOat were" allowed to become useless fAist for want of ix,little repairs; and yet there' were \ liundreds of laborers,: who were scarcely-able to get bread 'for their familie ' s and many a man - Was hardly able to keep life-in his wife and children; because they had: to be discharged from the Navy-yard just because there was no money topay them. Just becauie of this economy,l in another part of the Government departments, the clerks, even a lot of poor girls, had to be discharged ; and so the laboring nien had to be dis charged and thrown out of . employ ment so that the Democratic party might go before the country, and show what they had done. This was whit they called economy and reform. "'There are two parties that are asking us for their votes, and the question I asked myself was, Which party am I going to take stock in ? Is my interest - With the Northern or Southern people ? Which of these - - two-sections will help the laboring men ? I have come to the conclusion that if there is to'be a solid South, I will Vote with ' the solid - North. [Loud cheers.] You remember. if you read about the Cincinnati Con uention, that several gentlemen got up Ind promised the solid South. nein Democrats olaimed right along that they would have a solid South, and the Chairman appointed as Chair man of all the important committees some of the Southern men. These are facts that cannot be denied. Now, I have this questionto ssic you, t :.,, 1 r. ...i - :: - : . 4 ,.' ~. --:: - ~, ! I --, -•---. . and whether you have been Republi cane or Democrats,l want you to lay your prejudices aside. If I speak the truth, give me credit for. it; if I tell you a lie, I don' t t want you to believe anything just - because I say it, but read all aboutitfor yourselves. Where are , the emigrants that have come from the oppressed peoples' of Europe? Where , are they gone? To the South ? or are they not in the North an] Noith-western States ? Ninety per cent. of them are in the North. [Cheers ] And which was the party that got, these Homestead laws under which they can icome here and get along in life ? They came from the , Republican party. This is one reason why I am going to vote the Republican ticket [Loud cheers.] Now, I have another. ti,fro years ago I wad, a delegate to the Democratic- COnvention from county, and the committee on reso lutions reported a platform in which they said they were in favor of the repeal -of the Resumption act. That was another thing I began to get shaky-aboPt. [Laughter.] ' I knew just as well as possible that Sherman was going to come out all right. [Cheers.] The Democrats said then that when the Resumption act went in Ibreelhey were going to take out every bit of gold there was in the Treasury. But they never did it. [Laughter and cheers.] Now just look a little at these things. E T ,can't, give you any fine' polished talk.. I leave that to other people. I don't know much grammar, but I can read about-these things, and I thlinktood ness for .what what I'do know.- What I say is : 'Stirdy well, andihe careful before yea cast yonr ballot [C beers'. ] Be-sure that you know you arel'ight. They tell you to joinAlm,Zonth. I hale been a little down ;South. I have traveled a good .deal. They tell you. there are plenty of plices down there, but I know - tihat in the South a poor man, no matter how hard he may try, stands a poor chance of getting along. The Northern men are the 'friends of the laboring man. [Cheers.] I have beep thinking over this-for a considerape length of time, and I think lam right. [Cheem] And when I know I am right, I don't allow any man to change me from my course. " Now; you don't want to vote for any of • these men that have no re spect far you except at electio4s. [Cheers.] I heard a man say ondy, • They never came to see me except at an election, and then they fetched me in a carriage, and I was a gentle man.' [Laughter.] I only just want to say a few more words to you now, but' you will hear from me again be fore this campaign is over. What I tell you now is this: Let every man consider himself a committee of . ope to work for.. the success of our Melia .[Cheers [Cheers mid cries of "-That's the way we'll do it.'] Don't, go and talk about it, but do it. My fellow-countrymen, this Republican platform is large enough and wide enough and grand enough for every Irisbniiin and every. laboring man to stand upon. [Loud cheera.] This one thing we are go ing to do—you Mark, it: We are going to-give the votes of the labor ing men to their friend at Indianapo lis—,[eheers]—a man that has stood by tliem [renewed cbeers] and has 'been their friend whenever they got into a difficulty and " needed help to seenre them their rights. [Loud cheers.] He has helped them many times, and the working men of this State are going to stay by him and dive him a grand vote on the second Tuesday in betober. [Cheers.] That man is Mr. Porter [turning to-wheit' that gentleman was seated upon the stage and taking him. by the hand, amid renewed and demonstrative cheers]. I hope he will succeed, and I will do all I can to get him elected. [Cries of 'Bravo,' 'Good,' and shouts of applause.] Gov. Porter—l feel like calling him Governor because - I believe he will tke-..-don't fee i any difficulty about- taking\a man bkithe hand, even' it he is a laboring man. Be has stood by - u - 4 - in.the bouv.eif difficulty. We will stand by him`uh, tit the hour of triumph. [tiondv and long-continued applause.] lie is not a man who is capable of cheating or of seeing others cheat any man out of his rights or his property. Ile helped us ,Now we are going to pay him back. [Cries of 'So we will:'] We are going to stand by him. We are going to see him through this can vams;-and I ask my fellow-working men to come right up and defeat any one that proposes to abuse him. He is no banker, Or usurer, [cheers, and cries of That'sbne for Bill English,'] hut he's a 'man that every one can support. Now, I think it is about time for me to stop. [Cries of 'Go on I'] There are some others to speak, and it would not be right or fair or honorable to take up too much of your time. You will hear from me again. lam going to take an active part in this canvass, for. I feel the importance of coming out and - staying out ou the right side. , no use for me to try to tell you what the Itepublican party has done for the land. It would take too much time. I ask you to Or up your prejudices. I know lam right. Be . assured that, you are right. have found out for myself on which side it is best fora laboring map to cast his vote, and that is in favor of .the Republican party, and I am go ing to be very careful, to do it." [and ,cheers.]—lndianapolis Jour nal, July 16. MISS DUDLI FLRITITEIt'S hew story be called ' "The Head ,of Medusa. "lt must be a snake story.—Norristown 1157. r • 'BRA IWORD is getting to be such a place' for petroleum fires that no sober citizen would like to take a naptba.—Afie York Graphic. ' IT caul be such a difficult task to write an autiblograpby. We meet scores of men every day who are fitted for nothing else.--Boston Traiseript. ' • THREE days after a babyis born every body says, "Ketchetty, ketchetty," and dip its ribs with a • forefinger. Hence the prevalence of ill-teniper in adults.— Jarksoncille Sun and Press. ." PROPIIIIFVTOIC-.. "If you boys don't clear ,out I'll Call that officer and have yot tak en in." Boy—" - That's where you'd be taken it ; that policeman's my dad, he is."—New York Telegram. 4 f sl.oCl , per ',Annum In Adinince. A Burdette Among" the Farmert. Er. Thlstlepod's Experience*. : • Bob Bunlette, of the Burlington Hawkeye, paints this pretty pastorial. pjetnre: It is spring. and the annntd war fare begins. Early hi the morning the jocund rainier hies him to the field, and Mints in the 'dead weeds and grass for the plow he left out there somewhere sometime last -fall. When he findsit, he takes it to the shop to have it mended. When it is mended, 119 goes .baek -to the field with it. Half way' down the first furrow be lays, he runs 'the plow fair. ly into a big live oak root'; the handles alteinately break a rib on this side of 'bim, and jab the breath out of him opthe other, and the sturdy root, looking up out of the ground with i la pleased smile of re cognition, snys cheerfully: . Ah, Mr. - Thistlepod, at it again eh? Fifty feet farther lon he strikes a stone that doubles trii the plow point like a pieee,of lead and, While the amazed and breithletts agriculturist leans,a limp heap of humanity,scross the' plow the relic of the glacial period remarks, sleepily: • ha; spring here already? Glad, you woke me up.' And the granger its down, and patiently tries to tie! on that plow point with a hickory withe, and while he pursues this fruitless task -the friendly :7 crow sitoppa down near enough to ask: " - Goin'.to put thiS twenty acres in corn); this year, Mi.iThistlepod ?' ' And before helms time to answer the sable bird; a tiny graishopper, wriggling out of a clod so _full of eggs that they can't be .eoutite,d, shout briskly : Here we are again Mr. Thistle pod ; dinner for 500,000,000,000 !' 1. And then a slowmoving, but very positive potato bug crawls out into the sunlight to see if the frost has, faded his 'stripes, and says : ' ' The -old fashioned peachblOw. potato is the best for_ a sure crop, but the early rose should be planted for the first market.'-;. 1 hen several new kinds of bugs' who, haven't made any record yet, climb over the fence, and come up-to inquire about the staple crops of the neighborhood, and, before he can get through with them, ; Prof. Tice sends him a circular qtating that there won't be a drop of rain from the middle of May till, the last of Octo ber., This almost stubs him, but he -is beginning to feel a little resigned when a dispatch is received from the Department of Agriculture at Wash ington saying that ifidications point to a summer of unpreeepted, aitabst incessant and long continued rains" and floods and advising him to plant, no crops at all. While he is trying to find words to express his emotion, a -neighbor drops in to tell him.that all the peach trees in the country are winter killed, and - that the hog cholera is raging fiercely in the north ern part of the township. Then his wife comes out to 'tell him that the dog Vas. fallen . into the well, and when the poor man gets to the door yard his 'children with much shout ing and excitement meet him and. tell him there are a couple of cats, of the pole denomination, in the spring house and another under the barn. With tears-and groans be returns to the field, but by that• time it has be gun to snow so hard he can't see the horses when "he stands at the plow. He is discouraged and starts for the house witb his team, when he meets a man who bounces him for using a three-horse clevis" he . made himself, and wrings ten reluctant dollars out of hini for it. When he reaches the house the drive-well man is waiting for -him, and while, he, is settling with m ii‘elock-peddler cOmesin ' and a Ilightning rod man, screened by the 4torm,'elimbs up, .on the $lO smoke house and fastens $65 worth of light ning -rods on it, and before the poor calmer( can get his gun halt loaded the balitT conies to tell him that he has been drawn on the NIT. There has been such a dearth = snake stories this searn, that the experience of Mr. Isaac Baker, a lo comotivefengineer on the D. L. R. W. Railroad will be read, with interest. On Sunday afternoon last, while-Mr. Baker, in company with his fathers in-law, Mr. Stephen Wheeler, of thi4 city, was on; the Anountaln, west of Scranton looking up some stone to be used for building• purposes he •killed fourteen rattlesnakes, and ex hibits their skins and rattles in ver-i4 - fication of his story. He said hind self and Mr. Wheeler had walked some time through the brush, and came upon a craggy clearing when Mr. Wheeler . saw two huge -rattle snakes lying just before them. Mr. Baker, who is an expert snake fight er, at once gave battle to the ." var mints," and soon pinned then] one after another to the ground with it forked stick which he carried, and then cut off their heads. One of the reptiles measured four feet six inch es' and had sixteen rattles, and the other measured four feet and one ' inch long. The largest was seven inches around the thickest part of its body.. They had no sooner dispatch. eh this formidable pair than another large one attended by eleven smaller ones, came out from among the rocks. The old one at once showed fight, and with bead and tail erect, hissed and rattled Viciously and sprang at its disturbers, all example that was promptly followed by the' young snakes. This made matters Lively for Mr. Baker and his compan ion, who, however, managed to dodge the assaults of the reptiles,- and deal some telling blows with their clubs. Mr. Baker finally got the old snake's head in chancery beneath his forked stick and in' a short time had her head Off with his -trusty - jack-knife. Most of the young ones disappeared during the struggle, but came out of th‘grass when the mother snake was killed, and r et With a similar - fate. "Mr.-Baker told it seemed a pity to kill them, they were so beautiful with their shining. coats, bat they were WM REIM OE NUMBER 13, , 'A Den Ofißattlesnalim none the less poisonous for - all that He thinks it. rare .sriort Ming old snakes and 'hopes to We another tassel frith a few• before the season is over. He Is anions to secure one of the largest Aide and civilize it by drawing its fangs. He says he has helped a Pittston snake hunter to do it already, and_ ' imagines that he would have no -trouble.—Scranton Republican. ' • Who Took the Orphan. A few days ago a boy about ten - yeam of a'e, lame and (sickly, who , had been living with his mother, in . rooms in the city, found him- self alonein the world.: e. The lad was too ill' to ride in the one "__ poet carriage which followed . the._ body ;to the ; grave, , yet no - one - - thought his condition serious. Atti ter the funeral a number of poisons - gathered in the poverty-stricken • , _ room where hq lay weeping, to see . what disposition could be made of liim. ," ' , 1 ' , If he - Wasn't ame' 'l ' d take him into my family,",observed one of the men, in a tone that seemed to show - .. he blamed 'the boy for the misfortune. " Well, it's awful hard," sighed one of the women, " but I know he I couldn't get along with my children.?' • "Nor with mine," added another. "If I should take him, he'd run up, a big doctor's bill on me," said a man .as he filled his pipe. - - t Each and every one had' some ex- - - cuse. The boy heard them all with out a word, but with quivering chin, : - and eyes full of tears. T f inder one pretext and another all slipped out, and left him alone, promising to have another talk in the morning. Per haps, that night, before they closed their .eyes in sleep,. some of them thought of the poor lad-lying in the dreary - roans, alone and almost help., -.- less, but if so none of them went near him. Late in the morning "a .woman - living on the same floor, went in to see if he might not want a bite to ' eat,, and ,the question of who should take care of him was nettled. God, ,had taken him. Hugged close to the' wall, as if he feared the midnight: -- shadows, and with eye-;,lashes yet _ wet, he was dead and cold; no longer' a burden - to any one. The boy too lame to be taken care of on earth— too feeble to earn tliel - crnsts that so e one would have given him, had a h me - better than the best. When the knew that he died alone, women - ben over him and wept. When they ` lifted the wasted body from the bed, men's consciences smote them • for , , their harsh words, but it was, too --,- late. He had gone from earth feel- r ' ing that there was no mercy in the , human heart. l' _ . A YOl4O lawyer f more extensive Jegal information than Biblical force, was engaged in the prosecution of a crimina case. The prisner proved a good 'character previous to, the - commission of the offense. The-zeal "oui advocate sought tobreSk the force of this proof. He asked an old, member of the bar to give him some . anecdote which would; forcibly illus trate the idea, that although a party might enjoy a . goodl character, he might, at tile. same time, be a &eat villain. The 'Old I.W:yer, knowing his young legal friend% ignorance of , t seriptural iricidents,,,told "of Judas Iscariot, who, whilst he enjoyed the confidence - of his - cempanions, basely betrayed for a small sant of silver the most confiding and 'affectionate of . friends. The young attorney en. - thusiastically remarked: "By Jove! that's good, andlts my case; where did you - get it?"—Chicago Legal' News.. Mon4r, .ARMIMETI6.—One enemy may dd,us niore injury than twenty friends can repair. It is politic there fore to overlook a score of offences before you make a single foe. By imparting our griefs we halve them ; by communicating our joys we double- • them. When a married couple is one, their success is pretty sure to be Icon - too ; when they are two the chances are two to one that their affairs will be at sixes and sevens:, The'money ' scraping miser, who is always think ing of number, one, and looking out for safe investments, forgets that the only money we can never lose, is that which we give away ; and that the -. worst of all wants is the - want of what we have. In the ciphering of the heart, division is multiplication, and subtraction is addition. - PLANTATION' PROVERBS., -011C-Cyed mule Can't, be bundled on de - blind side. Moon may shine, but a; lighted knot's "mighty handy. De pig dat, runs wid de year er corn gits little mo' dan de cob. Lickor talks mighty loud when it gets loose from the jug. Sleepin'.. in de Tense . corner don't fetch Kriimus in de kitchen. 'Twben "de. bug and de bee-Taartin taint hUrd to tell who's gwine to 130 ketcled. De proudness uv a man. don't count w'en his -head's colt]. L'ou'd see mo' er de mink of he knowed whar de yard dog sleeps.• Hungry rooster don't cackle . w'en he fine a wum. Trubbles is seasonin' • ?simmons ain't good-twell dey er fros !bit. Thoughtful Thoughts. EIIIENIg' are won by those who believe n winning. • PEOPLE'S intentions can only be decid ed from their condic — f. - - FittAnnomi alwuys endeavors, to copy the mien and attitude of truth. I 7 7. NEVER lend an, article .yon have bok- 1 rowed unless you ) havo permission to dot 80. Titre is the foandaticin of all knowl edge and the' -cement of all aocieties. - EVERY man is bound to i tolerate the act of which be himself seta the ezumple; Trrens is nothing more to be esteemed than a manly` firmness and decision of, character. . WE mount to heaven mostly on tho - ru ins of our cherished scheme's, finding-our failures were successes. Im is easy to pick - holes in other people's work, but_ far more - profitable to do bet ter, work yourself.. . - HE who has no opinion of his own, but depends upon the opinions and tastes of others, is a slave. •NErzu think that God's. delays. 'are God's denials. Hold on ;hold fast ; hold out. Patience is genius.. -. Foun things come, not back ; the brok en word, the sped arrow, the past life, and neglected opportunity: Wntsr a niari hal; no design .but to speak plain truth, he may , say a great deal in a very narrow compass. Dims is as much a- test of civilization as the literature of the country; and those who decry it show how- deficiently. they are in reading and observation. , We judge a stranger more or less by ids dress, no matter how much we may claim, to be above such influences. Love never tires; the more we love the more we have of solid satisfaction. Eve ry-now soul we come in contact with and leartilo esteem fills us with new light and life.- Those' who love others are therm selves fall of sunshine, ' and the day marches triumphatitly, ,on. with them from rosy worn to dory int WI silent night,