Ijc imc0, Mvo Bloomftclir, )cu - ' Li : j " I was in the act of inviting Rose to rido with mo, ss you came up, Mint Fuller ; I wish to soe something of this beautiful f cenery, and It would add to the enjoyment if my young friend could accompany me. I shall have an extra seat in the carriage, if you will accept of it," Mr. Emmerson hastened to add, seeing her hesitation, anxious to avort suspicion, and yet trem bling for his invitation. . . " You aro very kind to include me, but I should bo unublo to leave my scholars," Miss Fuller replied, " reluctantly, for such indulgences were rare in her monotonous life, " but I see no reason why Hose may not enjoy iho pleasure, provided you take a third person, which is one of Mrs. Riving ton's rules." ' Mr. Emmoison was silent in despair, but Rose came to tho rescue. " Maggio has been longing for a drive; may she not be indulged now?" . "Oli, please say I may go, dear Miss Fuller," Maggio pleaded in her childish way. i , "1 see no further objection, except to limit your drive betwocu the hours of two and flvo o'clock," Miss Fuller said finally. ' At the appointed tinio Mr. Emineison assisted Roso nltd her littlo friend into his carriage, and-thcy drove away Iho envy and admiration of the' school. Roso was too sensible to attempt the removal of any bag gage, but her pretty summer suit of gray poplin, while it excited no suspicion, was suitable for trawl, with the additional ad vantiigo of being ' very becoming. The poor girl was nervous and excited, although sho tried bravely to conquer her emotion. Magitic did the talking for all.' Seated by Mr. Emmersonj holding tho whip or reins,' tho child was supremely happy, her sweet voice ringing out in tho unrestrained glee of childhood. They wero at tho destina tion beforo Hose could behove half tho dis tance traversed. . '' " Mr. Emmorson, sho called hastily, but his quick eyo had detected Harry before she spoke. Rose sprang out of the carriage without assistance, and ran up tho walk. " Where is Hose going?" Maggio asked, Homowhat alarmed. "To see a friend of ours. Would you bo afraid to sit alone in the carriage for a few moments, if I fasten the horses ?" Mr. Emmorson asked of his little companion. " I shall not be afraid" sho onswored, courageously; "but please do not stay very long, or we shall lose half our ride, "she pleaded. Mr. Emmcrsoi) found his friends awajt ing his presence. He gave the fair bride away, and in a few moments, Roso was no longer alone or unprotected. After the conclusion of the ceremony, they returned to tho carriago, as it had been arranged that Mr. Emmorson was to drive them to the dopot and then return with Maggio, to moet alone the surprise which would follow tho discovery of Rose's flight. Maggie had scarcely noticed the addition to their party in hordelighttobo in motion, but when the depot was reached, and sho understood that she was to lose her friend, her grief was uncontrolled, and sho clung to Rose, begging her to stay, amid tears and caresses. Mr. Emmerson thought his hands wero full by this time; Maggie's distress quite disturbed his composure, but to his great rollef the train came at last, and Roso was bidding them good-bye from tho car win dow. " We shall be in Now York in a week, and thon you will come and lot me thank you for your kindness," Rose was saying, when a gentleman, satchel in hand, saun tered along the platform, and attracted by the voice, glanced up at the window. It was a mutual recognition, and each changed in color. Rose felt very secure In hor new position, and could not forbear giving her old enemy a thrust. " Good-bye, Mr. Gordon, that unfortu nate engagement prevented your presence at my wodding, but I must beg Mr. Em merson to make my excuses," she said, in .alow but significant tone, as the train moved away, leaving tho gontleman speech less from astonishment. " I demand to know by what right you have interfered in this affair, since I am re ferred to you for explanation ?" ho said an grily addressing Mr. Emmcrsen. " We are upon equal ground, then as I shall demand au explanation of your sing ular conduct toward your father's ward, an well as a strict.account of her proper ty," Mr. Emmorson returned cooly. " What explanation do you intend to give Mrs. Rivington of this infamous busi ness?" he asked insolently. " Should I fail to Justify my conduct in that lady's opinion, I will call upon Mr. Gordon for assistance," his companion re plied, (Irmly, and placing the little girl iu the, carriago, he turned his horses to the Seminary, Mr. Gordon drove in the same dlreatlon, evidently determined to give his account of the affair before Mr. Em morson could offer any explanation of his conduct. Mr. Emmerson therefore, checked his horses, wisely concluding it best to allow his opponent to receive the first shock of the surprise, shrewdly guessing the commotion his announcement would create. As he had expected, ho was himself an object of interest to the young ladies, who were gathered in groups around the grounds, eagerly discussing the elopo-mcnt. "Mamma Is home, I hear her talking," Maggio exclaimed, as they entered the house. "She is in tho library. Come, Mr. Emmerson, I will tell her what a nice ride we have had, and she will not blame you," she was saying, as sho led the way into tho room. " The most astonishing piece of rascali ty and impudence 1" Mr. Gordon was say ing angrily. " Oh, mamma, you must not blanio this nico gentleman 1" Maggio burst forth. ' . 1 'pf ' i i f Mr. Rivington lose to rcccivo her singu lar visitor, waiting in a cool, haughty way for him to speak, but receiving no explana tion, nho glanced up to see tho gentleman leaning heavily against a table for support, evidently struggling with some emotion. Their eyes met iu ono gaze, which revealed more than words. Striving to retain her composure, sho grasped tho child,, and would have tied from tho room, had not Mr. Emmerson detained her. ' mi you leavo mo thus, after nil theso years, Helen? Have not my suffering and sorrow attoned for the past ?" , ho asked passionately, holding her fainting form, and pressing lasses upon her cold lips, re gardless of the astonishment of spectators; t hen lifting his insensible wife in his arms, and bidding Maggio lead tho way, ho car ried her to her own room. ' Tho hours which passed in pleading and explanations, that brought these long divi ded but loving hearts together, belong not to the world. Sharon lost its beloved Preceptress, but Miss Fuller filled her place with honor. Mr. Einniersoii has grown every day sinee tho timo ho enacted Mr. Pickwick for tho benefit of his, young friends, and his wife laughingly declares she notices a growing resemblanco to that benevolent and chivalrous gentleman. Ho is happy in tho fullest senso of tho word, there is perfect confidence and sympathy between him and Helen, and iu Maggio's opinion thcro is not another such a man in the wholo world as her dear papa. Harry is as much in love with his "Rose of Sharon" as on their wedding day, and Mr. Emmerson has no reason to look for clouds in their future. The day artcr their marriage, Mr. Gordon received a letter from his dutiful son: ' i " "Mv Deaii Father: My game is nil up bore. Rose has eloped with that fellow, Waltham. I sail for Europo in the first steamer; if you aro not ready with a hun dred thousand, I adviso you to follow my example, for Waltham will bo hard oti you for the money." ' . - In which opinion Mr. Gerald Gordon was wrong, for neither Rose nor Harry could add to the old mart's Borrow when he con fessed to have lost half of her fort u no in an unlucky speculation in which his rascal ly son hud involved him: Cold Weather in Europe. ; The recent sovero cold weather in Eu rope has called forth the following facts, which appeared in tho Journal de$ Debalit : In 350 A. D., the Euxine was frozen over. In 508 the rivers of England wero frozen over for two months. In 508 the Black Sea was covered with ice for twenty days, and in 708 tho ice was eight feet thick. In 821 the Elbe, the Danube and tho Seine wore frozen during four weeks. Iu 1323 the Mediterranean was entirely frozen. In 1400 Tamerlane made an incursion into China, and lost his men, horses and camels by the excessive cold. In 1420 Paris experienced so great cold that the city was depopulated, and animals fed on corpses in the street. In 1409, in Franco and Germany, wine was frozen so hard that it was cut in blocks and sold by weight. In 1570 tho intense cold lasted throe months, and all the fruit trees of Provence and Languedoo were destroyed. In 1007 provisions and fuel became so scarce on account of cold in Paris that a small bundle of kindling brush cost forty cents. The cattlo froze in their stalls, and the Seine could bo crossed by heavy carts. The year 1700 was one of intense cold all over Europe, and mass could not bo said for many weeks in certain provinces be cause tho wine could not be kept in a fluid state. In 1735, in Chinese Tartary, the ther mometer fell ninety-seven degress below ro ro Fahrenheit. 1740 was a winter of such rigor In Russia that an Ice palace was constructed at St. Petersburg flfty-ono feet long and seventeen feet wide. Six ice cannon were mounted on the walls, and two mortars for bombs. The cannon held balls of six pounds weight were charged with powder and discharged, so that tho barrel pierced a board two inch es thick at a distance of sixty feet. The cannon did not burst, though its walls were less than ten inches in thickness. 1705 was a year of intense cold; also 1778. Since that year the cold has lever been so great in PariB until this vory year 1871, when for the first time in a century, Jack Front came again to the tune of twenty one degress below zero centigrade. tW " A wag speaking of a blind wood sawyer, says that while none ever saw him sea, thousands have seen him saw." t"?T" Scarce Politicians who don't want offices, and maidens who don't want husbands. SUNDAY, HEADING, ; A CONDENSED SEBMON. V bt Has. o. o. riKi.n. : r ' ' . . The poor you have to-dny, Close to your very doors Search out their needs without delay fllve from your hoarded stores) -Nor deem that with the setting sun ' Your Work Of charity Is dons'. ' i ' ' ' Forgive your enemies bet not your heart be set . On still remembering Injuries . i t ' Forgive and then forget i And know for once how sweet Is life ' Lifted above Ignoble rtrlftf. ' i , Then if you can be freo From lust of power and gain, From pride, self-love, and vanity, And nil their luring train,' ' '. You'll surely have Hint peace of mind So many seek In vutu to find. ' Eafy enough to do 1 ... ,, Simple ss one cnnld nskT Easy to lo as preach, my you f Try, then, the simple task ) And let me know next Siuuluy morn How many souis anew are bom, . , A New Religion fct iu England. A London paper has the following story: A great! Frenchman wild that the English bad three hundred and sixty.flvo religions and ono sauce. We havd added to tho count, and now, not to, speak of tho sauces, wo have at least three hundred and sixty-six religions, for tho " Peculiar People" could not have invented themselves in his day, or ho would havo made a special epigram in their honor. Who aro tho peculiar people.' It is difficult to say? They aro people.it appears, who believe in letting littlo chil dren dio for want of a tcaspoonful of physio. Two Peculiars appeared before tno city coroner, who was inquiring into tho death of their child, aged fourteen months. The little 'thing had caught cold, and his perverso parents tried to save him by prayers and brandy water only, instead of calling in tho help of tho doctor, because they believed that " Cursed is man that trustcth in-nian," and that they should " Trust not to au arm of flesh." Inflama tiou of the lungs set in after the prayers, and the child died. They had nothing to say in defence but that thoy belonged to the sect called " Peculiar Pooplo," which has its headquarters somewhere' in ' Essex, and when it is laid low prays to the Lord, who heals it again or not, at His pleasure. Being very ignorant, they called an elder in to speak for them, who justified their want of faith in tho llushy arm on tho ground that "all men wero afflicted to dio," and that they hud a conscience they wanted to keep clean, He was a gem, this elder, and to prove how absolutely they throw tho flesh over, ho handed in a mani festo of the visiting elders of tho sect, in which tho dear brethern visited were re quested to pay tho cider for his time and travelling expenses. They were all perfect fanatics, and there was no making any thing out of thcin; so the coroner commit ted tho precious father and mothor to take their trial for manslaughter at the Central Criminal Court. . This appeared to frighten them a little, and their friend tho elder mildly observed that in Essex, wheto deaths from neglect were common among the brethern, tho recorder had decid ed " it was not manslaughter when they sincerely believed iu the Lord." Mr. Payne, however, was not quite of tho Re corder's way of thinking; hut he took bail for the appearance of the father and moth er. ' Two wealthy Peculiars signed tho bond and were then asked for the usual fees. They refused to pay, however, and as the bond was accepted nothing could be done, " and they went their way rejoicing in the Lord." This certainly beats any achieve ments on the fleshy arm. The Pyramids. Colonel James, in a recent lecture on tho pyramids of Egypt, stated that in .the King's Chamber, inside the pyramid, some of the stones were thirty feet long. These stones, weighing some ninety tons, were not found in Egypt at all, but were brought down tho Nile, a distance of five hundred miles, and then placed in their present position, one hundred feet above tho level of the ground. ' In regard to their finish, these Syenito stones aro among tho hardest known; and yet they are so exquisitely polished, and built in to form a casing for tho King's Chamber with such superior skill, that the finest pieces of tissue paper oould not be put between tho joints, and this after a lapso of over four thousand years. Such workmanship should excito the wolidor and admiration of tho world. tW " Without doubt," said a wise Arab, " men are equal, ns the fingers of the hand. Behold t look at these fingers; their origin is common; they cannot bo parted without grave wordst but ono of them is long, the others shorter. If all were alike, I oould neither touch nor strike alike, nor grasp. Be sure it is with men as with the fingers of the hand." . 'i - ' " i , COFFEE. - ' iYy-'-; riHE coffee of commerce is the seed of JL small evergreen tree, indigenous to Southern Abyssinia and Liberia. The plant commences to boar in the fourth year, and continues bearing for about twenty years. There is ono main crop in each year, but, liko other tropical fruits of the samo species, flowers and ripe berries aro to bo found on the ttoos at all seasons.""' ' .The ripp fruit resembles tho cherry, both in sizo. and color,' but contains two seeds instead of ono. Theso seeds aro im- beded in a pulp, which at a certain stage of the ripening is eatable. , fjoffco is improv ed by allowing tho pulp to remain in tho seed nntil perfectly dry.- The demands of trade, however, willjnot penult tho. timo necessary for drying naturally; benco the berries are gathered and spread out in tho sun to dry, after which thedry sovoriug is removed by machinery. The character of the berry is greatly affected by climato and soil. Dry hilly lands aro said to produce the best qualities of coil'oo. . . Two-thirds of all tho coffco used iu tho United States is produced iu Brazil, iu con sequence of which, tho value of all coll'eos in this market is governed by tho ruling prieo for this, which is called IUo. In tho order of merit, Jamaica coO'eo is most high ly esteemed by connoisseur .' while Rio stands the lowest. Brazil is tho largest producer of coffee in tho world, affording more than ono-half tho total production. In Brazil, coffco is cither planted in a misery or directly on tho spot whero it. is' intended to grow. It sprouts in about a month; imd if planted in a nursery is ready for trans planting iu from eight to ten months. Tho transplanted scions aro at first covered with leafy bushes, to protect them from tho heat of tho sun.' Afterward, until about the fifth year of their growth, they are shaded by other productions of more rapid growth, planted between tho rows.' In this way tho planter cnli mako his soil profitable during tho flvo years required for the coffee plant to reach maturity. The soil is kept free from weeds by frequent hooiiiRR, plow ing being but littlo known in Brazil. The trees are planted ten to twelve feet apart. Ono laborer is required to each 8,000 trees between five and ten years of ogo, and to each 4,000 trees after that age. Two years after being transplanted, the troe begins to bear.. At six years it attains its full vigor, and produces anuually three pounds of coil'ee in the provence of Rio do Janeiro. After its twelfth year, the tree begins to decline, and ceases to bo profitable at from fifteen to twenty years of ago. The use of tho plow and other modos of modern cultivation has, however, it is said, in some instances, prolonged tho bearing of the treo from five to ten years, i Tho coffee tree blooms twice a year; first, tho latter part of September, and again a month later. The blosom is a white flower. A bushel of ber ries yield about ten pounds of clean coffee. The bony begins to ripen in April, when the picking season commences, lasting until about tho first of September. As the coffee tree, or rather bush, rarely attains a height exceeding ten feet being generally from six to ten tho picking is not difllcult, and each laborer can gather from three to five bushels per day of the berries equal to thirty or fifty pounds of oloan cotfeo. Great caution, with good judgement and expe rience is necessary in picking, in order to gather only the fully ripe berries, as upon this depends chiefly the quality of the coffee. After being gathered, tho berries uro spread out on terraces to dry. Theso terraces are usually built of masonry, with sufficient inclination to prevent water stand ing on the surface. Another kind is made of wood mounted on wheels, in ordor to admit of being placed under shelter in case of rain. The smaller planters, unable to defray the cost of the above apparatus, dry their berries on scaffolds made of reeds. Formerly the Rio coffees were dried on the ground. This imparted au earthy taste to tho berry and brought the coffee into bad repute. Although the cause hus long since been removed, the prejudices against Rio coffee still exists in the European country. After the berry is dried it is ready lor hulling. Formerly this was done by pestles in tho hands of laborers. Machinery has also been lately invented for hulling coffee, and also for removing tho pulp beforo it is dried. One machine hulls the coffeo by passing it betweeu one fixed and one movable cylinder. Another has two cylinders, one hollow and the other covered with copper plato armed with teeth and working within tho hollow cue. Still another, and tho most successful, lias a number steel belts passing over a rough piano supported by spiings which aro so tempered us to yield if tho pressure becomes strong enough to crush tho grams of eeffeo. After being hulled, it is eloaned, assorted, and sometimes burnished, which is gener ally done by machinery. A machine has lately been patented in this city for clean ing and burnishing cofiee, which adds one to two cents (gold) per pound to Its market value here. , After being assorted and cluancd, it is put in bags containing about 100 pounds, St. Domingo coflco comes in bags of 130 pounds. Lnguayra, 110; Marac arbo, 120; and Ceylon iu bags of 150 pounds; Manila in mats of 70 pounds: Jamalcla in barrels, bags, and other styles of packages, of 200 pounds; Java and Sing apore in bags of 130 and mats of 00 pounds. JV. T Hertantilt Journal. -JVctti Advertisements, - . , THB CAU8K AND CUItE OF C ONH UMPTIONI rpHE primary cause of Consumption Is d X rungenient or the digestive arguus. 1 bis derangement produces deUcleut nutrition an assimilation. By assimilation, I mean last process by which the nutriment of the food Is converted tuto blood, uud thence Into the solids of the body. . Persons with dlgestlou thus lui paired, baring the slightest predisposition t pulmonary disease, or if they lake cold, w ill be very liable to have (Jousumptluu of thu Lungs Iu some of Its tortus and 1 hold that If will b Impossible to cure any case of Consumption without llrst restoring a good digestion and healthy assimilullou. The very hist thing t he done is In cleanse the stomach and bu ls from all dlseused mucus and sliino, which Is clogging these organs so that the; cuuuot pec form their functions, uud then rousu up uud restore the liver to u healthy uetiou. For tht purpose the shiest Uud best reined v is Bcheiick's Muudrake Tills. ,- These Pills clean lh ttoat ach uud bowels of all tho deud uud uiurbld slime that is causing diseuse and decay in th whole system. They will clour out the liver of nil diseased bllo thut has ueeuinulaled there, and rouse it up to n uew mid b nutliy action, by which natural aud licalihj bile is ccreted. Tho stomach, bowels, uud ller uio thus cleansed by lbs use of Sjheuek's Muudruks Fills ; but there remains iu the stomach au ex cess of ucid, the oiun is torpid auj the ui pe tite poor, tn thy bowels the iscteuls uro neuk, uud requiring strength uud support. It is In a condition like this that ' beheiiek's beuweed Tonic proves to be the most valuable remedy ever discovered. Jt Is alkaline, and Its use will neutralize ull excess of seid, making th stomach sweet und truth ; it will give perma nent tone to this impoitaht organ, und create a good, hearty uppetilu, and prepare the system lor the hrisl process ul good digu.tion, uud, ul timately make good, heulthy, living blood-. Alter this preparatory treutiiient.u bat remains to cure imiHt case of tJoiiumiliuii is Uio free und pcrsuvereiug uu of liciieuk's Pulmonic Syrup. The Pulmonic byrup nourishes th system, purines thu blood, und is readily ab sorbed into the eiruulutiou, and theuvo distrib uted to the diseased lungs. There it ripens ulV morbid mutters, whether III the form ol absces ses or tubercles, and then usslsts Nature to ex pel ull the diseunud luutlur, lu the form of lrc expectoration, wliou once it ripens. It is then by the great healing und puryfyiiig properties of Bcheuk's Puliuouic Syrup, that ull ulcers and cavities arc healed up suuud, uud my pa tient is cured. The essentiul thing to be done la curing Cod suniptlou is to get up u good uppetilu uud a good digestion, so thut thu body will grow in llesb uud get strong, if a person hus diseased lungs u ent ity or abscess there rho cavity cuuuot heal, tiie matter cannot ripeu so long as the sytem is below pur. What is uecessury to cure is u new order of things it good appe tite, a good nutrition, the body to grow lu desk and get fat; thou Nuture is helped, the euvities will heal, the mutter will rlpeu uud be thrown oil lu lurgu quuntius, uud thupursou will regulu heultb uud stureugth. This is thu truo und on ly plan to cure Consumption, uud if a persos Is not entirely destroyed, or eveu if one lung Is entirely gone, If there is enough vitality lull is the other to beul up, there is hope, . . I buve seeu many persons cured with only one sound lung, live uud enjoy life tou good old age. Thl is what Behenck's Medicine will do to cure Consumption. They will clean out the stomach, swcetun uud strengthen It, get up a good digestion, uud gie Mulure the sys tem of all th discuses she needs to clear th system of all the diseuse thut is iu the lungs, whatever the form may be. It is Important thut while using Schenck's Medicines, cure should be exorcised nut to tak cold keepiu-dours iu cold und dump weather; avoid uight uir, uud take out door exorcise only iu a genial uud warm sunshine. I wish It distinctly understood ihet when I recomineud u p.ilieut to bo curel'ul iu regard to taking cold, while usiug my MudiciucB, 1 do sit for a special reason. A mull who hus but par tially recovered from the ellects of a bud cold 1 fur more liable to a rclups thun one who has been entirely cured i uud it is precisely tho sum lu regard to Consumption. Bo long us the lungs are nut perfectly beulcd, Just so long Is there imminent danger of a full returuof the disease, ileucs It is that I so Btreuuously caution pul monary patients against exposing themselves to an uttnoxphcre thut Is not gonial and pleus uut. Continued Consuinutives' lungs are a muss of sores, which thetfeust change of at mosphere will lntianie. The grand secret of my success with my Medicines couslsts iu my abil ity to subdue luunuimulion Instead of provok ing it, us many of thu faculty do. Au lulluinod lung cuuuot, with safety to the patient, be ex posed to the biting blasts of Winter or the chill ing wiuds of Spring or Autumn. It should bis carefully shielded from ull lrritullug lutluucas. The utmost caution should be observed lu this particular, us without It a cure under almost any circumstances is uu Impossibility. The person should be kept on wholesome and nutritious diet, and all the Medicines continued until the body bus restored to It th natural quantity of llesb and strength. . I was myself cured by this treatment of th worst klud of Consumption, aud bavs lived te get fat und hearty these muny years, with en lung mostly gone. I have cured tbousuud since, aud very many have been cured by (bis treatment whom 1 buve never seen. About the First of October I expect to tub possessiou of my new building, at tho North east Curncr of biith uud Arch tilreets, wlier 1 shall be pleased to give advice to all who may require It. ,. Full directions accompany all my Remedies, so thut a person In auy part of the world cub be readily cured by a strict Observance of th same. J. 11. BC'UENCK, M. D., Philadelphia. Sr-.IOUNSON, llOLLOWAT & COWKKN, tiUi Arch Street, i'liiladelpliia, Wholesale Agents. 6 m -Y. L llUVOLVEIlS! TheNewX I, Itevolver, No. 1 22 lOOCa!., No. 22-liJO Cul., short Ku, 3 iiiUOU Cal., long. No. t OH ( 1 for Pocket Hevolvers, are uiisui mused. Ihey use the ordiuary Copper Cartridge aud or beautiful lu shape uud lluish, TlioB.U.LAItl) I)i:HI!INGi:il 41V (I rat., hao no equal an a IVrringor. ull and complete stock of GUNH, KIFLH, l'ISTOLH, AMUNITION AN til'OUTMKN'S GOOlXi. ,, MANU 4CTUKE0 BY M1CI1W1N& J1UU1UUT, 8.1 Chambers and C5 Headu Streets. 8cm for Catalogues. (40 a 3 m) N1!W VOKK. JOWNBON HOUBE, (Formerly kept by Wood ru IT and Turbett,) Nut Jllootnfiild, J'trry County, J'a. AMOS ROBINSON, Proprietor. Tills well knows "and nleaosntly located lintel has twn leased for a uumfier of years by the pies cnl proprietor. and he will spare no pains In uccnm module Ins Kiieits, The rooms are comfortable, the table well rurnlHlicd with the twit lu the mar ket. Hud the bar slocked with choice liquors. A careful and aticnlive liuillcr will be Iniitlemlsnoe. A km1 livery Halite will be kept by the proprietor. AurUlWl.tt ; T A DIES AND CTHLDRKN will find J splendid assortment of shoes at the od prle store of F. Mortimer.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers