• — c: , .• •:•'; _ . ;4 .7 rill . -,., . • • • 2. - '•• . • • - . . . ffr' • • ' , , ! , • , ; • • 4 <:. y. jt •51 , , rt _ - 7 • 1;!.: -4144 aK t, :ft, • t , r • • • • • j4‘. 4." • !oNS :44 7 . ' • • 12-r. 1 :4i ''C4ll2:f4tl' • 4.• ' •:• •?,; • - A Z‘ 31.- • •;f g .tF , . „1 •4 • • " . • rte: T ( ' L . • . . • • . t A. J. GE EtRITSON, Proprietor.} ORIGI. (AL. 7J/CXX.aMiI/MIVITTiIir. Lydia Cbeever's heart did incline When she had lived years eighty-nine, To say that Satan will be bound In chains till a thousand years roll round The Bible saith, " The• old Serpent will Be bound in fetters, and kept still A thousand years ;" then is come The time when he is loosed to run. He has not yet been bound at all, Since the Creation, and the Fall Of Adam, from his state of peace Into a gulf of wretchedness. But he has had full liberty TO tempt the" humap faintly ; And has deceived the nations so, That all are sunk in sin and woe. We read 41-God's own Book of some Who will in ages, yet to come, Build houses and their vineyards plant, And eat the fruit—which others can't. Their labors shall not be in vain ; But reap the fruit of all their pain ; These people—they shall long enjoy The things that did their hands employ. They are the blessed of the Lord, Who will enjoy this rich reward. But such a state has not been found, Nor will it come till Satan's bound. And when the thousand years shall end, Satan will from his pit ascend, And gather Gog, and Magog; for There then will be a dreadful war: Upon the earth they are to go, And compass camp, and city, too ; Then God will send Gre, and destroy The army Satan did employ. 'Tis in this world these things shall be, (Not in a ion!? eternity.) It is then more than a thousand years Before this earth shall disappear. SCANDAL. 'Now. let It work. Mischief thou art afoot. Tate what courNo thou wilt." The substance orlhe following is no fib: t ion. In a neighboring village, whose in habitants/like the_good.people of Athens, were tnuCh given to " either tell or hear some newLthing," lived Squire P., a face tious, good natured sort of a body, whose jokes are even yet a matter Of village re cord, and have been re-told through vari ous editions, rt.... 'Luc Uuttr . decimo. Aunt Lizzy was Deacon Snipe's wife's sister—a maiden lady of about fifty—she welit, to all the meetings—kept a regular account of every birth, ath and mar riatm, with their dates—doctored all the babies, and knew every yard in the nei!,h borhood—showed all the young married women bow to make soap, and when they had bad luck, made every child in the house sit cross-legged until the luck changed. In tadt, she was a kind of vil lage factotumr-s`rnt her time in going from house to houSe, grinding out a grist scandal to each, as occasion required, hut always concluded wilh "the way of the transgressor is hard ;" " - poor Mrs. A. or B. (as the case was) I pity her from the bottom of my heart," or some such very soothing reflection. Aunt Lizzy was always very fond of asking strangers and others, without re gard to time or plade," the state of their minds ; how they enjoyed their minds," the. These questions were generally fid. lowed by a string of scandal, which was calculated to destroy the peace and happi ness of some of her best neighbors and friends; but she, like other narrators of this kind, considered such ib intellectual murder as either establishing in her own way a fair reputation, or as the only mode of entertaining the vidage, and thereby rendering her society agreeable. One warm summer's afternoon, as the Squire was sitting • near his office" door, smoking his pipe, Aunt Lizzy was pais ing.hy with great, speed, ruminating on the news of the day, when the Squire bro't her suddenly to, as the sailors say, by "what's your rry, Aunt Lizzy? walk in." , •-, • The old lady, Who neVer wanted a sec ond invitation, , went inw the office and the : following dialogue coinmenced: as Well, Squire P., .1 haVe been thinking this forenoon what a useful nfan you might lie . ; if yea'a on ly lia.ieofF Your light conversation, as the good book says, and become a -Seriott'S twin, you might be an ornament to both church andstate' as our Mitnitter says." , " Why„ as to that, Aunt Lizzy, a cheer ful--:countenance I consider as the best in dex of a grateful, heart, and you: know what I,he Bible says - on that subject— When ye fast be not as the hypocrites of a sad tountehaude; but "annoint thy head'and face; (Aunt; Lizzy be taati) feel for her pdeket'handerclilet; fir she Wag 'a taker.of *,sttuff,) that ; thou ,ap pear not unto men to fast?" 'what 1 there Squ-- irez hat's just 'what 1 told you--see how you bavetbe seripter at your tongue's end; what, a nieftd man you niighu he in par. - thureb,-ltiou'cl poly be a- doer as well as -a bearer of the wora."; "Ae to that, AMIE Lissy, I don't Bee' that your 'professors' as you call them, are a Whit.better than lam in private. I respect a sincere profession as much as any man ; but I know enough of one of your church, whom you think a great deal of, to know that she is no better than she should her At thette inuendoes Annt Lizzy's little eyes began in twinkle; she sat down be side the Squirk, in order to speak in a low er tone--spread her handkerchiefover her lap, and began to tap the cover of her snuff box in true style, and all things be ing in readiness for a regular siege of "scandal= magnatum," she commenced fire— " Not, Squire, I want to know what you mean by one of our church ? I know who you mean, the trollope ; I didn't like* so many curls about her head when she told her experience." The squire finding curiosity was putting his boots on, had no occasion to ndd spurs to the he'els, for the old lady had one in her head lhat was worth two of them.— Accordingly he had no peace until he con sented to explain what he meant by the expresSion " in private"—this was a dear word with Aunt Lizzy. "Now, Aunt Lizzy, will you take a Bi ble oath that you will never communicate what I am about to tell you to a living being, and that you will keep it while you live as a most inviolable secret ?" " Yes, Squire, I declare I won't never tell nobody nothing about as I breathe the breath of life; and Pit take a Bible oath on it ; there, sari in as I live, Squire, before you or any other magister in the country." "Well, then, ou know when I -went up to Boston a year ago." "Yes, yes, Squire, and I know who went with you too—Susey B. and Dolly T. and her sister Prudence." "Never mind who vi''ent, with me, aunt Lizzy ; there was a whole .la`2'ist passen gers—but, but"— \ "None of your buts, Squire—out with it—if folks will act so—a trollop" "But, aunt Lizzy, Val afraid you'll bring me into a serape"— " told you ,over and over again, that nobody never shall know nothing about it, and your wile khows I ain't lea ky"— "My wife! I wouldn't have her know what. I was going to say for the worid— wltS--, aunt lozzy, if she should happen to knUW it"— '• Well, don't be'afeard, Squire, once fur all I°ll take my oath that no living critinr shun . , never so long as I live, know a lisp on't." Viro)l, Our+, -le you must , know it, I slept with oti. of tlte.likafl church members nearly hat ifie AV a y nijr" Aunt Lizzy drew in a long breath, shut up her snuff box and put it in her pocket, muttering to herself— " The likeliest of our church members ! I thought it was-Susey 8., likeliest—this comes of being flatterid a trollope.— Well, one thing I know, he way of the transgressor is hard ;' but I hope you'll never tell nobody on't, Squire; tor sartin as the world, if rich a thing should be known, our church would be scattered .abroad like sheep without a shepherd." lu a few moments aunt Lizzy took her departtire, giving the Squire another cau tion and a sly wink, as she said good by ; let me alone for a secret. It was not many days before Squire P. received a polite note from Parson G. re questing him to attend a meeting oof the church, and many of the parish, at the South Conference room, in order to set tle some difficulties with one of the church members, who, in order to clear up her character, requested Squire P. to be pre sent.' The parson, who was a very worthy man, knew the frailty of some of the weak sisters, as aunt Lizzy called them, and as be was N particular friend of Squire P.'s requested him in his note to say nothing of it to his wife: But the Squire took the hint, and telling his wife that there wai a Parish meeting,Tequested her to be ready by 2 O'clock, and be would call for her. Accordingly the,bour of meeting came, the whole villag - „e flocked to the room, which could not e ;tall' of them. All eyes were : alterti4ely on the Squire and Susey B. IMrs. P. stared and Susey look ed. as though she . had been crying a fort night. The Parson, with s'fiened tone, and in as delicate a mannerls possible, stated the 'story about Susey. W, which he observed was in everybody's mouth, and which he did not; himself believe a word of—and Squire P. being called on the stand as a witness; after painting in lively colors the evils of slander, with which their village bad been infected, :Ind particularly the church, called on aunt Lizzy in presence of the meeting; and before the church, to come out arid make acknowledgment for violating .a Bible Oath! Annt Lizzy's apology was that she told pl:46en Snipe's wits on't—and she took an oaiti that she wouldn't tell nobody else Deacon; 'Snipe's wife had, it appears, sworn- Rogirs Toothaeher's sister never to tell nobody on't—and so it Went thro' the whole church; - and thence throughthe • The Spare then - adknowledged befOre the whole meeting; that,..he bad, as be told aent I#474:#frlitith:,trtilitttehmemiier , wair 'BOOM, tad that .110 MONTROSE, PA., TVESDAY, NOV. 12, 1867. believed her to be one of the likeliest of their• members, inasmuch as she never would hear or retail slander. 411 eyes were now alternately on Susey B. and Squire P.'s wife. Aunt Lizzy en joyed a sort of diabolical triump, which the Squire no sooner perceived than he finished his sentence byNieclaring that the church member to whom be alluded was his nun lawful wife P' Aunt Lizzy drew in her head under a huge bonnet, as a turtle does under his shell, and marched away into one corner of the room like a dog that has baen kill ing sheep. The Squire, as usual, burst out into a fit of laughter, from which his wife, Susey B. and even the Parson, could not refrain from joining. Parson G. afterwards ae knowledged that Squire P. had given a I death blow to scandal in the s village, which all his preaching ,could not have dune.. Mrs. Lincoln Again. The N. Y. correspondent of the Boston Post tells the iblinwing, : "When Lord Lyon; represented Eng- . land at the Court of the Republic, his wife had kwaiting maid who took the fancy of a certain lady in the White House. By the promise of preferment and increased wages, this maid was in duced to transfer her services from Lady Lyons to another lady whose name had the same initial. She thought, poor thing, that she would have nothing to do but exhibit herself about the White House; but this delusion was very speedily dis pelled ;, for it was only a few days when she was set to making drawers out of the linen sheets of the establishMent. This wounded her feelings so much that she soon "gave notice" to her em'ployer, anti when she spoke of her sorrows to her friends, she said that the extraordinary length of the drawers she was employed on left no doubt in her mind as to the person who was to have the comfort of wearing them. - "'Mrs. Clarke' made several trips to New-York in the war times, and made some extensive purchases each time she came. On one occasion the leading pro prietor of a lading jewelry and furnishing establishment on Broadway, received (so -- the story goes) an order for a beantifel chandelier for the White House. The price of the chandelier was *500; but somebody (as I was not present at the time, I wilt not he positive about names) suggested that the bill should be made out for $1 000, and that the difference should be made up in jewelry, but the I gentleman to whom the proposition was TPRficlblesbAcq.cciilled t.Q.entennittit. to Washington. " - On another occasion, a Broadway dealer, well known throughout the coun try, was favored with an order for some sup,t fine sets of porc.lain and china ware for the national establishment. The val ue of the sets was *B'lo, but other pur chases made at the same time brought the bill up to *2 200. • The storekeeper was requested to make the porcelain and china ivare cover the whole amount of the bill, and to oblige his customer, he did so. The bill went to the Secretary of the Interior, who said to himself:— 'Twenty-two hundred dollars is a very Ihigh price for those sets ; I must look in to it.' He did look into it by sending an agent to a large furnishing house in Phil adelphia, where the same kind of goods were sold, and the agent went back, to Washington with the l information that the Philadelphia price of the article was 8800. The Secretary of the Interior then wrote to the Broadway dealer to know how he come tea charge *2 200 for goods that were sold for $BOO in Philadelphia, and the merchant wrote back that he eharged only *BOO for them, and that the extra 81 400 covered the purchases which had not been specified." ar A Paris correspondent enlivens his -letter with the following anecdote: "I heard an amusing anecdote the oth er day, illustrative of French incompe tence to master any foreign language. A yountt married lady, wedded to a German or a Dutchman, was making purchases in the Chausee d'Am in. At Congth she de sired the things purchased might be sent to her address. " And your name, ma'am?" " Really, sir, I am not acquainted with My name ; I was the PrinceskTrtUnouilie, and I have married the Baton—Tenter— Tenter—if you will call my,,,servant, who is at the door, I think he knows." far'Young man, pay attention. Don't.' be a loafer, don't keep loafer's company; don't hang about loafing places.' Better work than sit around day atter day, or stand about corners with your hands in yoUr pockets. Better for your ,health— . better for your prospects. Bustha 'about, if you mean to have anything tolmstle about fur. Many a poor physician has ob 'tained a real patient by riding after an imaginary one. ~A. .q uire of blank , paper, Lied with red,tape,. - carried . wider .a law ! yer's arm, -may procure hitn ; h is first case, and :wake his fortune. -Such is the world lbat_ bath .118 iven.. Quit dreaming and notnpAnningAlmot• and. Eniod your The Fellow that Looks Like ffie. In sad despair I wonder, My, heart, is filled with woe, When on my grief I ponder, What to do, I do not know; For cruel fate has on me frowned, And the trouble seems.to be, There's another fellow in this 'era town That's just the image of me. CHORUS- Oh wouldn't I like to catch him, Wherever he may be, 0, wouldn't I give him partic'lar fits, That fellow that docks like me. With a lady fair I started .To the Central Park to go, Bat was stopped in the street by a man Who said, pay this bill that you owe. In vain I said, I know you not, He wouldn't let me free, Till a crowd came round, I paid the bill For the fellow that.looks like me. The other day while walking, Through a harrow street up town, I was seized by a man in a rage, Who said,l've caught'you,Mr.Brown, Yon know my daughter you have wronged, Though this gal I never did see. He beat me till I was black and blue For the fellow that looks like me. One evening I sat sparking A girl as dear as life, When a lady who had just dropped in, Says, Brown, how is your wife? In vain I said, I'm a single man, Though married I wish to be; They called me a swindler and kicked me out For the fellow that looks like we. Unto a ball one night I went, And was just enjoying the sport, When a policeman grabbed, me by the arm, Saying, you're wanted down at Court. Youkve escaped us twice, but this time I'll take care you :lan% get free; So 1 was arrested, dragged to jail, Fur the fellow that looks like me. I was tried next day, found guilty too, Arid about to be taken down, When another policeman then bro't in The right criminal—Mr. Brown. They set me free, and locked up him, Oh ! he was a sight to see— The ugliest wretch that ever I saw, Was the fellow that looked like me. vain 'gentleman of the Milesian persuasion, wbo has achieved some little I , newspaper notoriety in this country, and ! the initials of whose last name, if put txt gether, would spell Murphy, for some reason or other and much to the disgust of his brother Irishmen, changed. his time hotiOred patronymic to the more highfa lutin cognomen of St. Clair. Every one knows how it hurts an Irishman's feelings to see a hxother Irishman "go back on the oulil sod," and it may be sure he got many a sharp rap over the knuckles, as the saying is, for the change of name.— Some time during the war our hero was stopping at the 31— House, as was al so a dashing young Irish officer of our army. They chanced to , be vis - -a-vis at ta hie, and Major J—, who always goes for a joke, whether at his own expense or at some one else's, thought the opportn nity was too good to be lost, so he sings out to the waiter : 'Tat rick !" Pat came. "Bring me a St. Clair," said the Major, in his matter of-filet way. "A which, stir?" says Pat. "A St. Clair, I said ; don't you under stand the American dialect ?" Pat, sorely bothered, scratched his head and replied : A "Shure, Ameriky is a quare country, and I niver heard shim things asked for before, stir, at all." _ "Well," quotb our joker, with the air of one about to impart useful knowledge, "it is a potato I want ; we used to call them 'Murphies' at, home, but I believe the polite name for them in this country is St. Clair." The Major hit hard that, time at least, for the owner of the "polite" name left the table, amid the unrestrained roars of the company, who understood and fully appreciated the "joke," and I,believe this was his last appearance on that stage. VEIIY Dar JOKE.—In Easton the oth er evening, just as a performance in the public hall was about to end, two wags put themselves in front:, of the . Aoor-Way with . an utnbrella, and Waited ` for the out coming crowd. It was: not raining, but when the first persons of thC audience reached the door and saw the warning umbrella, scores of hands, Were thrust out, wits. Were buttoned closely, and dresses taken Op,'While quite aalturiber remained in'th . e hall, reftunrig;t6'.Come' out on ac count of the rain. The "Salt" was corn . lete. —Mr. Greeley offersconioltiop to the Maryland,l4,, bi telliOstbern that now : _ 44 aye .to 99inpate bitter tickets thim $l. th ey litia a 0490 - 0 , el . ecting thezii.' In one of the battles during the latter part of the war, a soldier in one of the Ohio regiments was taken prisoner. His comrades, supposing him killed, so report ed it to the family he had left behind him, consisting of a wife and one child. The woman remained single a year or two, living from hand to mouth, but finally went:to Toledo, where she accepted , a sit uation as cook in a restaurant owned by a mulatto. After a while they were mar ried. The mulatto sold out his establish ment at Toledo, wandered about from place to place, and finally brought up in this city, and procured a tenement in the upper part of town. After running the gauntlet of several of the Southern pris ons, the soldier was finally exchanged, and at the end of eighteen months after his reported death went back to his old home to find that his wife and child had disappeared, bvt where she bad gone 'no one could tell him. He at last came to Lafayette and accepted a situation in a cooper shop, he being a cooper by trade. One day about ,two weeks ago .a little boy came to the shop after shavings, and the soldier at once recognized him as his own. He asked the little one what his name was, if his mother was living'and if she was married. .Tte child gave his name—the'same as his own—and said his mother was married to a black man. He told him to come back the next day and he would have some nice shavings and blocks ready for him.. The next day the boy returned, and at the soldier's re quest, conducted him to where his moth er lived. The mulatto was not at home. Upon seeing her soldier husband, the woman, as a matter of course, fainted af ter the most approved fashion and went into hysterics. She soon recovered, how ever, and after a few moments conversa tion an understanding was arrived at be tween them. Her last husband 'had but two hundred dollars in money—what was left of the proceeds of the gale of his es tablishment in Toledo—which she pro ceeded to secure, together with such lit tle articles as she needed for her own comfort and that of her child, and the two, with their boy, left. the house and the city together. The mulatto also left the city thi next day and has not been seen since.—Lafayette (Ind.) Journal. cca RomanCc in Nixed Circles. Joking in School. Mr. Moody of the Winthrop Gazette, who has had some pedagcgical experi ence, tells the following good joke of himself: We once had a pupil who would not tJi'lltG4tity .. d. • busily engagod with his slate. Accident ally passing his desk, we discovered on his slate a picture of somebody. We cared nothing for the picture, but wishing him to know we had seen it, said: "George!" • He looked up and bawled out : "What ?" "Were you looking in the glass when you drew that ?" "No," said he, "I was looking at you." It is dangerous joking with clowns or fools. Once we set one of the latter class to work in our garden, and suspecting he would "nurse the poe handle" as soon as we were out of sight, we stole upon him I unawares after half an hour. He stood Fhb his right band poised over a large mosquito that was drawing the foolish blood from hie left arm. Stepping up be hind him we gave him a sharp slap on shoulder, and said briskly : "Work away 1 Mosquitoes never bite a fool." The surprise hastened the fatal catast rophe to poor skeeter ; as the fool raised the trap to see the result, one eye looking at the bloody blotch on his arm, and the other askew at us, he said, with very leisure emphasis : "Ilan% you glad orn't ?" Receipt for Fits. Though no doctor, I have by me some excellent prescriptions, and shall charge you nothing for them ; you cannot grum ble at the price. We are most of us sub ject to fits ; I am visited with them my self, and I dare say you are also. Now then, for the prescriptions: For a fit of passion, walk in the open air; you may speak to the wind without hurting any one, or , proclaim yourself to b&a saqpleton. For efit (if idleness, count the ticking; of a clock. Do this for one hour, and you will be glad to pull - off your coat the next time and work like a horse. For a fit of extravagance or folly go to i the workhouse, or speak to the ragged and wretched inmates of a jail, and you will be convinced— "Who maketh his bed, of briar and thorn, Most be content to lie forlorn." For a fit of ambition, go into a church yard 'and read the, grave-stones. They will tell you the ee ambition. The group Will scion 'be your eharnher.bed; tbe .earth.yony pillow, corruption yew; Wier, Ontithe worm your mother and sister.. For . O 6t of repining, look abOut - for the *dt,and,blind,,and visit<.tbp : bed , ridden 4d - afflioted an 4 deranged, Alla Ili map you tudiainedOroomplaiiiiirsofixtur lightest ittaititidati; I V 0110 Alt. XXIV, „Nulop:bi-:464s ,Elias Howe, The death of Elias Howe, Jr., ther'; in ventor of sewing machines, is announci_d as having occurred in Brooklyn, N. :K., a few days ago. The deceased has left behind him aft invention which will , live forever a monument to his genius, perse verance, and industry. He was born in Spencer, Mass., in 1819, of poor parents. He received a , scanty education; and de veloping a taste for machinery, learned. the trade of machinst. He devoted his attention early to the hivention of a -sew ing machine, receiving but little encour agement, as the idea of supplanting stitch. lug with machinery was almost universal ly scouted, being , classed with perpetual motion vagaries. However, in 1848, his genius triumphed and he received a pat ent on his pet machine. After years spent in litigation, growing out of infringements on his patent, he finally succeeded in es tablishing his rights, and found himself the sole possessor of au invention which not only benefitted thousands of the hu man family, but likewise brought fabulous wealth to his depleted treasury. During the war he enlisted as a private in a Matt sachusetts regiment,,and served his coun try with credit and distinction. --The soldier never had a better friend, nor the army a better private ' soldier than the millionare volunteer. A NEUr—YOIIICER.—A . little girl who had been visiting in the family of a neigh bor, hearing them speak of her father be ing a widower, on her return home a - dressed him thus: "Pa, Are you a widower V" "Yes, my child. Don't you know your mother's dead?" "Why, yes, I knew mother was dead'; but, you always lord ma r you was a New- Yorker." Baron Platt once, when visiting a penal institutioo x inspected the tread-mid with the rest, and, being practically dis posed, the learned judge trusted himself on the treadmill, desiring the warder to set it in motion. The machine was ac cordingly adjusted, and his lordship be gat' to lift his feet. In a few 'minutes, however, he had had quite enough of it, and called to be released ; but this was not so easy. "Please, my lord," aid the man, "you can't get off. It's set for twenty minutes ; that's the shortest time Usti: can make it go." So the Judge was in dnran' ce until hi's "term" expired. CHASE _AND TUE PEESrDENCT. A Fr • , - •• . 1 . soon be inaugurated by the friends of Chief Justice Chase to bring him promi• neatly before the country as a Presidential candidate. Leading Northern politicidns have been in consultation with him for several days past,vand it is intimated that one of the prominent Republican papers of New York city will soon hoist his standard and squarely advocate his claims against all other candidates. An expert df the Treasury Department, positively asserts that the alleged coun terfeit bonds hre printed from the same plate as the genuine, and the impression was obtained in the Department by the same means as was the hundred dollars interest policy plate, some months ago. The Counterfeit 33onds. —A most extraordinary matrimonial arrangement has lately been consum mated in Chicago. The three bride grooms are brotherS, and the happy brides are sisters, and it was literally the marilage of two entire families. It •was an eConeinioal arrangement, thus wooing and marrying at wholesale—a great saving in lights, fuel and the expenses of the wedding festivities was effected. —A Radical spread eagle orator, who recently addressed a meeting in New York State, wanted wings to fly to every village and hamlet in this broad lat,d, there to tell the story of Andrtiw John son's perfidy to die Republican party. Ho wilted, however, rathersuddenly when a naughty boy in the audience sang oat : " Dry no, you old fool ; you'd be shot for a goose before you flew a mile." - _ —" What object do you see ?" asked a surgeon of a patient who had recentlY 'un dergone an operation to restore •his eye sight. The young an hesitated few moments, and then replied: "It, appears like a, jackass, doctor, but I rather think it's your shadow." —TI/ 13 e New YOrk Cpmvercia . l ildvertikr says ' • e result did not tarn half so much on th question whether colored men should vote in Ohio, as'whether we wonld,' by military law, convert the Carolitap, Georgia,, Lonsiana,.Alabaniy, Mississippi. etc., int St.DornAngosr • —A lawyer in Miltord; • iihoiti Brief; received a • letter a few days •'tince, evidently.directed ib an:honest Hibertdap bend, to ‘, ! Scprire Brief; Lief, and Attorney Milford; knee:: —The Atatemint that !Auld 11 . 10 h2su_ ii n4„b? " iltd . . trace with frOviotasis