--ir.ons or rvIILICAIIOX. 'The curt) to aroKT ars Is oalillsted over/ cb,imiay ,roi-ng of 4.31 Itl4lafg a Ntreclicoca. itt 9ue - bellar and Flrity Cents per maim, 111 iiireance: tr..srttilng In all eases erelastee of Into. per ratoo to 11, p .pdr. SILA Vt. NO riCEita•ervedst TEN CllllTepifir Hue tot &tut tuiAn rie drat rs pertlue !NCI 40 •*3 I t4ut. ta d out s au uottoe inserted for ..tAtc , tiUso C WE, S'TS will welosert- 0.1 v. cc ••I.laute rates. A. tla.t.CA Jr *ll &locators Nottcee,' ft; A ttt.tr' i.,..tet",1!..5a; 3 IitUOSS Cards. flee linos, (pot' y additional lines ft each. 31fiy tif truseri Are entitled to unarterily h .•4./iitlflL 41VatiOrnelltIltnust be paid for in ado.ince: ,Yr : Ail .'al m utt 4ioclattlOns; communications it u,ted Jr:lndivdual inrest and no' leer o brrixl4CS Jr WALLIS. i , 1 . d e g lA"e ithmire tharg.f el PI VAp 'r due, but "tuipl•• nutlet:mot mar r [Aga* and de •t It Alt I be published without charge. d e it Aron ratidastug a dirge' circulation than any:oftlta 41E( ill :Ito o.)•tuty, mates It the beat Jrttst d; •dtant to N•irtherti t'unasylsania. J fl Nti of every . Kind. in plain and tansy'catars, lone with neatness and dispatch. tains, Winks, Caids, eautphiets, Bilibeads, St .tem"ets, Sc., of every variety and style.prtuted at :no mort,st notice. Th. , ttseuttign otricr Is to "appiled •••Ith potter presses, a . good matt of new type. And !tr,rything in the printing 11 a • .tau tiecuted lu the mo-t artistic manner an I st theloscest rates TERMS LS VARAB Y C Stitt. ' Susiness.4aii►s. AV LES, ALL, D ATTORNEYS - AT - LA W . SOUTH SIPE OF WAI D HOUSE Dec 2;1-75 M. W. - BVCK, 47T0R.VE1"..47-LAW , TOIVA . NDA. N0v.111 4 _ . Of9fe4-At Trea+urer's ()Mee In - Court House .1" SMITH & CO., ROOK RINPERS, A n , l I , nlor , In Fro Amateurs' Suppl:es t•.-1,4i for pi itc-11,1s. BEroRTEU Toxsmin. Pa ADILL A; KINNEY, jj AtT,),:NEYS-AT-LAW„ occupied by Y. M.C. A 11... T. 51401 LT.. 3. 1 O. D. KINNEY J WIN NV. CODLING, ATTOIIN EN-AT-LAw, TOWANDA., PA. • !are user K ithy'h Krug Store: I .':lOMA* E. MYEK .iTTOKNEY-AT - LAW, YALL'iING, PRN paid To Iti,•lness In the 0, ths' ',olll't and to the as Lt:etnent at estates. ! ..1,;":711:!,...r IS7t,. I !•:4;K & 0 E icrois; ro;..NEYS-A r VW, TOWAN I),C. A. i , A. O ,V!:UTON ODNEY A. M PTV.' CR, _it. ATTi - inxEY AT-Law, TOWANDA. l'A.. • ••, 'leitor er Patent , . Vartivittar attention pal , .• :••••, In the vrpnanz.. CUllfl and to the bellle -• rdenianyes U)' 1. • 7 9. OVPIITON tt SANDERON, ATTI , ItNEY.AT-LAW W l) EttiON. J it IV_ 11. JESSUP, ti . , II!:EY A CD I'OVN'F.LLOTI-AT-LW, r.~ . . the pracl'lceof tin l'ef:::.:%1V41113. Fill 3: :end to an 1 ro-t llrm!for.l count:. I . :III 4 . 3:1 Oil It • ••rl ! i„ a .oW.tteda, apptOtfallell lIEN ItY ST 117.:',ETER,_. r C011::illi IND I,OI',NEJ.:LLOI:-.VS-LAN, - ToW NDA-. l'A L. 1111 LIS _Jo A'lrjlt NET-A T-LAW, WAN DA, PA. LIAM E. BULL, SURVEYOR: ;INE.t.tIING, : , I"I:KkYING AND imAFJING. ' Ich G. F. 113 , ... , 4 over Patch &.,Tiacy row:lawn, Pa. MEM 1( i•;I3IiFE: t-SOV 4 " A Tron NtiV TOW AN DA, PA. =EMCEE i ()liN W. MIX, fl A r: ,, :INET•AT-I.AW AND U. S. COMMISSiONEA =I 1 4 .ce—N or th P utifix '!.:q111t0 I}::E\V WILT, UZI ATV/1:N EY-AT-LAW . .1: L. Kent -3.13 y bu ruuaultrA lu lit 9 [ prlt42. '7b.; • W I t - N ' A rrm:Nr.r-Ax-Live, TO%VANDA. PA :. • ._4 , •rc:ur 111f.r.k. r.ric , tri , td, up Atalr.. I ) It. t.,., 5 1t NI.. • . „. 1y 0 0: ( 1) n1 B LT It N l,l Ph y si v X • :. ••.;r.2,•.. Cry Z el.ot oorth or M. E. Chuivh. I' ols . z... lq O1:1. , NI. • vs. , 11.1. , r I: M E I. I , . L I, Y , t, D I F. I. N T T I ST. , -- i l da, o l pi et :• a. .• . t 1-erlefl on lital4l, Sth et. Inibber, and Al n - .'.• Da !,a...;•. T.N.O extracted ikit bout : , ain. 4 1.,. it-T.:. / . ., 1 .11, • 1. ° 11i..0 lAN AND NEI: 'EON... • 1•r..,,. over Mt..daw,c , ' 'tore;4 )dt flours from It to 12 x. NI., :mil ( r,,r ! , : to 4 r. H. ' , peetZ: Att,utlon givril do 1):•-1 - ,....}:,i DPW. ASE': and Or . ' . .. i '''' . T,, I, E. 1 1.. Nit: EA I 0 L. L . l N i li, . • I k ,- I . _., • . . - . 4 T Tr , .7 TV, !; 5 North W.1.11“-s-Barre, Pa `;•-• lit a't,01..!1 to COliPl . t . .loll, In LOV`t II 2 Refer' n: 11011;1 . :‘. ; N.1:1 , , , tat i 3 int:, MAgruida. E.l PEIRIiIGU, = .Tikowoogh I:iv,. a.d Harttint, • .1 a 9ireially. L.ncnt. dat .1, I'. k IZrreire!ict: Hnhur TWAfitid.i. March 4. ldn. E' S. RUSSELL'S GENEIIAL I - NSURANCE AGENC) Ell K A 1 1 11‘1*WD WILLIAMS, 14 PR ACTIoAf, PLUMBER &GAS Firrrn l'a•-e of 6:i%1ne5...3 few oloors-north of roq-Offief r r- . c; to Fitting. Repairing Pllmpc ofol 4:1 kinds, of lir:tring prom ittl% attervir4 V. vi wk . :toting work ill tag line 10n a a• 1. F Der: 4. 1879: viitsrNATioN'AL BANK, TOW AND A. PA APIT Al. T" AID TN FUND.. r .t• ft tut o'fors ona.ual facilities for the trau tr!, n of a geau rAI banking bahluesa. N. N. if ETTS, Cashier Pre'sldont. F\" -y 110 USE, ER NI A[\ S WASkINGTON STREET. FIIIsT WALD, TOWAND•, P♦ M-x's st theirs Terms to snit the times. Likte attadled P.Y, PROPRistoR T , wiln4 . .. n I f 1 1 1 EX T MARKET!: C. M. 1M I E R, Located fu 14 .1.p1.ENSAN'S BLOCK. BRIDGE STBEET Keep un hand; FRESH AND SALT MEATS; D It lED BEEF, FiSII, POULTRY, ukuDEN VEGETABLES AND BERRIES IN THEIR SEASON, EC. ;Towle dellvercd free of charge Tcninia4s:Pa., War 111. IMI By virtue of sundry.w4ts issued nut n . t the Court of Common News lotAtradtord Count, mat to qtte tPreettt. I wit expieurto patine aale, a the Court Mouse in T!.watwa Borough, o THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2J, 1882 at t o'hock, P.M., Ilie:follovitng described propel , ty. TOWANpA.PA No. I. Ono Int. niece or parcel of land, alt. :patent Towanda Borough, bounded and as to , orts . : eglitt.lag at a eornet.so feet east o. Fourth .dreet Itothee along ttrldvatteet auont 25t r. et to Third'at.teet; throve vorll le•rly atorg Thlr rreet feet,to corner or lot formerly of John F. Means. n 4. l'euuyi aeLcr; alottk add Peony e ttekres lot to 10. 4 0 f Oreln Which= : lb* Hee north: along said' WWII - inn'''. lot 14 feel : thence wen. a 1. ., r 'MOM iii a point 50 feet Para at Fou•th ' street ; thew , • nt•rtli along PatlFog .rty , lot f ow C. K. Scot.) 75 feet to the plaee of ta.gin tiCa.g ; heln'g 1..1 MI %Weil thH 1110 W r. I large tw....t.ory fr.tst."ed dwelling house. out buildloEs. and ft tilt nod ortiamentnl Ir es there ; ••n. setzed ant tan , n Int • execution at the stilt to .f.. 1) P. liar y I , lllntiey and C M. Phi:they. '7.0. 2_ Az...1.0 —Coe other lot of land. eituato fr :zit:Ml-Id township, bounded north by intilbt 01 urtln Scoot, east by lauds of Vain and Wal'ae ?se.t', soutU.Ly androf chrlstopher Childs. and west by the public highway : contain , . la at-re-. e or lest, fowled Noose. 1 reamed barn Marti' 1, 1881 1 li•T,ed)arn and a quantity of troll* trees thereon sriz-(1 and taken inid exc,cutiotiat the suitor Jess Sumner V. J"tui 1:11(1. No. 3. A I..Skl—One othm- lot of land.. situate It iti t fl toato.htp., imun.l.-d north by lauds of CI o e. 14 by 'ant.. of Alb. rt Campbell , . 'oath by, o• ll:trrbk. and Wrlit by mutt . ..1 Ilorap- - Wllltstost'h e tato ; ciontallts 125 ntore-or. hens. abort 90 Impr tea, with two framed toms's. 2 framed Intro", I hog h (flu% I ef,ra boar oh!,bul.(llng% aud orchnrif of fruit nee to•r•on. No. 4. ALSO—Onf. oilier lot of land. situate 11. tdut..l.lp. I.ound. 0. to Ith by nth& or 11..1• W !Alston 1 ustpte, ,ast by lands a Lis. Whir., %•litli by and. of .1. G iffl , ll and piddle highway' mid , west by lands of contains Avccs. More ow bo 18114 , Vribents. •SelZed an. Alien cution a• itto sul , of A. C. Clsbre. dld .1. M. CIS.' v.. A hranil litinsteket. .Ao.S P. Ltdl-011.• otlwr lot'd laud sltda•e Ingflei.; township. hound...Nl add .de....eri bed a Conitiodo.h , g In eotiv . road runt.lne 1114111 SVrilgnt•ni to lllUg' , .lllY. In a 11 , 0bWe't c'. nrr Of . 3i r-. 11. E. Lea 113.11%. 1 3 401; th,our south 81° ea.' I : 8.9 10.18 to a p , st thehe.. nhr•h 6.10 net. to x po.t; them, 11 , 1t.b 59 .1 .4 P we 14 1-11 r d, h. - eentro or road . thediro son 11 - 20f.. 0 w..st ro to p are of b. ginning ; rout:du3 1.4 8-100 ridl ,4 land, more or less with 1 train..ll house.l f.aillEli "3.1. and a f. a .I.lllt 4.N.1. N. PECK N.' i.I A 1.5. 1 )=-..00 other iot or iptd. situate h t•ov,,,hh% looettioled anol,,de.ertheir a-. •••11..t, : 4 '01111Itt•lielila lop the litghaay rutonittg (reel, Ittg to lia Seholol tt t he ea , ' end of 1% W u . s.trtt'N ta. d; h•-tor oe ill 7..4i 0 as. 02 ro.l. toea poo..1; then. e ../eph 29 0 k_. 4-U t, a I.ont ; to SPA 0 v. e• !At S-10 to ol+ to a ; .ltienee ! , 4° tat II t.. a1p...0, It being , the teorthea.t her of its ,100 Toot ,er'• land; t along the ill,. of Hirju. et's 1::1,41 tom h 41 1 4 0 e..e.t 120 7-10 ruts to . P. : :hem, t..•ri h 2%R e. est 4SY•I4 rorbt to a putt : oort it .75° .•a•t .t 3 n•db to a 1,0,1 ,tori It 5.7. 0 .•31t IC Votts to a Ill.:it. thew, Iturth art :to r. it , to a it,rtit n••-t 15 1., • Lvov.. tioi Ili '.2° as( IS rod-; the•uc.. totrilt ttt ,i° 97 9-to rod. to lip. pace• tt. c..ntatti ....-11l acrt., won, or I. 519Z.•11 hi.ll takou Into 3,111:: F. SAVDERSOI. x.--retig,e at le malt ~f ph (71. ilk's 11-4, an. ". In A. Ile:leek an-I .larees IL Webb, a4iell.lntra of .1. • No 7. A I.Bu—De I .atlanislnterest in abaft} lane .It • 17) the Itorengli and .t.mto.hlp • 0ti.d...1,11.1 .1....er1t00 1.. f a (04 , , : it gin dug a • s.tilaital.4l.ner of i' .r. ns and A. th. bee 1.....1111 S• 0 ea.t 1.10 too , . to a Ilk o,k; !better north 0 ea-1 7r.d• to a %%WV.. at: thin e • h 8!.. 0 ...a:4 130 rods to a h - a. k oak; thence nor It 0 ea.. , a 3 r.A. for :t cort.e. ; Iben.e :ttalll b,l e... to a white' I.lue ntillop; tho l e,' t o 11 0 ':id '5 torch r to , hazel stake ; I it' ttee sent h nil r.. 1. to a I.:aelc thence noftl• 23 reds I. • Ittehor tre. t, thelle 1111th h 0 ea; In rod. toil ot tier: 11,ettee 11 oth 230. east 17 7.111 r 0.1•; t on h s•° eo•t :1 I rod'; th bee sAtttl. 28 0 e 2- 4 111 r ti• ; nee 1.011111 40 0 27 red- •. thrn 2 0 .. To•I'.; thence ..11111 3 0 30 I , tietee north 2 0 et.•i 111 toils t the:race of tt.pit 1',.211,111. 273 to re.. and CI perehe. of [and n re r te•s. at. tat 2011 acres Nip . ..vett. ,A Illt faille I houto% 3 fraud. d tia.t.• and 2 orchard. 0 , the eon. Exe , .l.ling a 1,41 ieNerving beret oth 23 here• a1..1g the 3. - tutti •41e Ito Ile reek or 111111 irdid. • op-to the brow of the .11.. to to• t.. make It of t.qtril 141,1 It at earn - •]•ot1 MAI to ...Noah. 23 “en.,111.41er which II no , * n and I ailed tit- •••brieiptar y :". ante 1. 0wn.... and enJ •yed ter the .partle. to the. deed - !llFtie , :titi .1.. e , ....mtel tit- -Nina• before the lot. Ed said deed; the ..11.1 •aelll above oleSe lb. a I' ttl'27,'l'. [novll-Th th 7. farm and land of A lon2o I.ong.4lecea4Nl: 1,011 11-etl l• made :,111.j•et to the claim tent ape n T.g. of ...;11,1 I,niq; ttn.t her to tln to`thit tle._,ll:aforr.ll.l. No. S. ..1;i1) rd her lot of .Latia; - sltuate .11 , r..t .rongh. h.oddle,l north High ,treet tl..tit 11.4 1,4 o it I Da or is. biog. ueNt Iv Ex• •hang.. street. and ea,t hy (7.lltie Stye. fl °mains L.ELshask • Hls acre. !nor, or r ranked . hon., m i d i .. ,f 11,1 , ,g the Kam,. Tot a. •••srtltitql 111 fkeeil from ado,thborito I. !111 I'yelt2 01. t In , frel t) , Kak N. , 43. pag.• 42. : No. 9, .pc „ti t ,' lot of 1.1:11.1, Ai6aitt I..miltied awl .I.,,rilt k m as 1,4.41% 'Jan.l,l97s :da•giaa adtag a; . a naa-t brio. abe 111111 on I lit! bank 1.1 .1” . v , a . C6: n . 3' la) lajtchoa la to no. n a a h 7, 0 west 16 is.relies to the reta• ••aa: of a lat. - a rack: south 41 0 West pereht., ar'daag tilt ugh the liana p.aual laa where a liosh stood i•• 3. V 111! soll!P 6,lge alt t he said pow!: perchr. 10 a p al alt 1 hr . earl end of th, : Till .47 0 ik..st down the ervek mill • , tre• 4,,(1 to the plate 14 111T111111111Z1 a MI ;l1. a 4 ai•re. ati/14•11 It-tette+ of land. [horror.' at Ithiit c laed, will. I framed !Lill sa.. I (rallied barn ' isiwyr saw hilit and Cider 1/1111 - Ilker,on. Mil ~ g ;nil e: toad the c..ii , 1i11 , .:,• and if7pitlatl4.l:• el !o. I h In a de0...11'1,01n 1 , . li. (•,,,..e and alto ti• in. 1,7... Lciiig,r,porileil in lir piforil ('initiry cleric i.. 61: Ni;. .7.1 1..ig.• 123. Th.: ahoy.• dei."..111,..11 tikri•- 7 f laud •tii , j...i.i 1 , . int• ei3llll of Mary T. L , he. thr viii"w of .1..1....ng d.Li•ra,ril. a• ti....airlow ,41,,1 1 1 . 1 .online t uri, fiam• - it frotg Martha J. Lime.l liPin i1.../iit/t Or 4, 111. third. S • ~I a .,,l taLt, loi, ..x.... :iitioa al the stilt' of Mary T. Long 'rt.. l're,ii..V. Lou g. _..... W 11.1,14 .'.IT T. Hi 11:T4 IN. S:ierlff. . . .. S Jae, fr's 0111ce Towanda, Jan. It. 19 .2.- . (X -I' I) I 'II) 11'S• N0T1 ( 11.7.-In ri , e‘tato ,tf Jos. I). Ms.oaoy.e. Ileceased. It, ov t ii.11:41,..' COT. of 1:1 - 3,1r• ril c.,111 1 y. the Ulefieroel.l'll. MI •113 , 11i. , r api.gloif.tl by the 3ht rout to make 41.-ttlholloo..f the !tn.'. rat,...: •v tbr. saie of .:dill • 'eyed. tit ri real hereliN ive , none , that he will meet ibo infer A . Mee In T.a•aoda it ,, r 4. ‘ ,, ch uu 311.51/3 Ile- 3 h of Fl.; A k y, 15;2. It II) o'clock A 4.. ar. whleti tln.e. mot !,:mie all p.•r+anal ha• 11,1: tll.•n S3lll rlll‘ll nu rt pre-eat them. or lie , orever debarred 111411 , 0111 ire I. 111111f1 .1 AM PIS . 1. Ii AL Atultt.r. . Towanda. 14. • .• A - ilmiNtsilzATo lI'S NOTICE. • t•tt..r. adratrilsiraft. a ha. lag !Irv!, grant •l o. ne Ulid.•Nigovil Up. fi for est alp of Efisbn F•af , st. late of Cio,lookti. •bio, weir c•• i, t0.t,1,y,14.vi1i that all pi•r:4lll% Ifideblea t.iaal %int , are F. , p1e , i , 11 to Mate p 'l4l alliwisfa, , having c , aitaz agallist t•alil est ti. satio• auttienticat ii to th. : , nth•lAgtw.l fur settletarut. E 1.. 1111...L1zt,-Adialotntrator. 1' wanda. Pa...tau. 5 • 1,f2. PI'LICATION IN DIVORCE Sr} n• AD% rd r. In the (•urtrt ty pie,. of Itra , lloril I otllo. 129,, PAI. You are helm y art , lttl , tl that KM , . i• or n apple , ' to the IP,t , ttrt et 0.41 Moo county for a . , llvoree from h.. tti nia . tiony. and h. said C. , ort ha at r , II11..(1 Mw, lAy, Feoronty 6th, Itte2. In the Cunt; II else a , Towanda; fon hearing the said Klia die ' premises. at uhlrit 'time unit place you may attend II you thtbk propper ter4a.,•2. Wl' I.IA M Ili iRT4 *herlll., I'I'LICATION IN DIVORCE LI -T. , Atm t s. 11) In the r.ort .t! ((((( 1".• ..f ISt alm, ,1 County. No. '6 .Pelirnary Tern,. 1-sl. You are hereby.notified that Witliam. your lest,, m,, has applied to the Court . o'7 romnit,i) Pleas of lit (Monty tor a dinmee th. hoods"( matrlowny. and the 1.31 , 1 Court, 1111" Nll.l rt ty . Pebrunt, 6th. ' as 2. In ;the corn! Hon.,: at Yo , ...attola, f..r hearing the saki I. the Wlilrll time and maee you may .10.11r1 If you I hint. proctr. % 11.1.1 A M T. 110ItToN, TOWANDA, PA I'NLICATION IN: VORCE. Bowman. In di- Court of 00,0100 PI as of Bradford Comity. No.-44. : f., ISSI. You an- hereby n 0116,11 that 1 7 .'n. 01 , n, your Inotha d. ha, applied to the C urr 01 .'.llOOO Virus or Itra - I foi 01. Comity for a dlvorm , •rmatt the 6a011...1 matt itt,t,tiy. and the sale! Com t u.. nppointed. Monday„, , Filanary 6;h. 1e62. In flu , : Lourlf ote.e at Towanda for hearlog the. Isafil N.. 80% wan, In 110 , (+rem ISPS. at wofelf fluty; and idare y. may anima 1.1 vim think proper , I:.J.uoil. W 11.1.1 it. 1101 t rOfiz'Sherlff. .8123.004 73,00 t A rpucwr A ioNN I)IVOI{CE. Ix mwvit, in iff tltttin• l'it•to,, to Mt ad2ortl 5,.. 192.Septelltiott/ f., 4,1. y.. 11 are In-reity Doti ti •O - hat Marker. It. y.,tir wtft , ltatt apill,l to the . Cototj at nl•-ommop of Ilrodita - tt Cott iv for a divwcr fri•ni the bo:.d+ - of that attd the said 'null has ippollitell .Montla), rehltoily e. 11. tee:. In the C”,eri at 'loi:rands., for ll,arltigt lie !atd Mar gatill in te.e ittentlecel., at time and pitiee you may attend If lion t Whirh r.q.er. 12.1.d1+2. 11.1.1 AM T. HORTON, Sheriff., • LIST OF LEGAL BLANKS Prltard and kept on sale at the REPORTZROIPPICIt 'at wholesale or retail. Deed. . . • Mortg•ge. Boud.. •.,. ._ . . Treasurer's Bond. Colfrctors Bond. r • • . ,•• . Leas-. - Complaint.. - - . • Commitments. • .. Warrant. --,- Constable's Return. • I . ' ' l Al tkiesof Agreement,2f rim; Bond 011. A ttstentnent. Co.stable'. Sales. _ Collector's, Glee. . Bierut ton. eutipati/p.. . . - -, Petition for License. Itood for License. Nut* 1 odonient. 11.oss J wigrunisPet Ss& C. M. MITER till COODRICII & HITCHCOCK. Publishers. E VOLUME - XLII. re4al•; Sheriff's ,Sales. GOD IS OVER Ortch wh•ti our . sun is dar'oest. . And the clouds bat g blade and low, We forget the light's still shlntne - And athwart the clouds the bow. We forget O"4's promises If we lore him as we should, • All things, even sorrow, . Work together for ear good. When our friends are taken from na, 'fly the relentless hind of death; When we listen to thelr farewells,' • Wateh'thelr feeble fluttering breath, We forietols Christ who told na, For the weary there was rest, That he'dfiniy enne before us To the mansion of the blest. That serves the ley river, • . Which wo all must cross ere long, Stand• the heavenly, golden city. i 4 Whore they slug their new. new Cong. There with Chrl‘t and holy angels, . There our loved ones shall abide t . ; We ono day shall go to meet them, ; Over on the other side. • —.Anon:: Mrs. Penny's Mistakes. 'Just on the brow of-a gently sl4 • ing hill, commanding a rich and varied • view. on one side of a road •ait into the solid hill, stood Elmbolt Church. Crowning the opposite bank was an ivy -clad. gray-stone p all, bi.- uind which two soleMn, slaimbroas vewa kept sleepy watch on their the ologieal.brothers in the churchyard ; 41141 behind the yews also solidly built of the gray stone' with its mul lioned windows, was Elmholt the .residenee of no less a personake than Mrs. Penny, who now sitiOrith A sort of blue woollen antimadass - 40 ov,r her ; lentil:al frowsy iron-gray ringlets„ deeply immersed in a OM "cal pamphlet The room is barely end somewhat incongruously fur oished. An, obi-fashioned grand piano, of which the legs and rather rich carvings bad at one time been -2ilt„oecupiii.one corner of the room; 'n another sVitais a harp, whose 'bet ter days belonged to.the years when George the Third was king; .and oth articles of furniture .bear the. same m press of faded gentility. Mixed aitii these are homelv, inicashioned Windsor, chairs; plain deal table, -cantily covered by a . -threadbare common Cloth '• and other furniture not quite too far gone to he rejected - from the kitchen of a house Where the exch. quer is very limited. Mrs.: Penny's studies were. 'inter ropted by • a loud but not unkindly voiee outside:. 'Put it down, I tell 'ee. I won't ha'e thee do With a snort, Mrs. Penny tosil down her_ politics and strode out with masculine tread. •Let the' boy alone. Penny,' The, won't have you interfere with him.' 'i'tell'ee'• said Mr. Penny,'. for 'it Nas.he, 'he shan't tliny.► . stonea at the j..nny-wrens They he Godatuoighty's Mr.. Penny was a hal. -looking old man, rather florid, with wiry gray heard and, mustache. and somewhat ' , owed in fioure. He wore. gaiters. corduroy breeches, and a drab- coat with 1) ass buttons; which looked as hough it had formed part of some isca very. The boy who was the subject of the. tbriatened altercation stood ir• res`olute,iwith the•stone ip his hand, and his eye•on the hush where the jenny-wren had disappeared. .luit in 'he nick of time a blackbhil started out, and ; that the stow! miolit, not be caned. he hurled it at the g olden bill.d.lov , r of cherries; and then ran ff laughing. 'A y. ny.' . said Mr Penny. Tang ilw Bull "at they if thee Mrs. Penny pushed her blue,anti maeas•ar a little more on one side, hitched npber dress in nauticalldsh• ion, and retired to pernse theinter upted et:itusideration, -of woman's rights She-was a lady of good birth, re in•etal le education and fairly well endowed with those 'good gifts' of which Sir Hugh Evans had 136 high an appreciation. -She had been left, an orphan Ih-fore' she was out of her - teen , ,, and .having always very strong opiniims as to 'woman's ability to d.o lnything that men could do-and do it, better, too—with a .marked par tiality for a coontry life and for inde pendence, -it wgs : not long after she became her own mistrets that she took into-her own hands - the farm on which ElmhoLt House stood, and. be aan to manage it on .strictly original Orinciples,althoirgh she Condescend-. d to dip into Virgil and Columella fur a hint sometimes. _ The .m.4/111)141 . 8 occasi'inally made merry at her expense when she corn nitted a more egrfgreous 'mistake than usted,•but She bore such jests as reached her ear with. imperturba= ble good-himor, for, without I sing any of his morbid sensitiveness, She rivalled poor' Hayden. in a sublime contempt for criticism. , There was an element of practi- eslity in her natute,. however, which led her at. times to _contemplate the . necessity of consi4ring her ways. . .Penny oceupied`the nominal 'isi. i ion of steward-bn the farm, uut. Miss Gurteen was too much of an autocrat to admit or this position being, more than normal: Hip advice she by no means felt bound to .follow, though she did -not Prollibit . it. He' had, on one occasiori', urged the= necessity of having tn:nli sheep on the faxm; and. as the.sugnestinn seemed to her rea , sonalile, she purchased a small - hut . h •autiful flock-on what she thought to he favorable terms. 'Well. Penny, what di) you think of the sheOp?? she •asked, after be had returned, rioni inspecting. them. Penny, whose f•..ce was unusually red and rigid in the lines of it.'open ed his lips tolreply;and a loud laugh. •which he haitheeti at touch• pains to Suppress, took the opportunity to e cape.. ' 'Have you lot t.,yonr senses, man,' slid Miss Gurteen angrily, 'that you behave in tint way before me?' '1 hvg fardon. miss,' he said, - re ciivering his gravity with an 4 iron that nearly choked him, 'I Couldn't it.'. • • 'l'..nny, you're .n great baby, said his mistr+•ss; what you are. And now about the sheep— , Wtr4,.lor lslesayou wise--' TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., 'THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 2, .1882. Ile. st opped suddenly. grew purple in the face, resolutely compressed mouth, turned his• bend, and hurid into an uncontrollable roar of laugh , ter. - Miss ,Gurteen looked on with nmazemptit. When the,paroxism was Over, ahe said severely; Tenny you've been taking too much cider.. ,b.I haven' had a (imp o' ziden Ain'_ —et er so lone; a .id be, sutuitituting an indefinite phrase, as it flashed up on him that be had *just refreshed himself with a cup in the kitchen. 'But they sheep—they be all tams!' Some time afterthis, Miss Qin... teen .who had been meditating much, said 'Penny, I've been thinking about those sheep.: -I shall always be mak ing mistakes.' • 'Like-enough,-miss.' said he with . all the graiity he could command 'I can only see one way to keep clear of them,' tlhe went, on. shall have to marry you.'., • Penny grinned from car to ear. 'Oh, man: - she said petulently, !don't grin like that. .It makes me sick. Mist do . you say to it?' •Well,. miss,' said he, `if you be willin' I be. And with that 'brief wooing Miss Gorteen became Mrs. Penny. The relations between the lair . wen scarcely alte , ed. She -etnains auto crat still; and he, good -easy men, was still steward. -with but little in• creased responsibility He was placid and obedient, and their life was hap-, py enough. In the course of time a soil and heir was ,born—the young. inaligu . ant whom we found casting stones at the . jenny-wrens, then abtint fourteen Years itf ate, a plump, well grown, affectionate bey..• Mrs. Penny had from his birth destined him for the church, the liv• of. Eltnholt being in her gift, and the lad, with a placidity which would have tiOn'e no (Met dit to his ftither. acquiesced-In the destiny. Not that he felt any special vocation for that. sacred office, of which he would'even (tu: young scapegrace I) with consid erable humor make fun when lie made his way into the .kitchen; and extemporized a pulpit with a couple of chairs. and 'a surilus with a table cloth; to the infinite merriment: of the servants • . The proclivity of the boy for find ing companionship in 'the • kitchen was Mrs. reivny's greatest trouble. She ad • been at infinite p .iris to make him understand LEW, he was a gentlen an. and must avoid : low corn . pany' s ch aa - "' that afforded by the servanti and his father. That •PennO , should prefer to sit in the kitehe , smoking ,his pipe . and chat- • dna ith the laborers after his (1:1 ' a VL 01A, was natural and right; 'lie be. longed to 'that class of peopl e;' btrf her sun was expected to keep state with her in the : parlor, or in a digni• fled promenade up . axpl down the..fil. belt walk. 'Gus oppns«l to thi., arrangement a passive resistance. When caught and -Marched off with Mrs. Penny'S hand in his collar, lie inade no complaint. took his book Or his pencil, listened to.his lecture, and rendered obedience so long '.as the maternal eye was on him ; but the moment he was released from Mutt stern gaze, he slipped back witli un impaired cheerfulness,. and with as much perseverance as a moth persues its own shadow on the ceiling, evi. gently regarding the parlor existence as merely, .parenthetical. 'lie will grow out of it,' said Mrs. Penny, when she cautioned .het stew ard not to encourage him in: the practice. • But he did not grow . out of it. Even after "his experiences at a gen. teed boarding school; he, would come. hack to shudder away froM theAull . decorum of the gentlefOlks' quarter of his home to the cosiness, warmth. 'freedom and , fun of the common folks. Generally, too, there grew up in his mind a painful sense of his father's polition. -It did not eAme . to him early., for from his babyhood • his father had always been anuiet, - good• humored cipher, and the' pereeptiori of strangeness in conditions rendered so familiar to us .comes and . comes .late. 'ln' him it cams surely, and while he grew- more studiously polite with his mother, he giew. more and More`tatectionate with his lather. lie loved to waik round the fields with him,•pick up from . him scraps of natural history and folk-lore, lis ten . .to. his - broad but innocent j. 4 s , his, kindly gossip of village atlairS. I • 'College will knock all that out' of him.' Said Mrs Pebny . when - she was, with something cif reticent pride, giv ing a hint of her trouble to the rec tor.; but college did nothing of the :Pt3us- passed through his.univergity career respectably, though .wiihout attaining any distinction ;. but he came back to-Elmholt with a fixed determination, which he 'w Ls quite prepared to maintain, that he . would not be a parson. ' 4 EI4 lad,' said his - lather to him once, soon after he 'eft. college. '1 .ain't fit company for the likes o' thee. You go and • talk to', your mother.' 'Ab, von old gentleman,' an swered 'Gus, taking his • arm as he did so. 'What mischief arc you thinking of that you want to be quit. of me ? I have just had a very long talk with mother. and now I. am• coming to have : . low talk with yotil' The old gentleman was inwardly, delighted. He was immensely prowl of this . tall, fine, handsome, happy eon, 'such a fine scholar and such •a• tine ' gentleman, and yet,s - o compan ionable, • ,T . • .4 • His pride, notwithstanding, the old maosaid : 'Eli, lad, tleourt pleasant to Me,aa harvest to a , hay-auck (a hedge-spar r4).; " 'but - Tdon't 'ee go for to vex your mother.' Merl! he like a - dry dock' .(water course) 'wi'outen time 3 et." 'What a seltwilled old . boy it is,' said 'Gus smiling. - 'No; lam com ing with yon, arid.witti nobody else, for i have something very particular to 89y to 'Well, lad, well. It makes bci.eht play, tome to u bitve tbee ; but thee musn't vi.x thee mother.' qbaCii.just, wlti.l. I'm afraid I 411 I -(/ REGARDLEBB OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER. ~~~ have to- do,' replied - 13 us gravely. •snd that is what I Wantedte tell you You know molter has always Intend ile.reetor of Elmkult.?' • zartin . .'Well! 1 ne v er shall be. lam not going into the Church' The oil man stopped abruptly an•l looked with awe-struck dismay in hit. .on's face as he (jamil •scissors.! fhe're wns a wholeiworld of wonder ment and horror in the esel imation 'No,' said the young man, 'I can not do it. I have nevehthought se riously about the - matter till quit:. lately, - hut, as - the- time came neat when I should have to take•orders. I was obliged to look it in the . face. and I sin sure .1 am not fitted fro such a position. I could not take ull that -work as a trade, or a mere pro fession. I, don't feel called upon to eensure those who, do ; but such a d!o.! rse would be utterly hateful to me. I Rould never respect myself. nor could I look for respect from !44.thers. I shall be very' sorry to vex mother. If it were a matter of incli. nation . only, knowing how her hears is set on it, I think—but rine never knows—l think I should have Rivet) way and sa;d 'Wiling, about my feel , ings ; -but, as a clergyman. I should be a conScioits- humbug and a hypo trite, and . 1' won't- - . be that for. any tody. I wouldn't try. to he it, ever. I or von. ql' hat you say ia . right good; c la'.' said the old man with. unwonted de eisilou,' 'lt's erubhin' (food) 10 hpal i thed . ray it. But it'll vex your moth er tnore'n anything sin I've known site. he.wild about, it. Don't t,hee tell it right out, but break •it to she bit, by bit, like.' The conversation was earnest and prolonged, but it . traveled, as th: wont of talk, very much . in a circle, and did not, go beyond what .has been indicated, though father, and son varied the form of expres sion from , tine to time. Meiin whilt Mrs. Penny had been engaged in a most interesting tete•actete.. 'An old 4ehoolfellow of hers-no* a. willos in comfortable circurnstancea, with a married son and two unmar r ied .12thuhters_Aall made a call at Elm holt Farm. and -Mrs. Penny. who ha' largely meditated much an her srm's settlement, in life, with characteristic frankness and 'directness batj pro. nosed a match - between and His. liurrowe's daughter. '.The proposal .met with a gracious' reception, lb , 'Gus was a decidedly eligible. ybunu man' The living of Elmholt was More than eomfortaf?le. and ~ M rs Penny, though not stiny,. was fru' gal, and bad' al ways lived . below - income ; so that he nuld inherit from her no inconsidera:ble propertA. :de was a. healthy. good , looking, al: most, handsome youno.ftlllow, frank and modest., high-spirited. and with out a particle ;of. ,Wice , Any mother might .be well pleased to find sude at , on-in-law.-and- Mrs. liurrowe;, whi• could alMost answer for her da.ugh• no obstacle in the way,of th , match, unless it . lay in the young man's inclinations. `As to that.,'. said Mrs. Penny, 6 w# arc quite safe .-" Augustus' ugustus' (Alie nevei eimdescende 1 to the ablireviation) ..has really seen no one - , and has no .loolish..romantic - notions • A mot... charming gin; than Marion I know he could nOt find, - and I known W have only to bring the young folk,- together, a's, you and I will manage it, to have e verything settled happily —and soon' Mrs. Penny and -Mrs. Burrow , went to Work with gusto,. and whin Farmer Penny awl 104 son 'returned from. their walk they were still at h But there WaS an obstacle • to the fulfilment of. the scheme even mor. serious than the anti-elericil . deterna 'nation of- the younir man an'l of this even : Farmer Penny knew noth tug. . - There had lately come: to the farm. asla sort of - upper-servant, a niece of the good farmer. a iiright eyed. neat• handed, and really bewitching young woman. If Mrs. Penny had made :I love•miteh with her. Steward, -sin - might have suspected ntiscWef here: Ant ,hers. had been merely matter of cOnyenienee of the . m..st prosaic kind. the possibilitY of 'Gus falling in lovu with his father's nee Alice had, never flashed upon her, ',even as a re: mote , contingen y. Nor, in truth. had it upoii- the honeSt old farm e r. though, living much in the kite*. regions, he had seen them together far more often than the autocrat had done,and haddistened to, and lanalied at. their blight wit-combas which she had never beard. And the denouncement destik ed to come upon thein all very sud denly, for 'Gus,. rightly arguing that his mother, would never gilvebet' con % gent to suet' . a Match, aft„l'l,lnit:- hi father, from whoin certainly' he anti eipAted neither- opposition ;nqr dis approval, -would unquestionably be severely , handled if. he were mach privy to the scheme. kept his, own mmnsel till he'shoidd be able to say. 'We nre one till den. h`rdo, us part, what use are reproaches ?' So just before Alice took her holi day to visit her friends Thornhurv. '(ins elected to spend fa: week or two with an tild , college fri'etyl-at Bristol ; and one morning a . rytilet little wed ding party stepped into the little od lfashioned church of St. John the `Baptist, and Augusfus Penny, of Elmholt, and Alice Covington, of 'Uhnrnhnry,. glowing with ralliant • happinesss, stepped out of it man apd wife. On his way to chureb, 'Otis had posted a long lever to his mother esplaining his invincible repugnance Co the career she had distined fitr him ; his determination to he a farm er, the rare qualities or the wife he: had chosen, and her eminent fitness to adorn that.sp ere ; his'vtarrn affection for his father and mother ; and the hope which he and Alick in dulged that it would be their hippt• ness to minister to the comfort of _both in. their declining years.' It wile a good, honest, Sensible letter, but it matte. Mrs. Penny furious: She tore her air, stamp ed,'ereatri ed. flung herself on the - floor, Went into xiolent hysterics,, and then lay .for half a day on the sofa, so hing and moaning. Utterly unreasonable it was" as every one 'must, see; not unnatural. The cherished par nose Mr five-and-twenty years had heen, plat as it seemed on the eve-or accomplishment; irrevocably dashed into ruins, and the poor )ady'acleso tation of so.d was complete. Her hoy, her hope, her onelove, passion-, ately loved under that tioeer, eecen irle, autocratic, half comic exterior, iirixa dead to her, and the cloud which lad taken him away had blotted ont ill the brisrhtness of life; Presently, like David of old, sbe arise from the Paull, and washed and anoin'ed her self, and changed her apparel, and -tuned bread to be 'set before tier, ind she did eat. -There was nothing !lOW to weep for, to toil for, to joy For any longer., When • her husband approached her sopewhat awe-struck, with home ly words of comfort; she repelled him with fierce scorn, and imperati vely forbade all.referenceito 'the sub ;pet in the houSehold. No strang r hadintermeridled with her joy ; bitterness was , all her own. She went about her household and . farni itralrs as . . usual, but more silently. virh pale face, compressed lips, and fierce fire in the clear gray eyes of heirs. ' Then, npon a day, the old gates -- , Wung hack; and she, saw the ynnng man coming up •to the 'louse with his bride whose fee , • vas rather - pile -and an:low!, -on his arm: She-went out and stood.o.) •he top step -- of the doorway to re-. eeive them. her tall form drawn to ;ts full heiffth, her any hair blown hither - and thither by the Wind, and. her face hurnina as with white heat. .'Mother,' said 'Gus, as be stretch. ..haut his Arms to her. •No mother of yours, ungrateful hny shrieked' she. 'All that is oast end hurled. You have scorned friv love; von have trampled on mi. 'wart. And now go - and take .your beggar hride, and work oht . Your own low tastes, and ditch, and delve, 4arve ! Never move shall you .en , 41,r those doors ;you are no ;child of mine!' ' '; but. , motl4,'''hn exclaim,e(l. litlt.st at her ; angry reheinence, 'heal . 'lt- is too late ; I Will . never listen tri your voice again. Ttfina no musk 'or me now .; nor will have - till I die ''en have made me otless' than np ieciunt, and I blot yOu like an evil •Ireqm from my memory.' As she spike she struck the doof nest. with such force that the blood crinkled from the bruised and wound oil hind, but without heeding it, slit went. on : `The sight of you burns and 41:nrehes.roe What-was love is in nne as is raging fire. If I could hay. :.oinefi mt• hea'it for you to give you joy; ! would have done it ; and you havemade of my love only the play •iiinc, of an idle .hour. to hecast ashlt 'or the first light fancy that crossed it And now go your own way :o with 'my—nn, 1. will not -.curst von ! but ao without my bleqtaino anti never look - upon my face again. 'Wait. a minutP. A mPlia.' sgiii thr =logy sonorous.voice of 91 , 1 Pennv vlin hall stood silent, with bowed 'l-'q►i during. this . &MC ontbnrst . Ills head was' erect now, and 'GT= .s he lookcid 'at him. could hut think he bad never seen his father so much a man before, ' • 'penny ; how dare you ?'' exclaim. his wife, almOat- breathless wit,. -imnz.ment. tuipreeedented roihim to address-ter by her Chris tian-name, ! 'We dare do; much,' .said the old man. 'a4 we nivver - thoucrht-we could ha' done till the time for it comet• know:A yon have RUIN . tut ne fora qniet, good natured fool ; moil so I am moat ways ;`but I ain't -ieh a fool as not to know that house. and this farm, rad all the rem .4 it is mile.j - Yes.-mine. every rand and every . shillin' of it You didn'l have. nn settlements when you mar ried. an' it al hecame a mine. I didic want it. and I didn' care ahnut it •ind I shouldn'.never ha' said nuthin 'trout it's•loncr as all had gone quiet. Rut I won't see the boy wronged Flie house is mine, and 's long aP it's mine he's ,weleome to it, • and• all that's in it ; hearty, yes. hearty.' It was another of Mrs Penny's little mistakes. In her Scornful re- pudiation of any interference in her atirs she hal married without con ulting any friends. and.without iak iniz any precautions to - secure to her self the control of her. .propertv find Po quiet and siihmisSiye had fie' • husband hen that no, suspiciOu tier position had flashed upon her till now; when indeed she :.realized .it in to . full force. She stood as tine 'hand rstruck, hut taking in every thing With such helpless acquiescence as that With - which . - we _regard the wonders of a Aream. The old man approached his son, shook him by the harel warmly, and kissed his niece, whose eyes, dry till now, answered his kindness with re sponsive deWs. •y,our- mother,' said he. 'is tossica (perplexed)"like with disaPpoint rnent and the vexation ofit 'Thee'd better not worry hertow. It'ud be Netter; mayhap, ypu'd go away 'no a week ;,then you come back, and 'all 'ull be right.; beet have time to come round. Go round to the kit- chen, and I'll come and talk to . you a minit.'. • '.NOw Amelia. come,' he went on, *hen he had led her into be parlor •tWe both on Us• loVes the boy, and vou'djw bitter sorry if he was - . to take you at your wor 1 and . go away. Aye, an ' he loves us too, though he . has chosen - a wife for himself, as a man should dO. And she's a. right D0)11 oil. never you doubt that, she'll m:ike him a good wife, and, he'll b a happier man and a 'better man than if you and 1 had the shapin' 0' his life, for 'un. He's all we'n got, and we mus'n let 'no go.' . We are strange c•eatures ' and our s liveand characters are full of 'con tradictions. The quiet tone of au thoriey, which any time .during . the quarter of a century she w6uld have resented -strenOusly; was now grate -ful to her, feelings, and she allowed herself to rest„ with a sense - of._ com.• fort and security, on the; prncticsl common sense. an 1 right feeling of like husband she bad ayaturay 1 1 ,.\ \ I i) 'l , it ! II underrated. 'Leave me alone, Penny. said she, lor . half an hour. My head: is ilia whirl-now, and I want to b.! .alone. :Tell Jane to bring me a cup of tpa, and come back in •:half ay. hour. Don't let the boy go till you've seen me again. . When the allotted time had expir erl, Penny went ",,bnek again, and found her looking ten years younger. hi•r hair brushed and. smoothed,. ar 0141 fashioned; but equisitely be:iuti• ful lace cap on her head, and a boa of trinkets and whini•wbams by he► 'Pennx_' she.said 'at once, 'I have been nn old friol, and blind to .mor , things than one. I don't say tirs.• if what has been done could he us done I. wouldn't undo it ; but I can' , and I will make the best of . it. -Tel' the boy he . needn't go away for s week. I am not tossicated . -now And tell him, too, that if I never g,ive - him occasion to remember- that magi , scene outside—as, ' so help mr Waven, I nevet will hope' that he will never recall it. st.r. ! hew,' he added with a burgh, emptying. the . box of trinkets on the table, haVe never wore those things since I was a girl but, Alice will loßit ga in them.' Two ye rs and a half later, the folks sat by a blazing winter fist-• :And a "chubby .boy was fondling +baggy dog on the hear brun• at their feet. - The old lady stooped down indsmoothed the flaxen ringlets of the. child. ‘Jame,' she said, do you mind my tain~ you once that if s I could undo what 'Gus had' done ? do no , 4kb it undone now.' The Wrong Ashes Tie was a jolly, looking mwill , n, will , u round corporation, 'a Bur:Tandy •inted nose and the ;teneral exterior •it a contented mind, and'as he en rered the editorial den he offered u a stood cigar, lit another. and said 'How about this local creamation theme?' • liow , . 'The fact is,' said the stranger, re flectively, 'I had a pretty tough expe rience with one of the cadaver roast ing concerns once, and - I though:' mebbe ,yoti might like to make an item .of the facts so as to warn Ma. people here in tinic.• 'Fire away.' • 1. .. _ `Well, you see; i 4 was in "Newilr leans. My wife died there, andas a creamation company was liavinii , rood deal of a booM there just t hTen. .he made .me promise to tt have er .pirit - sent up through their titre, ~ t it were. Said she thotriht it would he nice and melancholy for me to -arry her ashes around with rm• wherever I went—in s ki vase, you un 7 lerstand. . • . 'And you complied ?' • 'Why. yes. It was her last wish. you know, and besides I thought it might Fie useful in kinder preparing 'ler for i the here—but,'. never „mind hat nor. I sent the remains round o the company's office in a push.eart: lot a receipt, saw Maria touched oil. 40 to:speak. and two days after that hey returned to me a beautiful ma jolica jar full of ashes,•scenter with eoraet-me•not. and tied in with a pink ribbon. `That was pretty.' 'Yes; I was very much pleased at first, but I had to keel) the bottle out sight after awhile, though, because people were all the time opening the it under the - Impression that it con; twins preserved ginger or chow-cIuSW, or,gomething.' . `That would have been_unpleasint.' 'Unpleasant—Well, I should smile —f mean I should weep. Why, act.- ually, one day while.' - sas livincr in \ew York, I came hoine and found %. new servant girl polishing knives with the rencains—pst think. of it.' ."ferrible, sir; terrible' . 'But, what I was going, to•say, was this : About a year after my wife waS mer.tr cremated—l Arai; in _ New Orleans again . , and I lappened to meet, the superintendent Of -the refractory ,ors--I should say . 'he corpse•hurning furnace-at hinquetwand he got so full that I had tri see . him home. On the•way w. Atopped in a place.or two for a stead ier—„you know hoW it is—and the re : 4ult was that he got very commutii: ofttiVC about his company—in taet gate his whole business away.' • `Did, eh ?' 'Yes. sir; squanly owned up that ! , ‘e didn't burn the bodies at all. lie said they just • dropped 'em thro' a hole in The bottom of the furnace ; took 'em out the .back way at night, an sold 'em to the medical students.' . 'Gracious! A nd the ashes 'Mule ashes. sir; no hing,, but mule ashes ! They would just cut, up sonic old -mule carcass.' the superintendent said, 'pitch in enough t 3 make a bad smell, and then sell the ashes to the uriefstrickeit relatives at $2 5 a bottle ribly cheeky, no,w, wasn't it ?' 'And all t h is time von hail —' •Had been carrying - that old jar of mule ashes all over the country. Just , im•igine how I felt' • • •You threw it away then?' 'Well, no,'. said the widower, as be winked a tear out of his left eye ; •the. morel studied over the matter. the moreil concluded thatoble'ashes wern't so much out of. the way after all. You ace, poor Maria was an awful stubborn woman L-t-r-e stubbiirnand—yes. I kinder thotight,mule ashes would do Aighty near as well, all things considered.' And heaving the tesigued sigh of one who has succeeded in bracing up under great sorrow, the anti , creama, tionist 7 smiled softly.; lit another ci gar, and walked out.. = - It Seems Impossible that remedy niad, of such common, wimple plants as !hips, finch; Mandrake DandeliOn, etc., should malcii pi) many and such great clues se Hop Bitters do ; but.when old and young, rich and poor, pastor and doctor, lawyer and editor, all testify to having been cured by Mona, you must bellow_ and try them, yourself, and '4loubt no longer. '.Would cut his own ar(ptiutance : If a man ew aktnuch Omit hns. If as he does bbotit•liil4 twig Mm . u . ta mild never peak : to himself.— Whitehall Times. • New r'at'ing of as obi phrase : ••lien erousto a fault • " may be said of many men. At• least they are cruel ons enough to their own Cau.lo.—Loweit IMI $1.60 per. Annum In Advance. PLANTATION PROVERBS. !Slabber rest yer.erinter's Man , on yir richer ori bora Ivo d Kass de ellber frosted. songster may turn out a inocktte-bird. 'Taint de dog dat barks de loude6• &Nos makes de tougbes' flgbt.: Nor 41.. wind as rattles %slides' Allis brings de col., • e.• night. se 'Taint de toitiekillin• waistcoat klbera up de . 7 .• es' heart, Nor de lonlest' color chrome talks about de finer art. 'T tint the thousan' dolar Laruess makes de stiddy w.ek in' nag, . . Nor de fld ile darkey puts de cake meal in de bag. ;rep yo' heah de loony ewlstlaos howllu , like de deer bounce _ Put de h.rodgee , double padlock ou yo' fattes chicken r00t.% dettl.l yo' little trutibles 'limit de add ob court hue' Ltw. - - Or yo'il yo' nuicif 6 holdlti' dau kin kb ' • Ler chaw. Nebb .r eat de ruorrer's breakfas' till de day w•eu .t du‘., Ease de 'to embrance ob do feastln` makes .fastin mou;;hly blue Senator 'Cameron's Speecti. Oar senior Senator, Mr. Cameron. delivered a very excellent Speech in the United Stares Senate li . orr theXit ult., on the subject of taxation. , The following synopsis and ex :.racts from it; will eve the .reader I,ood idea'of the views,of one . of tl!e hest practical business men - of- the !State. ,The basis of . Senator .CamerOn's speech - was a resolution offered b . } that it is expedient • to reduim , the revenue of the Government h 3 , Lbolishing all existing interno! rove oue taxes except those imposed or.: high wines and:distilled spirits. „ He said that . tli public debt "way. r dueed more than` one hundred mil lions of dollars last year, and that i! the present rate of "taxation is eon ,inued. be whole debt will be pithi •itf in ten or twelve years. He.think, it iS.not wiSe.or-prud,nt to "tax tlit people so heavily to pay it off in so -hort.aperiod. He rernarks: No one will deny the wisdom of thelegislators.who inaugurated tht scsteu of reducing the debt, or - .tht. patriotism'of, , the -people who hay. endured a heavy lo'd . of taxation tt,. pay the. interest and reduce theprin •lpal of such indebtedness. Both . have been causes of wonder. to' tht world, and _have sewn the strength. , ionesty, and prudence attainable un der a republican form of goveromen in Matters where it was thought t.t . he weak. It is acknowled - that 91. course -thus pursued by .Corigre,is. arni supported by•the people, has ha. , 'everal good xesufts. The exercist .f the power of the Government an. the cheerful submission.to the -egad ing nature of the lazes by the peoplt has h•td an undoubted tendency tt„ elevate and strengthen the morn! tone of the nation, giving the peopl. more.contidence in each other, :illl 7 compelling the approval of - the world. It has reduced - the prineipal . sum .o our national indebtedness .until it is entirely? Within the_yrady4, - ontrol o' the financial ability of the people ei ',her to pay off or - pay_ the interes , there On. a lt has established - the cred it of the country, and brought it ui from a 'position where the six pel, - cent. gold bonds of the United.titate. before the war would not command part o a present premium of, : seven teen-per cent. •on a four pet 'cent. bond, and to the ready exchange called six per . cent.. bonds into , ,, nev, ones bearing three and One-half pep cent. interest. It has -- demonstratei the ability orthe . country not only to carry on a most :expensive intei nal war, but to pay otf a cost in time unknown to any other people and further, that the ability of Lb. country to-furnish men and material of war and to _meet increased Gan vial demands •is cumulative. TI.. Inirden carried by this country fron IStll - to thelpr'esent . _ day has ' much greaterlhan it Would - be if laic upon this nation and. people fron 11881 to 1:•390. • The,Senator Shows- that, taxatior in the ar ., regate is 4 ''onerons. peivle have to sustain the •Stati Governments wi h the expenses :any. outlays incident. to their legislatures . judiciaries, penitentiaries, and. tht numerous charitable institutions, ii siistain' the !.cominon -schools;' , an,' hear all the burdens .of city, - county town and borough governments.etc. etc He di gues from this that when ever a reduction is possible.,it of to made. - • Mr: CamerOn frankly admits another great reason for -advocatin t a reduction of :nternal revenue taxef, is to.prevent.any material, change be ing made in the tariff laws as Lie} now.exist. • On the Pension lase says : , , _Thii act, never shOuld be repealed and.in my judgment, it never will. o. Can be. It hns lately been held ul toCOntempt by that class of peopl. whti..tWenty years ago were . engaged in exhorting these same pensioners to go to the front .and. who new! oh jest' to 'rewarding'. them; bbt their opinion is not shared by. the peopl, at large; in fact; no more esSentiall3 just law was .ever placed upon the statute book.. Its effect is siritpl3 and solely, to prevent the. GoVerti ment from 'pleading the stature of limitation against its forme'r defend er s . It, did not increase the rate - 0 pensions in any way whatever; i hui merely Said - that a man entitled 'to pension for physical injury receivef in Government service should net h. debarred from receiving it 'because he was late in making his apPlica tion. .To the payment of 'these pen ' sions every sentiment of honesty; and gratitude should hold us firmly Com witted. • He reviecia . with much cleat'nes• and force the labor - question. with it, relation§ to a protective tariff: The great qneoion of protectim. to American lab r will be -the ques tion which dissen lions and unite the States in ' common brotherhood. 'The Demo cratic party has made its last great . fight.. It will s`ruggle hard, - and in its geath throes will. with the'ald oi a feiOr utuauooessful and dioappoinuxt NUMBER 36 •-Totedo A mertean Republicans, possibly have tempora ry local swcetraes; but death has marked it for its victim die it will, and on its' tomb will victim. inscribed, " Died because of oppoilitiori to the e lucatiou the elevation, the advaneis ment of the people." . 0n the National banking question , and the relation of the banks to the- National debt, he says : - The second great interest of the people, which will very shortly be di rectly affected by the , large - and in creasing surplus revenues of the country, is the system - of national banks, and this through the decrease of the public indebtedness'by the ap-' plication orthe annual surplus to its payment. The large annual reduc tion of the ' public debt will very shortly begin to affect the confidence of the public in' the continuation of the system. It will increase public - anxieties and excite their fears as to a substitution of any other system for this that has proven so accepta ble and so valuable to the country. • If the national banking system is to ,he worked out of existence, it will in evitably cause serious financial trou- . ble. ° Financial diMculties among a peo ple like those of thiscountry, howev er ill-based or slight, are always at tended disastrous cOnsequences, be cause in times of. prosperity the en ergies and hopefulness of the people ire stretched to the .uttnost inn the Shock of flninical trouble has the effect of an almost total par -II) ids on the business of the country. It is certainly the part of statesman -Op to avoid, such a calamity when ever it is possible. - - 1 unhesitatingly declare and -be lieve that the value of our system of national banks is so great in the ben efits the country derives therefrom_ and the dangers and losses its -con tinuance will avoid that it were bet •er to continue in existence an in debtecilie-is equal to the wants of banks which the country may from; !line -to time require until some equally conservative plan .may be of rered that will enable_us to dispense sit i thia-system. It is also important in this connec tion for _Senators' to bear:in mind that the increasing business of the country will annually require in ereased banking facilities. and con -tequently increased bonds as the ba -iis on they can • he organized ; tnd it, should not be overlooked that t possible determination by Congress •o payoff by retiring or funding the 2reenhaeks will create a great hiatus in 'the circulating medium of the •ountry, which can only be replaced by additional national banks based lion an equivalent amount of public ndebtedness. The - Effect of Sti iking Oil. A VILE. kOE OF TWO HUNDFiED. INHABI TANTS INCREASING TO FIVE THOUS AND IN SIX :%I.ONTHS—hovir _ RICIIihIRG FORGED AHEAD. - LaSt July Richburi, New York— just across the line from . Pennsylva lia—,was a village of .less thati 200 nhabilants. It was a pious neigh •aarliood: peopled by a cothinunity'of -Pet•enth Day Baptists. In July' a nan named Boyle struck a 27.0 bar .-el well Lear the village. Land went ''rum $l6 an acre t.l $3OO. There are ,low 550 oil wells_ in the neighbor- Poor], producing 10 000 barrels of oil . day. Richburg has 5,000, inhabi ants, It has .had- three murders vitlain six weeks. There_are several lotelS, an opera house,. banks (faro and national), Chinese laundries, ay . r,nios and rum- Four rail oaris have been built within ;three nonths. The Seven Day BiptiSts_ lave all sold their lands and become ich. Six oil:wells are completed !any, yielding from 15 to 25) bar els each, on the start. Every door. ,ard haS its derrick. and one man ,as taken his front porch for a boiler louse.. A short distance away a vil age of 3,C00 inhabitants, known as 3olivar; has sprung up froai a collec ion of - farms. Four railroads center - at that place. The oil production of his distribt at the present rate of in-. .Prease will be 15,000 barrels a day -0y February. No district in the his-- oty.cif the trade was. ever developed .-o - rapidly, notwithstanding ! that Prude oil is only si.) cents a barrel, and thatathe Braeford.field is alone ,rodsicing 25,0.10 barrels of oil .a day nore than there is .any'- demand for. There are now stored in the tanks-of be 'United pipe lines in the oil- re zions.ovt.Pr 25,00,000 barrels of oil, calling for 'a market. About :65,000 Irarrels - of oil are run through the 'ipe lines every day. There are 1.5. 1 .),1.1) - 0.01-0 invested in. the Brad !'aard oil field. .Not less than $5,000,- )00 have found a place for investment nP.,-this new territory since_ it was opened. AL the present very low ,vices of oil,' profluefers get 20 per Pent. returns for their money. The llnited lines take all the oil that is 'tiered to them.- If the northern, field becomes - exhausted rapidly. that Pomp-my ; will control about all the •ruale oil . there is in the:country. ayith their 13,):00 miles of pipe line hey hold the key to oil transports . ion. They now pipe oil from the el regions to Cleveland, Buffalo, and a) the seaboard. This latter line ex cad& from Olean to Rutherford, N. 1., with a double line completed to eon Jervis.- LACEYVILLE On the evening of the 16th just, John tuck from Dolittle Hill (in the edge of 4 n•agneha'ina Co .) was traveling -on L. V. H. R. in Black Walnut, this county, Ras struck by a train going north and thrown n Canal and seriously injured. (t is said be - aris under the influence of bad whihkey. On Thursday the 19th inst., two yoang men by the name ,of Jayne and . Frost tom near Mahoopany this county, hitch :d their horses together to a buggy to go ro LaTeyvillT, in crossing at ttreLaceyville *t3t-ry the team,: wazon and Frost backed if into the liver, at the same time throw ng the feriymau in the iver. :The'two men suc&eded in getting int safe' and cold,. and the horses .as drowned. suppo.led the ice rightened the horses hs it came against he ferry "bint.--1-. Within the limits of oliP town we have L.spacions b- tie ground, but fog the 4royx and 'other fixtures in the way. Hareow Fassett of Scottsville was married to Miss Lucy Smith of Laceyville last week, and still another wedding is aid - to have occur red between two young youths the Mr. residing in Skimaners 'Eddy, mai the Miss in Lacyville. -No names, but time will tell, so we will wait. A quarterly meeting at the M. E. church no S ifurday :eve and Sunday the 21st. and . 22d. CLAI7Dr. Jan. 23, 1883: No pateht, required to,!cateh the then mat,sm..A 'old and 'nett ...01i to if, ,ild you have it—the rhelimatteth. .ure wars with Bt. - -Jaccott (d,—Ohitiecip.) .le4er- Oe•da.