ttpmiiQ Bmorrot. HARVEY SICKLER, Publisher. VOL VII. fDpmiug pfinflcrat, A Democratic weekly ) paper, devoted to Poll yJfW\ art tics News, the Arts t. B nd Sciences Ac. Pub- 7KB day, at Tunkhannock Wyoming County,Pa Ny wt * )3 tin W —-y BY HARVEY SICKLER. Terms —l copy 1 year, (in advance) $'2,00 ;if dot paid within six months, $2.50 will be charged NO paper will be DISCONTINUED, unt'.l all ar ranges are paid; unless at the option of publisher. RATES OF ADVERTISING. TH LIXEB COSSTITfTE A SQPARB. One square one or three insertions $' 50. Every subsequent iosertion less than 9 50 ItxAt. ESTATE, PBBSOSAL PROPERTT, and GKXERAL ADTEBTISIKG, as may be agreed upon, FATEXT MEMCIKES and other advertisements oy the column : One column, 1 year, SOO Half column, 1 year 35 Third column, 1 year, 25 Fourth column, 1 year, 20 Business Cards of one square or less, per year, with paper, SB. J3?" EDITORI AL or LOCAL ITEM advertising—with out Advertisement —15 cts. per line. Liberal terms made with permanent advertisers. EXECUTORS, ADMINISTRATORS and AUDI TOR'S NOTICES, of the usual length, $2,50 OBITUARIES,- exceeding ten lines, each ; RELI GlOUSand LITERARY NOTICES, not ofgeuera' interest, one half tne regular rates. Advertisement!- must be banded in by TUBS DAT Noon, to insure insertion the same week. JOB WORK of all kind! neatly executed, and at prices to suit the times. All TRANSIENT ADVERTISEMENTS and JOB WORK must be paid for, when ordered RR. &, W'. E LITTLE, ATTORN EYS AT LAW Office on Tioga Street Tunkhannock Pa WIW. M. PIATT, ATTORNEY AT LAW Of flee in Stark's Brick Block Tioga St., Tunk nannock, Pa. H S.COOPER, PHYSICIAN A SURGEON • Newton Centre, Luierno County Pa. OL, PARRISH, ATTORNEY AT LAW • Offi-e at the Court House, in Tunkhannock Wyoming Co. Pa. vTT RIIOADS, PHYSICIAN A SURGEON • will attend promptly to all calls in his pro fession. May be found at bis Office at the Drug Store, or at his residence on Putman Sreet, formerly occupied by A. K. Peckham Esq. DENTISTRY. DR. L T. BURNS has permanently located in Tunkhannock Borough, and respectfully tenders his professional services to its citizens Office on second floor, formerfy occupied by Dr. Oilman. vGn3otf. PORTRAIT, UfIOS€AY& • AND OHSF&MEIST&I; X 3 .A.T JSTTiaNTO, 'Jiy W. HUG Eli, Artist. Rooms over the Wyoming National bank,in Stark's Brick Block, TUNKHANNOCK, PA. Life-size Portraits painted from Auihrotypes or I'botogruphs—Photograj.hs Painted in Oil Colors All orders for paint ings executed according to or der, or no charge made. RT Instructions given in Drawing, Sketching, 1 Portrait and Landscape Painting,*in Oil or water Colors, and in all branches of the art, Tunk., July 31, '67 -vgnso-tf. NEW TAILORING SHOP Yba Subscriber having had a sixteen year* pmc tleal experience in catting and making clothing now offers his services in this line to the citixens of ■ICBOL.SO* and vicinity. Those wishing to get Fits will find his shop the place to get them. JOEL, R, SMITH -cSO-6moß BOLTON HOUSE." HARRISHURG, PKNNA. The undersigned having lately purchased the •' BT'EHLER HOUSE " property, has already com menced such alterations and improvements as will render this old and popular House equal, if not supe rior, to any Hotel in the City of Harrisburg. A continuance of the public patronage is refpect fully solicited. GEO. J. BOLTON* "WALL'S HOTEL, LATE AMERICAN HOUSE/ fUSKHAXXOCK, WYOMING CO., PA. THIS establishment has recently been refitted an furnished in the latest style. Every attention Will be given to the comfort and convenience of those who patronize the Tlou*e. T. B/WALL, Owner and Proprietor : Tunkhancock, September 11, 1861. NORTH BRANCH HOTEL, MKSHOPPEN, WYOMING COUNTY, PA. Wm. H. CORTRIGHT, Prop'r HAVING resumed the proprietorship of the above Hotel, the undersigned will spare no _ efforts tender the house an agreeable place of sojourn to *ll who may favor it with their custom. Win. H. CORTRIGHT. fune, 3rd, 1863 MEANS'HOTEL." TOWANDA, PA. F. P- BARTLET, (Late eftae BBBAIXARD Hocus, ELMIKA, N. Y. PROPRIETOR. The MEANS HOTEL, is one of the LARGEST and BEST ARRANGED Houses in the country —It is fitted up in the most modern and improved style, and no pains are spared to make it a pleasant and agreaablo stopping-place for all, v?,a2l,ljr. mmi & Miimin eras A LARGE STOCK. OF SPKING GOODS, JUST RECEIVED AND For Sale f///-•.//*. ALL KINDS OF Produce TAKEN IN EXCHANGE FOR GOODS AT BUNNELL 6i BANNATYNE'S TunkhannocJe, Pa. snll. TUNKHANNOCK, WYOMING CO., PA. •• WEDNESDAY, AUG. 14,1867. LONGFELLOW'S PSALM OF LIFE. Tell me not in mournful number*, "Life is but an empty dream !" For the foul is dead that (lumbers, And things are not what they seem. Lifers real! Life U earnest! And the grave is not its goal; "Dust thou art, to dust returneth," Was not spoken of the soul. Not enjoyment, and not sorrow, Is our destined end or way ; But to act that each to-morrow Find us farther than to-day, Life is short and timo is fleeting, And our hearts tho' stout and brave Still like muffled drums aro beating, Funeral marches to tho grave. In the world's broad field of battle In the bivouac of Life, Be not like dumb driven cattle ! Be a hero in the strife. Trust r,o Future, howe'er pleasant; Let the dead past bury its dead, Act, act in the living Present, Heart within and Uod o'erhead. Lives of great men all remind ns We can make our lives sublime; And, departing leave behind us Foot-prints on the sands of time, Foot-prints, that perhaps another, Sailing o'er life's solemen main, A forlorn and shipwrecked brother, Seeing, shall tako heart again. Let us, then, be up and doing, With a heart for any fate ; Still achieving, still pursuing, Learn to labor and to wait. THE BEAUTIES OF BIBLE LAN GUAGE. If we need higher illustrations not only of the power of natural objects to adorn language and gratify taste, but proof that here we find the highest conceivable beau ty, we would appeal at once to the Bible.— Those most opposed to its teachings have acknowledged the beauty of its language, and this is due mainly to the exquisite use of natural objects for illustration. It docs iudeed draw from evory field. But when the emotional nature was to be appealed to, the reference was at once to natural objects, and throughout all its books, the stars, and flowers and gems, are prominent as illustrations of the beauties of religion and the glories of the church. "The wilderness and the solitary places shall be glad for them, and the desert shall rejoice and blossom as the rose*" "The mountains and the hills shall break forth before you into singing, and all the trccsof the field shall clap their hands. Instead of the thorn shall come up the lire tree, and instead of the briar shall come up the myrtle tree." The power and beauty of the same ob jects appear in the Savior's teachings. The fig and the olive, the sparrow and the lilly of the field, give peculiar force and beauty to the great truthsjtbey were used to illustrate. The Bible throughout is remarkable in this respect. It is a collection of books written by authors far removed from each other in time, and place, and mental cul ture, but throughout the whole nature is exalted as a revelation of God. Its beauty and sublimity are appealed to, to arouse the emotions to reach the moial and iclig ious nature. This clement ot unity runs through all the books where references to nature can be made. < )ne of the adaptions of the Bible to the nature of man is found in the sublime and perfect representation of the natural world, by which nature is ev er made to proclaim the character and per fection of God. No language can be writ ten that so perfectly sets forth the grand and terrible in nature and its forces, as we hear when God answers Job out of the whirlwind. No higher appreciation of the beautiful, and of God as the author of beau ty, was ever exposed than when our Sav ior said of the hllies of the field, "I say un to you that even Solomon, in all his glory was not arrayed like one of theseand adds, "If God so clothe the grass of the field''—ascribing the element of beauty in every leaf and opening bud to the Creator's skill aud power. I&r About ninety one years ago a Dem ocratic convention met at Philadelphia,and they laid down a platform which they cal led, The Declaration of Independence. and resolved to fight it out ou that line if it took all the summer. The Declaration is ratber out of date now—it was superseded by the Black Re publican platform of 1860, Still it contains some good things, and is worth reading along with the Reconstruction act and the proceedings of the Rump Junta. It says all men are born free and equal. This was supposed for a long time to mean whitemcn ; but it has lately been discoveerd to be a mistake it meant negroes- Our ancestors made a good many mis takes—they were not so wise in their gen eration as we are. The Declaration is a very severe on George the third. It calls George a good many hard names and accuses him of imposing internal reve nue taxes, tariff on tea, setting up military authority, and vaiious games of that sort, which our ancestors weren't used to, and would'nt stand. . George was an old lunk head. He didn't know how to manage these things. Instead of setting up the divine right of kings he should have called it the "moral idea," proclaimed himself a champion of freedom, like old Thad. Stevens, and de nounced Washington, Franklin & Co., as | Copperheads.— Corry Q\Lanus. " To Speak his Thoughts is Every Freeman's Right. " LOVED AND LOST. Loved and lost! 'Tis a wail that is go ing up daily, aje hourly, "unto Ilira that sits on the great white throne," from be rt-aved hearts, heavy with their burden of sorrow, too grievous for human hearts to bear. Loved and lost! From your heart, oh, stricken widow, as you stand by the cold form of your once strong protector, goes up that bitter cry. He who ever shield ed you with his protecting arm—whose tender voice never addressed you save in love, he who ever stood between you and the great cold world, breasting all its storms and cares with his own manly bo som, that they harmed you not, is gone forever; and you kneeling beside his life less remains, with yonr fatherless children clinging around you, realize more and more your utter helplessness and the great loss yon have sustained, while your pale lips burst the mournful cry, "Loved and lost!" And vou, too, mourning hnsband who have laid your fair girl wife asleep in tho embrace of mother earth. She went from you ere yet her bloom faded, with the tiny !>abe (her child and yours) that but opened his eyes on earth to close them in death— clasped close to her girlish bosom, mother and child, rose and bud, are sleeping to gether under one coffin lid; one grave holds them both now, while your house has grown strangely desolate since she, whose light footstep ever sprang to wel come your return to tho house which she presided over like a s the pronoun 'she' applied to a ship." To which one of the boys rendered tbe following answer: "Because the rigging costs mora than the hull." - > A wag of a boarder complained to the mis tress that.tbe sun must have gone under a cloud, when the shadow of the chicxen fell in to the pot where her brooth was made. A cool specimen of humanity stepped into a printing office out West to beg a paper, ''Because," sa'd he, "we like to read news papers ve-y much, but our neighbors are too stingy to take one." A poet intended to say, „See the pale mar tyr in a ahcet of fire," instead of which the printer made him say. , 4 see the pale martyr with his shirt on fire.', From what tree was mother Eve prompted to pick the apple 1 Devil-tree. Jones has been telling Robinson (a poor victim of fashion) one of his splitting stories Robinson—"Ya'as— it s very funny 1" J ones —"Then why the deuce don't you laugh Robinson—"My doar fellah, I would with pleasure, but I darn't display any ctnotioo— these trowscrß are so tremendously tight!" The young ladies of Pensacola, Florida have organized a base ball ciub. One of the rules is, that whenever any member gets tangled in hor steel wire and she falls she is to be immediately expelled from the club. Smythe spent two whole days and nights in considering an answer to the conundrum 'Why is an egg underdone like one overdone?' He would suffer DO one to tell him, and at last hit upon the solution—because both are hardly done. jlkeMarval says a country house without a porch is like a m&n without an eyebrow. In China the physician who kills a patient has to support his family. A sharp talking lady was reproved her husband, who requested her to keep bur tongue in her mouth, "My dear," responded the wife, "it is against tbe law to carry con cealed weapona." Never chew your words. Open the mouth and let the voice come out' A stu dent once asked, '• Can virchue, fortichude, graticbude, or quietchude, dwell with that man who is a stranger to rectichude?" The words here'are badly chude. A mad princess of the house of Bourbon on being asked why the reign of queens were in general more prosperous than the reign of kings, replied : "Because, under kings women govern ; under queens, men," Hearts, the best card in the chance game of matrimony ; sometimes overcome by dia monds and knaves , often won by tricks, and occasionally treated in a shufling manner and then cut altogether. An industrious blacksmith and an idle dandy once courted a pretty girl, who hesita ted which to take. Finally she said she would marry whichever of them conld show the whitest hand. With a sneer at the Blacksmith the dandy held out his palms, white from idleness. The poor blacksmith hid his brawny hands in his pockets ; then drawing them forth full of bright silver coins, he spread them over his dusky finger. The girl decided that his hands were whitest. _ ' A late writer wishes to know what more precious offering can be laid upon the altar of a gentleman's heart than the first love of a pure, earnest and affectionate girl, with an undivided interest in eight cornea lota and fourteen throe story houses 7 We give it up- We know of nothing half so touching, or, in other words, anythirg that most people would sooner "touch." The New York religious call each other "lying rascals," "dvaeon •edgings," "crotche- > ty heretics," and "squirts." NO. t