ill BY S. J. ROW. CLEARFIELD, PA, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23, 1870. YOL 16.HW. 29. gtlttl godvg. "IT'S THE EAELY BIED," ETO. Jlore than one bs shown how hollow la ihU proverb and absurd ; for tbe worm, it sure most follow, Got op earlier than the bird. fcoubtless, too. tbe bird In question. Eating with too greet e xeal, Suffered much from indigestion, Owing to his morning meal. And It wonld no be surprising If that birdie fell a prey To tbe sportsman earljr rising Mr.kes the aim, 0 sore they say. rerhsps ill young, too had it any? By their parent left loriorn. Caught emerrhal ailments many From the keen cold air of morn. Other birds for birds will shatter When tnev ssw the bird alight. Might have chirped withscornfol patter, 'Ah! tbe rake's been oat all night'." gumming np the ease concisely. This decidedly I say ; Early birds don't get on nicely, Early rising does not pay '. THE TVO MBS. TRAITOBDS. There was only one reason for not pro ceeding to the ceremony that was to make llosaltha Haworth and Elleray Trafford man ami wife. That reason was that Dick Traf iord, Elleray 's younger brother, a vouth a Lotit sixteen, had not yet arrived from the city, where he was attending boarding-school. The day had conic, however, and almost the hour, and, whatever the came th.it delayed biru, especially since it was Christmas week, it was not, of course, thought sufficient to propone the marriage. The Traffords were a remarkably hind some familv-7-so handsome that the family group would at once have riveted the eye of even the unobservant. - Mrs. Trafiord was one of those few genuine blondes who do not fade early and look like washed ribbons be fjre twenty years of married life. Mr. Traf f.ird tuizbt have been mistaken for a South crn gentleman, so brtmied was his complexion fo chivalrous his manner. Of three child ren. Klleray, the eldest, rcsjmbled the fath er. The two others were a daughter about f ixhteen, named Lucy, and Dick, the school boy of sixteen just mentioned. Both favor -d their mother, being blondes of the pur est hue. Lucy was just as fresh and tender as an apricot, and Dick was hardly one whit lt-i hand-ouie. He was one of those bean tlful girlish looking toys, who not unfre (ju.'Dtly uiuke the most masculine men. but -ho during the first years of adolescence Lave the hair aud eyes, the lips and com p'exious of cirl. Little did Rj-aliha Haworth dream what vas in store for her, when it was proposed that the bridal trip should be modified so that Klleray might call in the tnuroin; at th.? school which Diek was attending, and It-arn the reasons of hi delay. If "he had known, would she have consented ? We will no- stop to answer a question which, after all, is foulUh and futile, and involves a con rra jic:ion from the wry nature of thing. The wedding wai over, the congratulations were said, the breakfast was eaten, the rpoeches were made, the pood buys were bidden, and the new Mr. and Mrs. Trafford tr-'ttinx into their carriage, commenced that life the first year of which is said to be so tantalizing and ru?ged. They took their iaee in the train, accompli bed their jour ney in safety, and in due time arrived in the qniet old-fashioned city of P , where I'i'.-k's boarding-school was established. They tiok possession of the rooms which La i been engaged for them at the hotel, and text morninp Klleray sot off to see his young brother, leaving Rosaltha alone. If he bd had the dimmest suspicion, the Liindest forelxxling c f what was to take place, I hardly think he would have left Ro fa'tha's side for one moment. Just as they were setting out for P , Lucy had laugh iiyly warned him not to go there, and had ruiiindcd hitu of a certain former attach ment of his a Miss Dorothy Dilworth ' 'm Mill resided there, and who might be u-.-.puv.'J to be revengeful and Medea-like ivsard Creusa meaning Rosaltba -now tl i! hhe had los-t her Jason. Elleray had v!:tdvi.ileu(!y, remembering, indeed, when i: ! ;! fancied himself in lovwith one 6f tiie j'-.tftiest young Quakeresses that P e-'uM Lo?it, but he laughed it off, and ap: "-reiiriy the whole affair was forgotten. Hut could he have guessed who would l ive entered the private parlor where his wi?e w:n sitting, a few moments after his bi k wis turned. I hardly think he would have risked that walk to Pick's boarding 'li i )1. and tho anxious inquiries he made ait - !.im. Mr. S;eadman, the head master, a pom-"'iii-'y commonplace man, explained that l'ickhad left the school two days before, ''' I appeared as much perplexed as Elleray -t thy fact of his not having been heard frum. He was an intensiy garrulous man, ar. r'ik-ray found it impossible to escape fr in him. He inanely gabbled on, untrl finally Elletay tore himself away in the mid die of a sentence. Arriving at the hotel, he found that he had been absent two hours. He also found a letter awaiting him. Open ing it, he found it dated from his recent home. It was written "by Dick, was a hasty scrawl, and ran thus : I'll fix you off you see if I don't -for not waiting for me. I got too late for the train, and had to wait for the next one, and I tmuk you all behaved real mean. Your affectionate brother, Dick." Smiling at the boyish terms in which this note was couched, he put it in his pocket, and preferred to go tip-stairs to Rosaltba. Meanwhile, how bad Rosaltba spent her time? -..-.. ' Listen ! Elleray had been gone about five minutes, when, without tap or 'knock, or any other intimaticn, the door of the private parlor opened, and a lady entering, stood hesitat ing just inside the threshold. Rosaltba looked up. - Her visitor was what is called a gav Quaker. Her toilet was ex pensive, but extremely neat, and was per vaded through all its tasteful interchange of cnlrrr, with one truiet, neutral hue, which blent it into a rich, yet simple whole. Her face was so sweet, so modest, sc candid, that it put you in mind of a magnolia blossom. She was apparently about twenty years of age, well formed, and decidedly stylish. "Is this Mrs. Trafford ?" she asked. Rosaltba looked more steadily at the new comer, and an unquiet feeling took posses sion of her bosom. "Yes," she said; "won't yon be 'seat ed?" and rising she offered her visitor a chair. The pretty Quakeress 6a t down, and gazed with u i disguised curiosity at Rosaltha. "So," she said, "you are Elleray Traf ford's wife?' "Yes," assented Rosaltha, once more, hardly knowing how to accept her visitor's manner. There was a moment's embarrassed pause. "May T ask," said Rosaltha, then, "to what I owe the pleasure of this visit?" "Oh, yes ; certainly," replied the Qua keress, with emphasis. "Jy name my maiden name, that is is Dorothy Dill worth." . Rosaltba half rre from her chair, the blood atartifig to her cheek. Then ' she checked the impulse with a half smile at her jealous credulity, and restating Lei self, quickly sai l ! "I have heard that h'a'me before." "From Elleray, perhaps?" rrom Mr. Trafford?" asked R'osaftha, wiih spirit. "No: frjm his sister, Miss Dilworth." The next moment she regretted having spoken in a harsh tone, for her visitor' be gan to show very evident marks of agita tion. Her fine bluoeyes filled with tears, her exquisite red lips trembled, and pulling forth her pocket handkerchief, she hid her face therein tor a few moments. A wild, indefinite suspicion sprang into Rosaltha's heart, and she trembled with tbe violence- of her fee'iDgs. She constrained herself to rise, however, to bend over her weeping visitor, and inquire, with some ap pearance of sympathy, what was the matter. For some time the yonng girl refused to be comforted. At length she raised her head and she looked more lovely through her tears,' thought Rosaltha, than when her features had been composed and. looking with great effort into liosailha's face, ex claimed ; "How can I tell you?" "Tell me what," exclaimed Rosaltha: "For Heaven's sake, don't torture me. Anything is better than this suspense. What is there, Miss Dilworth, that you have got to tell me that I ought to know?" ' You ought to know that that is not my rinv name any longer. You bear the name that I hav3 the belter right to, and that u "What?" exclaimed Rosaltha, in horri fied tones. "Trafford." Rosaltha withdrew the hand she had placed upon the girl's shoulder. The con tact seemed to sting her with fire. She re fleeted intensely lor a minute or two, and then her courage returned. "You must be insane, she said : Why do you come here when my husband is out? Why do you bring me such a tale as this? i ou dare not coufront him with it. it is all a falsehood." "Do I look as though I was acting a falsehood?" asked the pretty Quakeress, raising her tear-stained eyes to Rosaltha's face. "No, Mrs. Trafford, and her exquisite lips trembled again, "what I say is too true. I had oo opportunity to warn yoo before, or I should have warned. I aw your arrival in this moraine's papers, and I came to vou at once at the risk of meeting him. Forgive tne if I render you miserable; but perhaps my grief has made me selash. have been miserable myself for the last year ever since he made mo bis wife "His wife !" repeated Rosaltha. , It seems as though the heavens would burst, or the ground open at her feet. "I swear to you I am his wife his true and lawful wife." continued the Visitor. "It is nearly one year since we were married. do believe that once when ,1 was innocent Dorothey Dilworth, he really loved me. Af ter our marriage we lived together happily just one week. From that hour to this I have never laid eyes upon Elleray Trafford; but I should know him know him any where at all." . - She stopped, noticing the change that had overspread Rosaltha's face. It had become very pale, and she swayed backward as though Ehe would have lallen. in an in stant the arms of the other were around her and the visitor would have touched her lips to her cheek. But Rosaltha, recovering herself, pushed her coldly away. . "You have had vour satisfaction," said Rosaltha,' "You have taken your revenge. Leave me. If it is any satisfaction, for you to know that you have ruined my peace for ever, enjoy that satisfaction, but leave me ; that is all I ask." -- A moment's compunction overshadowed the fair face of Dorothy. "Do not let us part as enemies," -she said, stretching forth her hand. "See, I would have kissed you if yoo would have left me. I hear you ao ill will. I owe you do grudge. I have taken no revenge. Only I'oould not bear my load of misery any longer alone, and wrong as it was, in order to make you a sharer in it, I have made you miserable. Forgive" me. Let us part as friends, never to see each other more. Let us be as sisters. But as for that man " "flush 1" said Rosaltha, raising her hand "not a word against him, though he has treated us both so shamefully. He is your" husband. You have the best right to him. Do you think I could live with him after this? Never. He is fo Ae no more from this moment, so far as anything more than remembering him goes, than if he had nev er be-n. To love him and live with him any longer would be a crime in the sight of nearen and man. Do not go I You must stay until he returns. Then, together, we will confront him !" Even while she was speaking, steps were heard in the corridor, and the next moment Elleray Trafford entered the room. The sight he met there was a strange one. Rosaltha stood facing him. standing by the mantlepiece, Jber form erect ard prond, her hands tightly clenched in one another. At the centre table sat Dorothj, her face buried in her pocket handkerchief among the books and picture i, and her shoulders heaving convulsively, telling the struggle within her breast. He looked from one to the other, in amaze ment, and an undofinuble expression passed over his face. To the day of her death Rosaltha never forgot it. He passed over to her, and would have taken her hand, but she repulsed him. "Don't touch me," she said ; "you She tried to pronounce the harsh word, but memories of the golden hours of her courtship overwhelmed her, her lip trem bled, and she burst into tears.' "For God's sake, what does this mean? Rosaltha', won't you speak to me? What is this mystery? What does ths woman want here?" He turned tor confront' Dorothy, but her face was stiff hidden, and her sobs filled the room. Rosaltha it was who commanded herself and spoke first. "Here is your wife ask her?" she said, pointing fo Dorothy. t "From this hour, El leray Trafford, you are no more to me than if you had never cro-sed my path." " As though by an inspiration, and without any process of logic, Elleray strode up to where Dorothy was weeping. "Who are you, woman?" he cried ; and laid a strong arm upon her tender shoulder. The head was still bowed. Shame, or fear, or anguish, still caused the gentle face to be concealed, although the sobs cauic fast and thick. Elleray paused once more, looking first at one woman and then at the other, in what Rosaltha took to be well-affected extremity of surprise. A second time he laid his hand upon tho woman's shoulder, and tlm time with a still rougher hand. '" "Who are you?" he shouted. "Speak, or " "Me? O, I'm Dick !" exclaimed a voice almost inaudible, through its smothered laughter; and the next moment the visi tor's head was thrown back and peal after peal of utterly irrestrainable boyish laughter ran through the parlor. Elleray and Rosaltha stood there like peo ple in a dream, utterly failing at first to com prehend the situation. Meanwhile, there sat their visitor, every moment exploding in a fresh volley, and pointing and gesticulating at them in a most unladylike manner. "Don't speak to me! djn't coune near me!" he exclaimed, his face growing scarlet with laughter. "I shall split, I know I shall! O, what fun I what larks! By jingo! 1 said I'd make you pay for disappointing me, and so I have. Mi.-s Dorothy! Elle ray's first wife ! O, you to simpletons ! O, it is too good 1 Don't interrupt me, please. Let me have my laugh out !" 03" he went again into another series of explosions, and Elleray and Rosaltba, hav ing nothing else to do. followed him, at length understanding how matters stood. Yes, it was Dick his naturally girlish fea tures, completely disguised in his borrowed feminine apparel. He had missed the train which was to have taken him to tbe wed ding; and bad arrived home some hours af ter it was over ; had left home afer sending his brother a letter calculated - to deceive him as to bis whereabouts ; had stolen a quantity of his sister Lucy's disused clothes in order to act his part, and stayed at the hotel all night, in order to watch his chance in the morning. Half an hour afterward he went upstairs, and soon made his appearance in the attire of his sex.: As East India Leuend. When the lofty and barren mountain was first lift ed into the sky, and from its elevation look ed down on the plains below, and saw the valley and the less elevations covered with verdant and fruitful tiees, it sent up to Brahma something like a murmur of com plaint. "Why thus barren? Why these scarred and naked sides exposed to the eye of man?" And Brahma answered, "The very light shall clothe thee, and the shadow of the passing cloud shall be as a royal man tle. , More verdure would be les light. Thou shalt share in the azure of Heaven, and tbe youngest and whitest cloud of a sum mer's sky shall nestle in tby bosom. Thou belonged half to us." So was the mountain dowered. And so, too, adds the legend, have the loftiest minds of men been dower ed in all ages. To lower elevations have been given tbe pleasant' verdure, the vine and olive. Light light alone, and the deep shadow of the passing cloud, these are the gifts of the prophets of the race. ' 1 "is "Hug Me Tight" is the ladies' newest jacket. ' . . A Tunny Mistake.' The Chicago Tribune gives an amusing account of the adventures of an amiable old gentleman from the rural districts, who had been wavering between orthodoxy and heterodoxy for some time. He came into the city to hear Robert Collycr preach. It was his first visit to Chicdgo. Stepping fn to North Clrtk street horse car, he rode out as far as Turner Hall, where many of the passengers alighted,- and perceived a crowd of people, and inquired of the conductor if that was Robert Collyer's church. The con ductor, at the simplicity of the question, promptly answered in the affirmative, and our curious inquirer passed into the Hall. : He saw a vast crowd of men and women sitting at small tables, drinking beer. This rather staggered him for a moment but he reflected that they were possibly receiving the communion. So he sat down at a table and looked around him. Presently a young man with a white apron came up and asked him if he had ordered. No, he replied, he was not exactly a member of the society, but he came to hear Mr Collyer. The youth with the white apron stared and pass ed on. Very soon a number of gentlemen stepped on the platform, with trombones, and fiddles, and cornets, and began to play. These Unitarians have aquier way of wor shiping, thought the old gentleman, but I have been living out of the world ; that is the matter I suppose. He thought it would come out all right when Coliyer came on. But after the music therewas "communion," and after a long interval there was urisfc ? rrml by-nna-by a man dressed in tights came forward and com menced to swing rotina pole, ihen as- other inan. dressed like the first, went through a course of exercises of the cross bar. And then there was ftrnre musi arrd no end of "conrrunion'. The stranger sat out the services very patiently and then Went home. He had come tb the' concul sion that Unitarianism was" all very well in fVmnrv. fiiir tllisft niw fnnplftd notion nf ' i -- ----- n worship were not so edifying after all as the good old Presbyterian psaliis and pray ers. WriAT Makes the Wind Blow. If tbe question were, "Who makes the wihd blow ?" all our young friends would have a ready answer ; they know that God con trols all the forces of nature. But he us es means. The tuir-is his grea wind mak er. To understand its action, think of ihe air as sC great Ocean like water, but much lighter, entirely surrounding the globe Tbe sun shines upon this ocean of air, arid through it on the earth, heating them both and iifiparting most heat at the earth's sur face. But the "sun's rays shine more di rcctlv down on some parts than on others and therefore he:it them more. 1 bus, it is always hotter in the region of tTie etfiaior than at the polls. Now heat expands a fluid, making it lighter, and when part of the air is expanded by heat, it rises", arrd the c-ol. r, heavier surrounding ah rushes in to fill its place, and thus wind is produ'c ed. The following simple experiment will show iust h.iw this works. Fill a lursre tin pail with water, in which scatter some fine bread crumbs. Place burning lamp under the middle of the pail and the crumbs will soon begin to rise, car riedup by the heated column of water, and then making a curve toward the sides will sink downward, and pass in a horizontal direction aljng the earth's surface. In room containing a hot stove drop into th air in different places bits of light cotton or drv thistle blossoms, and yott will see how the air is moving to each point Living by tbe Dat. I compare, says John Newton, the troubles which' we have to undergo in the course of the year to bumllc of faggots, far too large for us to lift. But God does not require us to carry the whole at once. He mercifully unties the bundle, and gives us first one stick which we are fa carry to day, and another which we are to carry to-morrow, and so oft This we might easily manage if we would only bear the harden appointed for us each day ; but we ch'oaso to increase our troub k s by carry ing yesterday's sack over agai to-day j aud adding to-morrow's burden to our load before we are required to bear it, William Jay puts the same truth in anoth er way. We may consider the year before us a desk containing three hundred and sixty -five letters addressed us one for eve ry day, announcing its trials, arid prescft bing its employments, with an order to o pen daily no letter but the letter for the day. Now we may be strongly tempted to unseal before-hand some of the remainder, This, however, would only serve to embar rass us, while we should violate the rule which our Owner and Master has laid down for us. "Take, therefore", no thought for the morrow, lor the morrow shall take thought for tbe things of itself." An amusing mistake recently occurred in the newspaper report of the speech, in the House of Peers, of Lord Westbury, on the common law and chancery powers of the En glish courts, in which the speaker stated that "the justice administered in the one class of courts was a terra incognita to the practioners in the other." Baron Westbury has a defective enunciation, and the report ers, incorrectly catching his lisping accents in the spacious chamber of the Peers, unin tentionally put into the mouth of the speak er a yet stronger and truer expression tha the one he used, substituting "a perfect ter ror for a terra tncognita. The Hartford Courant tantalizes its read ers with this atrocity : "Have you beard of tne man got shot lately 7 Lfot shot? no how did he get shot?" "He bought 'em An Economical Stockholder,' A' good story is told ef a' gay and festive railroad stockholder, who' visited Portland, Maine, from "away down East." in the oc casion of an annnal meeting' and a fine' din ner at the KeaYsarge.' . Zfe must harvg been one of those CcrrrscientrOus men' who insisted on good dividends. He didn't dine at the K'earsafrge, because he hadn't got his gold 'divvy." So, with all t!he importance be coming his position, be took a digmned stroll into an oyser saloon ?" "Say, mister, what do you ask for an oyster?" 'One cent apiece," was the reply. "I guess as how I'll have one," said the stockholder. . The bivalve was duly opened upon a plate; and he was invited to "pitch in." ''Say, mister, is this all there is for a cent?" . Yes." Can't you afford to give us another? How d'ye take it?" Well, some swallow it whole, and some rut it up into hash. A good many ways. You pay your money and take your choice." "It won't hurt a fellow, will it though ?" "Oh, no." So stockholder "went for it." and in a- bout two minutes the good thing was out of sight, with four large soda crackers to keep it company. "Nobody hurt." Say, mister, don't care if I have anoth er oyster. Do you take less where a fellow eats two?'r "No." "Well, don't aim. I'll have anoth er. Oyster No 2 was disposed of, and with eight of tbe aforesaid crackers. Stock holder shelled out the two cents, and was about to depart, feeling greatly refreshed. when he was advised to keep his money, a he might need it to get home with, and he wss wtljome to tl e oysters. Hetrok the two cents, the tyros t thankful creature ever seen in those parts, and departed. It is not reported whether be arrived sa'fely at home, nor whether he got the gold divi dends. But he's one of ' era. A Yant ee Trick. One of our peculiar, slab sided, gaunt Yankees lately emigrated and settled down in the West He as th pictare of a mean man, and as he put him self to work in good earnest to get his house to right-, the neighbors willingly lent him a hand. After ho had got everything fixed to his notion, a thought struck him that he had no chickens, and he was powerfully fond of raw eggs. He was too honest to steal them, and too mean to buy them. At last a thought struck him he could borrow. He went to a neighbor and thus accosted him : '"Wall, I reckon you hain't got no old hen nor nothin' you'd lend me for a few weeks, have' you ; neighbor?" " "I'll lend you one with pleasure," replied the gentleman, picking out the very finest in the coop. The Yankee took the hen home, and then went fo another neighbor and; borrowed a dozen of eggs. . Ho then set tbe hen, and in due course of time 6he hatched out a do ren chickens. The Yankee was again puzzled ;' he eoufd return the hen, but how was he to return the eggs ? Another idea arid who ever saw a live Yankee without one he would keep the hen until she laid a dozen eggs. This he did and then returned the hen and eggs to their respective owners; remark ing as he did so: "Wall, I reckon I've got a3 fine a' dozen of chickens as yon ever had your eyes on, and they didn't cost me a cent, tiuther." A good' story is ford by ffre New 1fork Ilerald'm correction with' the late arrival of the steamer Smidt alt that port. As soon as the captain1 of the 6teamer had touched the dock he was accosted by a newsboy,- who 6houted out : "Here's the Evening Tele grunt all about the safe arrival of the Smidt 1" He stopped the urchin and asked: "Vat's dat you say about der Smidt ?" "She's got in all safe; nobody drownded. Take a paper, sir?" "Yaw ; but votter toy- vel's der matter? Ah, ha f yaas, I hafes it. I made der passage too quick. Py tam ! 1 go right 'vay to der agencies and ' makes a- pologize." And he started off in so great a hurry as to forget to pay the newsboy for the paper he had taken. The joke will be best understood when we state that last year the "Smidt" was out 6ixty days between Breman and New York, while she made the last trip in ntty days, burely there was room here for congratulation: A Jerseyman's-Mistake. iA country man walked into a New York bar-room the the other day. and called for a glass of ale. Having swallowed the refreshing teverage with great inward satisfaction, he laid five cents on the counter and was proceeding on his way, when the barkeeper stopped him and blandly intimated that the price of a glass of ale was ten cents. "Whatl ten cents for a jlass of ale ?" exclaimed the worthy old Jenwyman, with a look of in dignant surprise ; and then while he brought from a bulky pocket book there quired additional currency, bis counten ance settled into an expression of mournful resignation as he plaintively continued, "Ten cents a glass for ale, eh ? Well, if I had ever suspected that, I'd have took whiskey." The Emperor of Austria is said to be the most profane monarch in Europe. The Emperor of Russia never swears except when he gets tight on "tooticy." The Oneida Disaster. " The Tribune publishes Yokohama cor respondence of the Oneida disaster.' The writer says the whistle of the Oneina was blow and three guns fired", . stiW Cap Win Eyre of the Bombay declares he neither saw nor heard a signal ; yet the steward of the Bombay, on his arrival at Yokohama, asser ted tihat the Oneida had bcetf run into and cut to the water's edge. But tbe worst of the story is' the evidence of a British Lieu tenant, that Captain Eyre told him he had "cut the whole quarter off a damried Yan kee frigate, and served her bloody well right" Captain Eyre's own evidence is to the effect that the collision was too slight to be much regarded, and his' pilot told him a spit of land' was near and there wai no danger, and that he was a good fifteen min utes looking after the ill fated ship. The statements of Captain's clerk Crown ingshield and Master Yates agree that the Oneida's whistie was blown fierce'y, ml that if the Bimbay had stopped or sent boats, nearly every man would have been saved. YaUs says as the ship was fast sinking. Captain Williams, who was on the bridge, was asked to get on' board, but re fused saying, "No, I shall stay in my shij if she goes down." Lieutenant Comman der Muldaur walked up and said, "Sir the ship is going down"." "1 krtowit," said1 the Captain, "but wba can I do ? 1 have repeatedly asked for boats, hut could1 not get them." , At this moment the' shlp'ret- tled, the smoke slack came over and forced the cutter from tbe ttetp'i s?d4; and she went down stem' first . I hauled the Cap tain's clerk, William F. Crowningshield, on board, md made a great effort to save' Lieu tenant Commander f tew :rt, but he sunk just before I reached him, saying as he went down, "for Clod's sake save me.'" He was quite ill at the time; Captain Eyre' has been suspended from the British service for six months for his inhuman and wilful regleet in not going to the relief of the "Oueida and her perishing passengers. ' While we are just rejoicing over the re- j turn of silver pieces to our legitmate cur rency the Canadians are rejoicing over the prospect of an early r?dd snee Of all they have got. American' silver has hmg been called S nuisance in' Canada, Strenuous efforts' hd'vff been' made by' the' merchants there to get rid ot it as' a' circulating medium by resolutions arrti all 6ther kinds of infor mal enactments". A Montreal priest recent ly announced from1 the alter, according to report, that fees' Would betaken in Amer ican .silver only at a discount of twenty per cent, and finally f'btt Ottawa Parliament has enacted that twenty per cent, should be the legal discount upon it, the half dol lar passing for forty cents and the other coins proportionately. We may, then, soon expect that our silver pieces will flow back in abundance to our side of the line, where they are fully appreciated. Thus it is that everything combines to bring us back by a healthy and natural course,' to specie pay ments, without the necessity of any violent action on the part of Congress. "Sfpare the rod and spoil tbe child"," is the fine old educational maxim which raised wales" on many a juvenile skin. Out in Gr5e'nfield, Indiana, a" teacher has carried the" prifwiple to extremes. The "child" in this case" bteing a young iiTan, a poker was substitrJted for the "rod." Unfortunately the educational prospects of (He pupil were spoiled. The p'ofter finished him, and there is CW pupil less in t he Greenfield school. A clergyman arid one of his elderly par rishoncrs were walking home from church one icy day last wirite'f. when the old gen tleman slipped and fell flat on his back. The minister, looked at him a moment, and being assured tb'art he Was not ' much hurt. said td hint, "Sinners stand on slippery pla ces." Tbe old gentleman looked np, as if to assure himself of the fact, aud said, "I see they do ; but I can't." The following "floater" may be relied on as a correct statement : 9 right smarts make a heap. 4 heaps make a pile'. 3 piles make a" lot. 4 lots make one' gob. 8 gobs make one' scad. 3 scads make one oodle. 5 oodles make a dead load. 2 dead loads make tnore'n a mule can eTy. . When the Baptist Mission" Board met, fifty years ago, they reported one mission, one missionary and one convert, itlBurra'ah. When the Board meets in May next, fhey will report; missions, 13; stations and 6ut stations, 1,800; churches, "50; converts. 50,000 converts daring the yar, 4,000. Spotted fever prevails to an alarafng ex tent in Davies, County, Indiana, and many deaths are occurring. Out of a school of 4 thirty-five scholars at Jit. Zion school bouse in the German settlement, thirteen of the pupils all of them girls died of the disease in two weeks. ' A New Orleans paper laments the decline of the Bar in that city, saying that while it has increased to more than four hundred members, candor compels the admission that not one-fourth of them are lawyers in tbe true sense of the term, but merely attorneys for collecting claims. . it is a mistaken idea that manliness and stoicism are inseparable that a tender regard for the feelings and interests of oth ers, ii wek and nnmanly. A heart insensible- to sympathy claims greater affinity with tbe brute than tha man. AW. WAXTERS, ATToaaar at taw , Clearfltld. Pa. OtBea in tha Court Jtboao. fTALTER BARRETT, Attor.ey atLiw.Claar J 1S1J, P. Msy 13, 1SS3. I?D W.GKHASr, Dealer fa Dr,-3oIs.Groes- U ries, Hardware. Wneensware, Woodenwar. Provisions, eto., Market Str9C Clearfield, Pa Dvn 0- Wivtllfff. ntiUi fa Dry-eooda. IAdiea Fancy ood. fists and Caps. Soots, Shoes. eto .8ociM gtfeet. Clearaeld. Pa. sepSi HF. BIOtCR iC0.. Dealers in Hardware and manafaetnrersof Tin and Sbeet-iroa tare. .Second Street. Clearfield. Pa. Msr'Tj. HF. KAtffLE. Watoa and Clock Maker, aad . dealer in Watches Jewelry, e. Roess fa- Grab am 's row. Market street Nov. It. HBUCITEK SWOOPS, Attorney at LawyCMar field. Pa. QlEotiaOraham'sRow.fourdoo west of Graham A Boyatod's stord. Nor. 1 4V JB .X'BXALTf.Att'oraeyat La. Clearfield1 .'"Pa. Practices in Clearfield and a'djbia'ng Tounties. OSes in new brick building f,Boya t m, id street, one door south or LanieVi Hetet XTEsf . .Attorney at taw. Cl.ars!4 Pa., wiff . attend promptly tn'all Lertl business Satruct ed to h is care in Clearfield and adjoining edon ties. Office on Market street. jVly 17, 1867. rrVHOMAS u. FOkcET. Denier 14 Squire and Jf Sawed Lumber, Dry-Goods. Qneensware, Gro-" certos. Flour. Grain, Fee, Baeoa, .. Ac, Gr hamton. Clearfield cbtinty, Pa. Out. 10. J P. ICR ATZER. Dealer fn Dfy.Ooods, Clothing ,- Hardware ?oeetsr. Groceries'. Prori stons, eto , MarXet Street, neatly opposite the Court Hogae. Clenrffeld. Pa. Jufla. jof.J. ri VRfsWIck A IRWIN. Dealer's ft DragV, Medicines. Paints. Oils. Stationary, Perfeme rj . Fancy Goods, Notions, etc., eto.. Market street. Clearfield. Pa Dee. , 18C 1 KRATZER A SCf. dWeri In Dry Goods V if Clothing. Hardware. Qneensware, Orocey ries. i-roriaions, e., beoonit Street Cleat field. -P Deo 7. ISfii. JOHN Gl'ELICH. Manufacturer of all kinds of Cabinet-ware, Market street. CTearteld, Fa lie slsotnskes Jo order Coffins, onshort notice, and attends tuner's. ith a hearse. AprlS.'Sf. R ICHARP MORSOP, Dealer in Foreign and' Da met tin Dry Goods, Groceries, Flour. Bacon. r, Bac few do Liquors. . A e. Room, on Market street, a few dtxrrd wist ol Jwm0r,Cre'arfield, Pa "1TTALLACE ft FIELDINO.ATToert s-?La ? Clearfield'. Pa. Office in res denes dt W. A.- Wallace. Legal business of all ainds attended to tith promptness and fidelity, "wit. X. Jan 5,'70 yp FBANa riCLDtxo TT V Is . Pa., will attend promptly to bosioe s e4J trusted to his care. Office on second floor of no buildiox adjnfninff County Natioual Barns. and nearly opposite the Court House. June 30. '6tij M'CnLLOCG n A KREBS. ATTRxtT-at-Iawt Clearfield, Pa. All legal business prompt ly attended to. Consultations fn English er tier man. Oct. 27, 1809. T. J. x'ccLtocon. P. t.. auaaa. FREDERICK: LBITZINgER, Manufacturer of all kinds ef Stowo waro.Clcajteld, Pa. Or ders solrcitod wholesale or retail. He alao keeps on hand and for sale an assortment of earthen ware, of his own manufacture. Jaa. 1. 186S XT M. HOQVKR.Wnolesale and Retail Dealer in) 1, TOBACCO, CiARS AND SXTJFP. A lMra assortment of pipe's, eiarar cease. Ae.-, eon' tartly on hand. ..Two' dbors East of tbe Poet Office. Clearfield, Pa. Hay 19. '69. WESTERN HOTEL; Clearfield, Pa ThU well know'n Bbfel, near tbe t'oart House, H worthy the patronage ef the publio.' The rabfe will be (applied with the best in tbe market, lb best of liquors kept. . JOHN DOCUHEKTY. JOHN H. FULFOKD. Attorney at Law. Clea field. Pa. Office on Market Street, ovef 11 art? wick Irwin's DrngStore. Prompt attention given to tbe securingofBouotj claims. 4e..and to all legal business. March 17, 1867. A I .TIIORN.M.D., PnTsiciAN Awn StRfiEO-jt, having located at Kylertown.- Pa., offers his profe&pfonal services to the eili sens ot that ptaee and vicinity. - Sep.S9-ly w. a. arwstroo-. r r.r-:' :' SAttex ti's-i ARMSTRONG L15N. Attobbti-at-Lav. Williamsport. Lyeo-aine Count. Pa. Alt legal bos.ness eatrovted to them wfll be carefully and pronYptiy attended to. fA"g 4, G9-m. W ALBERT, Jk BRO S. .Dealers in Dry Goods, ,'iroeerie. Hard ware. Qneensware. Floor Ba con, etc.. Woodland. Clearfield county. Pa. Also esfensfte dealers in all kinds of sawed lumber, fnicglef. and sare timber. Orders solicited. nuoaiand. ra.,Aug. itrtB, 1513 DR J. P. BURCilFIELfrLsrt Surgeon of the 83t Reg"t Penn'a Vols., naming retarned from the lir-ny, offers bis profecrrffnal services to tb citicstos of ClecHfCtd and vicinity. Profes sional calls promptly attended to. Office oa Soath-East corner of 3d and Market Streets. Oct. 4. 1S6& (mp. OURVEVOR. The undersigned offer- his services to the public, as a Surveyor. lie may be found at his residence in Lawienee township, when sot enraged; or addressed bf letter at Clearfield. Pehn a. March fith. HW7.-tf. 3 iX&S MITCHELL. . JEFFERSON L I T Z, M. iXv " . Physician and Surgeori, . Having located at Osceola. Pa , offers his profes sional srmees to tbe people of that place and snr rounding country. All call promptly attended to. office and f tsidonce on Curlia Street, former ly occupied by Dr. Kline. - May I,'6S. K.. B O T T O It PHOTOGRAPH GAL.LERT. X4RKKT BTUBCT, CLUABrtBUI, FlU'a, XegatiTes made in elondy as well as in efear weather. Constantly an hand a good assortment of Frame. Stereoscope and 8tereoecopio Views. Frames, from any style ef moulding, made to order. dec. 2-'6-jy. 14-gtt-it rplIOMAS W. M0OBE. Land Snrreyor and Conveyancer. Having recently lo cated intbe Burnugh of Lumber City, aad return sumed rbe practice of Land Surveying, respect fully renders bis professional services to tbe own ers and speculators in lands in Clearfield aad ad.-joing- eoontiee Seeds ef Can veyanew-aeatly ex ecuted. Office and residence on door last uf Kirk Sr Spencers Store Lnaher City. April 14, 1869 ly. w A L L A C E 1 ITIltl, Rbai. Estate Acexts a-b Cojctetaucvbs, Clearfield, Pa f KeI estate bought and sold, titles examined, taxes paid, conveyance prepared, aad imrao ees tauen. Office fn new building, nearly opposite Court House. 1J & 1870. WM. A. WAH.ACB. ' WAtTTBS. QOLDIERS' BO UNTIES. A recent bill O ha passed both Houses of Congress. and signed by tbe President, giving soldiers who en listed prior to Z2d July. 1S61. serve oneyear er more and were honorably discharged, a boaaty of SlftQ. lyBonnHoi and Pensions collected by me far thoseeati tied to them. WALTER BARRETT, Att'y at Law. ' Aug. 14th, 1868. . Clearfield, Pa. DRIED FRUIT, at redneed prieee. at-- -May 13, '69. . MOSBOfg. -?' THE high set aarket prises paid Wr EsjMst