. The V. 11. Mutual Aid Society of Pennsylvania, Present the billowing plan for consideration to such persona who wish to become members : The payment ot SIX DOLLARS on application, TIVE HOLLARS nnuually for roiB tkabs, and thereafter TWO IXiLLARS annunlly during life, with pro-rata mortality assessment at the (tenth of each member, which lor the Fihst Class Is as follows: , Amen 6 I ment 15 60 28 73 41 62 M 1 70 11 tit 29 74 42 M 65 1 HO 17 62 30 75 43 W M IN IS , 03 81 77 44 W 67 2 04 19 64 32 79 45 1 00 6H 2 10 20 5 83 81 4 1 (W 69 2 2S 21 M 34 8:1 47 1 12 60 2 40 22 67 35 85 48 1 18 61 2 45 lit 68 36 84 49 1 24 62 2 60 24 69 37 87 60 1 30 63 2 55 25 70 38 88 61 1 40 , 64 2 60 28 71 39 89 62 1 60 65 2 65 27 .. 72 40 90 63 1 60 Will entltlo a memlier to a certificate of ONE THOUSAND DOLL A KS, to be paid at his death to his legal heirs or assigns, whenever such death may occur. A memlier, or his heirs, may name a successor; l)ut If notice of the death of a member to the Sec retary Is not aocompanled with the name of a suc cessor, then the Society will putln a successor and fill the vacancy, according to the Constitution of the Society . Should the member die before his four pay ments of flit dollar are made, the remaining un paid part will be deducted from the one Thoumnd MUrirs due his heirs ; his successor will then pay only two dollar annually during his lifetime, and the mortality assessments. . Male and Female from fifteen to sixty-five f ears of age, ot good moral habits, in good health, lale, and sound of mind, irrespective of creed, or race, may become members. For further Infoina tion, address I- W. CKAUMKK, . (Seo'y U. B. Mutual Aid Society.) LEBANON, PA. Agents Wanted t Address D. 8. EARLY, Harrlsburg, Pa. 6 31 8m pel The Great Cause. OP HUM A. IV MISERY I -Just Published, In a Sealed Envelope. Price. 6cts. A LECTURE ON THE NATURE, TREATMENT. AND RADICAL CURE of all Diseases caused by excess, So. Also, Nervousness, Consumption, Hp. Ilepsy, and Elts, etc., etc. l!y R01IKKT J. CL'L VERWKLL, M. D., author of the " Green Book," etc., etc. The World-renowned author, In this admirable Lecture, clearly proves from his own eximrience, that the awful consequences youthful Indiscretion may be etfectually removed without medicine, ami w ithout dangerous surgical operations, bougies. Instruments, rings, or cordials, pointing out a mode of cure nt once certain and effectual, by which every sufferer, no matter what his condition may le, may cure himself cheaply, privately, and radically. THIS LECTURE WILL PROVE A BOON TO THOUSANDS AND THOUSANDS. Sent, under seal, to any address, In plain sealed envelope, on the receipt of six cents, or two post age stamps. Also, Dr. Cnlverwell's "Marriage Guide," price 25 cents. Address the Publishers, (JHAS.J. C. KLINECO.. 6.o.lyP .) 127 Bowery, New Vot k, P. O . Box, 4,686 QA fdf TO BK CRF.niTKn TO &4fc,JlJU MUTUAL FOLIC HOLDERS. The Pennsylvania Central Insurance Company having had Dut little loss during the past year, the annual assessment on Mutual Policy-holders will not exceed 60 per cent, on the usual one year cash rates, which would be equal to a dividend of 40 jier cent., as calculated (u Stock Companies, or a deduction of 2 per cent., on the notes below the usual assessment; and as the Company has over tJOO.000 In premium notes, the whole amount cred ited to mutual policy-holders, over cash rates, will .amount to ft.OoO. Had the same policy-holders In sured In a Stock Company, at the usual rate, they would have paid M.ooO more than It has cost them In this Company. Vet some of our neighbor -agents are running about crying Fraud I Fraud I .and declare that a mutual company must fall. But they don't say how many stock companies are falling every year, or how many worthless stock companies are represented iu perry County to-day. It is a well-known fact that a Mutual Company cannot break, i JAMES H. GRIElt, 6 25tf Bec'y of Penu'a Central Insurance Co. 11 E MO VAL! Merchant Tailoring Establishment. THE subscriber respectfully Informs the public that he has removed his MERCHANT TAIL. OitINO ESTABLISHMENT from "Little Store In the Corner," to room fonnerly occupied by J. G. sbatto, Dentist, where may be found at all times, a varied assortment of Cloths, Cassimers and Testings, With a complete line of . ' Tailors Trimming, Of the best quality. Those desiring to purchase GOOD GOODS, at Reasonable prices, and have them made In the LATEST STYLE, will please glveusacalL , 8. JU. BKCK. Also, a good assortment of SHIRTS, SUSPENDERS, COLLARS, NECK-TIES, HOSIERY, &C..&C, , i ; On, hand at low price. A. E FRANCISCUS & CO., No. 513 Market Street, PHILADELPHIA, Bar opened for the FALL TRADE, the largest and best assorted Stock of , PHILADELPHIA CAEPETS, ' t, Table. Stair, and Floor Oil Cloths, , Window Shades and Paper, Carpet Chain, Cotton. Yarn, Batting, Wadding, Twines. Wicks Clocks. Looking Glasses, Fancy Baskets. Brooms, Baskets, Buckets, Brushes. Clothes Wringers, Wooden and Willow Ware, ' : MTU UNITED STATUS. Onr large Increase In business enable us to sell At low prices, and furutsh the best quality of Goods. ' ,i SOLS AO JUTS FOB TUB Celebrated American Washer, Price $3.50. ,,..' THE , MOST PERFECT AND SUCCESSFUL ! : WASUER EVER MADE. W AGENTS WANTED FOR THE AMERI CAN WASHER iu all parts of the Stale, , , - j 3 Ut ' Presidential Campaign ! 1 Cap. Cape aul Torrhea ! Bend for Illustrated Circular and Prioe List, . CUNNINGHAM & HILL, Manufacturers, NO. 204 CHUUCH STttUKT. July 46, 187fc-3Vu.l , ( . ( f , IPHILADEU'IUA. ,;.0,X-l 13 It ; WILL' give FIVE DOLLARS per barrel for Cider cured according to my iwUsut linnrov. I d process. Any permm wishing to obtain a printed copy of this proems can do so, by enclos ing 1 00 to the undersigned at " MuxmunxiWH. l llI COL'HTT, Pa." : August 27, 1872 3m ENIGMA DEP ABTMENT. W All contributions to this department must be accompanied by the correct answer. 1X7" The following are the answers to the Enigmas In Inst week's Times i ' , Biblical Cross-word Enigma" Pralso yc the Lord." Enigma No. 8" Great Salt Lake, Utah." Jim Blaine's "Wonderful Story. BY MARK TWAIN. riHIE boys used to tell mo I ought to JL get one Jim Blaino to tell me the stir ring story of , his grandfather's old ram ; but they always added that I must not mention the matter unless Jim was drunk at the time just comfortably and sociably drunk. They kept this up until my cu riosity was on the rack to hear the story. I got to haunting Blaino ; but it was no use. lie was often moderately, but never sat isfactorily drunk. I never watched a man's condition with such absorbing interest, such anxions solicitude ; I never pined so to soe a man uncompromisingly drunk be fore. At last one evening I hurried to his cabin, for I learned that this time his sit uation was such that oven the most fas tidious could find . no fault with it. lie was tranquilly, sereiibly, symmetrically drunk not a hiccup to mar his voice, not a cloud upon his brain thick enough to ob scure bis memory. As I eutered, he was sitting upon an empty powdor keg, with a clay pipe in oue hand and the other raised to command silence. His face was round, red, and very serious ; his throat was bare and his hair tumbled ; in general appear ance and costume, he was a stalwart minor of the period. On tho pino table stood a candlo, and its dim light revealed " the boys" Bitting hero and thcro on banks, candle-boxes, powder-kegs, etc. They said; "Sh! Don't speak ; he's going to com mence." I found a scat at once, and Jim begau: ". "I don't reckon them times will ever come again. There never was a more bul lier old ram than what he was. O land fa ther fetched him from Illinois, got him of a man named Yates Bill Yates may be you might have heard of him; his father was a deacon Baptist and ho was a rust ler, too ; a man had to get up ruther early to got the start of old Thankful Yates ; it was him that put the Greens up tojiuing teams with my grandfather when he moved West. Beth Green was probably the pick of ' tho flock. ' He married a Wilkerson Sarah Wilkerson good cretur she was ono of the likeliest heifers that ever was raised in old Stoddard, everybody said that knowed her. She could heft a bar'l of flour as easy as I can flirt a flapjack. And spin? Don't mention it 1 Independ ent? Humph I When Sile Hawkins came a browsing round her, sb e lot him know that for all his tin he couldn't trot in har ness alongside of her. ' You see, Sile Haw kinsno, it warn't Sile Hawkins, after all; it was a galoot by the name of Filkins I disremember his first name but he was a trump oome into pra'r meeting drunk one night, hoorayiug for Nixon becus he thought it was a primary ; and old Deacon Ferguson up and scooted him through the window, and he lit on old Hiss Jefferson's head poor old filly. She was a good soul had a glass eye, and used to lend it to Miss Wagner, that hadn't any, to receive company in. It warn't big enough," and when Miss Wagner warn't noticing, it would get twisted around in the socket, and look up, maybe, or out to one side and every which way, while t'other was look ing as straight ahead as a spy-gloss. Grown people didn't mind it, but it most always made the children cry, it was so sort of scary. t, She tried packing it iu raw cotton, but it wouldn't work, somehow; the cot ton Would got loose and stick out, and look so kind, of awful that the children' couldn't stand it no way.. ' She was always dropping it put, . and turning up her old dead-light on tho company empty, and making them uncomfortable, becuz she never could tell when it popped out, being bliud on that side, you see. So, somebody would have to hunch her, aud say, 4 Your game eye hez fetched loose, Miss Wagner, dear,' and then all them would have to sit and wait till she jammed it in again wrong side before as a general thing and green as a bird's egg, being a bashful cretur and easy sot back before company, But being the wrong side before warn't much difference any way, becuz her own eye was sky blue, and the glass oue was yallor ou the front side, so whichever way she turned it, it didn't match nohow. Old Miss Wagner was considerable on the borrow, she was. When she had a quilting or a Dorcas' siety at her house, sho gen'ally borrowed' Miss niggin's wooden leg to stump around on ; it was considerably shorter than her other pin, but much she minded that.' She said she couldn't abide crutches when sho had company, becus they were so slow. When she had company, and things had to be done, she wanted ' to get up and hump bor self. She was as bald as a judge, and so she had to borrow Miss Jacob's wig Miss Jacobs was the coffin peddler's wife- ratty old buzzard be was, that used to go roosting , around where people was sick, 'waiting for' them ; and there that old rp would sit all day in the shads, on a coflln that he Judged would fit the candidate; and if it was a slow customer and kind of un certain, he'd fetch his rations and a blan ket, and sloop in the coffin at nights, "Ho was anchored out that way in frosty weather for about threo woeks once, before old Robbln's place, waiting for him ; and after tjhat, for as much as two years, Jacobs was not on speaking terms with the old man, on account of hisdisappinting him. lie got ono of his foot froze, and lost money too, becuz old Robbins took a favorable turn and got well. The next time Bobbins got sick Jacobs tried to make up with him, and varnished up the 8am o old coffiu and fetched it along with him; but old Bobbins was too many for him ; he had him in, and 'pearcd to be powerful weak; he bought the coflln for ton dollars, and Jacobs was to pay it back and twenty-five more bosidesjif Robbins didn't like the coffin after he'd tried it. And then Robbins died, and at the funeral he burstcd o(T the lid and riz up in his shroud and told the parson to let up on the performances, becuz he could not stand such a coffin as that. You see he had beeu in a trance once before, when ho was young, and he took the chances on another,cal'clating that if ho made the trip it was money in his pocket, and if be miss ed fire he couldn't lose a cent. And by George, ho sued Jacobs for the Rhino, and got judgment, and bo set up the coflln in his back parlor and said he 'lowed to take his tinio now. It wasahvays an aggrava tion to Jacobs, tho way that miserable old thing acted. i " He moved back to Indiany pretty soon went to Wellosville Wollosville was the plane tho Ilogadoms was from. Mighty fine family. Old Maryland stock. . Old Squire Hogadom could carry around more mixed lick r, and cuss better than most any man I ever see. His second wifo was Widder Billings she that was Becky Mar tin ; her dam was Deacon Duulap's first wifo. Her oldest child, Maria, married a missionary aud died in grace etup by sav ages. They et him too, poor fellow bilcd him. It wasn't their custom, so they say, but they explained to friends of his'n that went down there to bring away his things, that they'd tried missionaries every other way and never could get any good out of 'em and bo it annoyed all his relations to find that man's life was fooled away just out of a domed exporiment, so to speak, But mind you, there ain't anything ever really lost ; everything that people can't understand and don't see the reason of docs good, if you only hold on and give it a fair shake : Providence don't Are no blank ca'tridges boys. That there missionary's substance,, boys, unboknowns to himself, actu'ly converted every last one of them heathens that took a chance at tho barbe cue. Nothing ever fetched them but that. Don't tell me It was an accident that he was biled. There ain't no such thing as an accident. " When my Uncle Lem was loaning up agin a scaffold once, sick or drunk, or suthin', an Irishman with a hod full of brinks fell on him out of the third story and broke the old man's back in two places. People say it was an accident. Much acci dent there was about that. He didn't know what he was there for, but he was there for a good object. If he hadn't been there the Irishman would have beeu killed. Nobody can ever make me believe anythiug different from that. Uncle Lem's dog was there. Why didn't the Irishman fall on the dog? ' Becuz the dog would a seen him a coming and stood from under. That's the reason the dog weren't appintcd. A dog can't be depended on to carry out a special providence. Mark my words, it was a put-up thing. Accidents don't happen, boys, Uncle Lem's dog I wish you could have seen that' dog. i He was a regular shepherd or ruther he was part bull and part shepherd splendid animal, belonged to Parson Hagar before Uncle Lem got him. Parson Hagar belonged to the Western Reserve I lagan prime family ; hi moth er was a Weston ; one of his sisters mar ried a Wheeler ; tbey settled In Morgan county, and he got nipped by the machin ery of a carpet factory and .went through In less than a quarter of a minute.' . His widder bought the piece of carpet that be had his remains wove in, and people came a hundred miles to 'tend his funeral, and they had to let one end of the coffin stick out of the window. ' , . Jim Blajne had been growing gradually drowsy and drowsier his head nodded onco, twico, three times; then dropped peacefully upon bis breast, and be fell tran quilly asleep. The tears were running down the boy's cheeks they were suffocating with suppressed laughter and had beeu from the start, though I had never noticed it. I perceived that I , was "sold." I learned then that Jim Blaine's peculiarity was, that whenever he reached a certain stato of iutoxicatiou, no human power eould keep him from setting out with im pressive unction , to tell abont a wonderful adventure be had once bad with his grand father's l amand the mention of the rani in the first sentence was as far as any man had ever beard him get concerning it. - He always wandered off interminably from one thing to another, till his whisky got the better of him, and he full asleep. What the thing was that happened to him and bis grand father's old ram is a dark mystery to this day, for nobody ever has ever yet found out. " '" Rather Cooling. Young Blifkins, son of old Blifkins the banker he of the Dolly Varden pants and and vest was recently caught in a shower, and took rofugo undor tho portico of a dwolling ou Beacon street. A very attract ive young lady a pretty maidon who sat by the open window, secning his situation, sent out a servant to him with an umbrella, Blifkins went away in ecstasy; and on the following day, having attired hiraBolf in most elaborate and stunning array of starch and jowols,he took the umbrella, which was an old one, and laid It away with his treas ures of conquest as a souvenir; and then he wont forth and purchased an affair to re place it of the most beautiful and costly kind. Thus equipped he callod upon the lndy to return her flattering loan. She ad mitted him to her presence and received the umbrella without apparently noticing the exchange; and it was not 'until she had listened with becoming gravity to bis high ly dramatio acknowledgments that the truth beamed upon her. She saw that he labored under tho enchanting impression that sho had been smitten by his appear ance. "Weally," said Blifkins, in sweet, po etlo mood, "youah tendith act touched me. Am it touchod mo deeply, it did, 'pon honaw." " Indeed, sir," replied the maiden, with charming naivette, " there was no need of this gratitude on your part. As you Btood beneath our portico you obstructed my view of a gentleman at an opposite window who was observing mo, and I bent tho um brella as the readiest means to get rid of your unwelcome presence." Blifkins went home and broke up the old umbrella, and consigned its hated frag ments to the ash barrel. A Singular Case of Detection. Tho lawyer's monologue in the play of " Lady Aldley's Secrot," which vividly de scribes the gradual closing-in of a web of circumstantial evidence, is recalled by the curious story of tho detection of the mur derer of Professor Panorma in Brooklyn. A patched tape-line was the clue nothing more. A "sneak-thief," in whose pocket tho tape was found, questioned by a shrewd police officer, reveals his connection with a New York gang of silver-thieves ; stolen property is recovered ; men are arrested on the charge of stealing it ; one of the thieves is described as the murdorer of Panorma ; the truth coafts out, little by little ; and the scoundrel who dealt the fatal blow, ar rested in a receiver's house for robbery, is held to answer the charge oi murder. Great credit is due to Captain Farry and his men, whose ingenious disguises and untiring pa tience during a search which lasted for weeks have brought the perpetrator of an infamous deed to the bar of justice. If the man O'Brien be convicted and executed and the case seems perfectly clear the Panorma murder will take its place among the records of celebrated crimes. A Fable. A doer once saw himself pictured in a clear brook. " Truly said he, " I surpass all animals in gracefulness and majesty ! How lord ly do my horns tower up I But my feet how long and ugly t" Hardly had he uttered these words when be saw a lion springing towards htm. With the greatest haste his despised feet carried him to the next forest;' but sud denly his broad antlers were caught in the overhanging thicket, ' and be could not tear himself away. ' ' - The lion overtook him and devoured him. ' Learn from this not to value things from their outward .appearance, but for their in ner worth; otherwise you will often have to repent bitterly your unjust judgment. tW A gentleman who was in the habit of interlarding bis discourse with the ex pression, "I say," having been informed by a friend that a certain individual had made some ill-natured remarks upon this peculiarity, took the opportunity 1 of ad dressing him in the following amusing style of rebuke: . w . , . .'"Isay, sir, I hear you say I say, "I say" at every word I say. Now, sir, al though I know I say " I say" at every word I say, still I say, sir, it is not for you to say I say "I say" at every word I say." ' "tyAt Valley Stream, Long Island, a man fell between two trains of cars, in at tempting to jump from one to the other. With the exception of a Blight contusion be was unharmed. ' When some of the railroad employes stopped to pick him up be waved them off, saying: "I can pick up my own corpse." ' .. t2TA railway watchman caught nap ping at bis post, and convicted of willful negligence, said to the jailor, who was about to lock him up:' " I always supposed that the safety of "b railroad depended ' on the soundness of the kteepers." " So it does," retorted the jailor; " but such sleepers are never safe unless they are bolted in." Of To interest, without exciting to In struct, without offending to please, with, out flattering to be cheerful, yet grave and humorous, t without descending into buffoonery are the prima requisites of a public instructor. ' ' . :. ' ' SUNDAY P.EADI1IQ. Only a Uralu of Kami. A man who had for years carried an old and cherished watch about him, one day called on its maker, and told him it was no longer useful, for it would not keep tima correotly, ' "Lot me examine It," said the maker; and taking a powerful glass, he looked carefully and steadily into the works, till be spied just ono little grain of sand. "I have it," he said. "loan get over your difficulty." About this moment, by some powerful but unseen power, the little grain suspect ing what was coraiug, cried out, " Let me alone 1 1 am but a small thing, and take up so little room. I cannot possibly injure the watch. Twenty or thirty of us might do harm, but I cannot, so lot me atone." The watchmaker replied, "You must come out, for you spoil my work, and all the more so, that you are so small, and but a few people can see you." Thus it is with us, whether children or elders one lie, ono feeling of pride, vanity, or disobedionce, may be such a little one that none but ourselves know of it ; yet God who sees all things, knows it, and that one sin, however little it may appear, will spoil our best efforts in bis service. One Worm did IU Ono day I was walking with some friends through Sudbrook Park, in Surrey, when Dr. Ellis drew our attention to a large syc amore tree, decayed to the core. "That fine tree," said he, "was killed by a single worm." In answer to our inquiries, we found that about two years previously tho tree was as healthy as any in the park, when a wood-worm, about tlirco inches long, was observed to bo forcing its way under tho bark of the trunk. It then caught the eye of a naturalist who was staying bore, and ho remarked, "Let the worm alone and it will kill the tree." This seemed improb able; but it was agreed that the black headed worm should not be disturbed. After a time it was discovered that the , worm had tunnelled its way a considerable distanco under the bark. The next sum mer tho leaves of the tree dropped off very early, and in the succeeding year is was a dead, rotten thing, and the bole made by the worm might be seen iu tho very heart of the onco noble trunk. . " Ah 1" said one who was present, " let us loarn a lesson from that single tree. How many who once promised fair to use fulness in the world and the Church, have been ruined by a tingle tin!" The Death of a Dishonest Man. It is ovor.' Ho was buried to-day. Ho did not live to be old, and yet his life was not a short one. He did a great deal of business and was widely known. The flags hung at half-mast, for his name hod been a good deal before the public Yet nobody respected him. no was not honest; and that was the fatal drawback which always kept bim under. ' He was shrewd enough, and smart enough, but yet he never had any solid, substantial prosper ity; and the sole reason was because he had no inborn abiding integrity. Providence so ordered things that dis honesty thwarts the most cunningly de vised schemes for making money. Were it not so, thieves would become rich, in the true sen se of the word, Thoir gains are un certain, and their lives are thriftless as well as unhappy. , Apart from all reference to a future state of existe uce, there is no better platform for this world, no bettor basis to do busi ness upon, than that of the ten command ments. ' tW Suppose we saw an army sitting down before a granite fort, and they told us that they intended to batter It down, we might ask thorn " How ?" They point to a cannon-ball. Well, but there is no power in that; it is heavy, but not more than half a hundred or, perhaps, a hundred-weight; if all the men in the army hurled it against the fort, they would make no impression. They say " No, but look at the cannon." Well, but there Is no power in that; a child may ride upon It, and a bird may perch In its mouth. It is a machine, and nothing more. " But, look at the powdor." Well, there is no power iu that; a child may spill it, a sparrow may pick it. Yet this pow erless powder aud powerless ball are put in the powerless cannon; one spark of fire enters it, and then, in the twinkling of an eye, the powder is a flash of lightning, and that cannon-ball is a thunderbolt, which smites as if It had been sent from hoaven. So it is with our Christian ma chinery of this day; we have the instru ments necessary for pulling down strong holds, aud oh, for the baptism of fire 1 Arthur. t3fIn the ruins of Pompeii there was found petrified woman, who, instead of trying to fly from the destroyed city, had spent her time In gathering up her jewels She saved neither her life nor her jewels. There are multitudes making the same mistake. Iu trying to got earth and heav en, they lose both. " Ye oannorserve God and NumuKm." Bo oue thing or the other.