SIN(IILE COMS, VOLUME .X.; -MCBEL 7. THE P.orro. JOURNAL, PtriLIIWED TIIVBSTAT lictlL4lL4'o, TAW. To vikom a. 1,1 Letters ,and gotawunipations gbpuld Pciatbiressed, t 9 secure attention. 70.graik"4PNWitala.Y.th :44/APC 43 ; $1,25 per APpeini. 'ferias of 4.4:VOY#SiAg. gqoare [l6 lines] 1 insertion, - 1 II it 3 77 Each subsequent insenioh less thain. 13, 1 Square three nwuths,- ---- • - - - 1.: " six ," • _ .5 ..5 0 1 ' " nine " If i one . YS's•rs .' . .6 0.0 lisle andfigdre tvork, per sq., 3 ins. , 3AO Every subsequent insertion,_. ------ :• AO 1 Cce i tan six mouths,. . . .18 0 t. • 16 1.1 . . 10 40 * U. 4; 0 ---- . - -7 AO i " per year, ----- 4 - : 30 140 • 64 I, II /6 00 Administrator's or Executor's Notice, 2QO 4 4t4jitor's Notices, each,,- - -•- 150 Sales r per tract, 1 50 Marriage Notices, each, 1 00 "..Bnsiness or PrOfessioaal Cards, each, not exceding . 8 lines, per year, - - 500 Special and Editorial Notices, per line, 10 oar All transient advertisements. twist be paid in advance, and no notice will be taken of 'advertisements from a distance, unless they are accompanied by the money or satisfactory reference. ' guzint,ss Carlls. JOHN S. 314NN, ATTORNEY AND COUXSELLOR AT LAW, Coudersport,. Pa.; will attend, the several Courts in Potter and M'Kean Counties. All business entrusted in his care will receive prompt attention. Office on Main st., oppo-,\ site the Court House. 10:1 F. W. KNOX, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Coudersport, Pa., will regularly attend the Courts in Potter and . the adjoining Countiee. 10:1 ART4UIt ATTORNEY. & COUNSELLOR 'AT LAW, Coudersport Pa., Will attend to all business entrusted to hie caii, with pionw,tnes and fidelity. Office in Temperance Biock, .sec ond Hour, Maln St. 10:1 ISA4C BENS'i),I ATTORNEY AT LAW, Cotidersport, Pi., will `attend to all:Ousiness entrusted to Aim, care and proraptneis.thrice corner of West and Third sts. . 10;1 L. P, ,W114.45.T0N, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Weßsboro', Tioga Co., will attend the Courts in lottee attd M'Kean Counties. . A. F. C.4c)E ATTORNEY k r LAW, Wellsboro',Tioga Cp., Pa.; will regularly attend the Courts of Potter County. 9:13 B. W. BENTON - SUSVEYOR_ AND CONVEYANCER, -Ray- Mond P. '9., ..4.11e0Lny,3p.,) Potter Co., ?a., will attend to all nusines in his line, with care and iliinatch. W. K. KING, SURVEYOR, DRAFTSNIAN AND CONVEY ANCER, Smethport, WKean Co., Pa., kill ,tend to business for non-resident land- Spiders, UO2pi reasonabp .terms. Referen ve.i given if:iv...pared. S.--3;ps of any . part of the County made to order, 9;13. 0.1 T. ELLISON, PRACTICING PHYSICIAN, Coudersport, Pa., respectfully informs the citizens of the vil lage and - vicinity that he will promply re ,si,ond to all Falls for professional services. Office on Main st., in building formerly oc cupieit by G NV. pis, Esq. LEWI.3 MANS. A. F. 70N113 I EN M UM! JCiNES, MANN FL JONES, . , DEALERS IN DRY GOODS, CROCKERY, Boni Shoes, • Groceries and Provisions, Main st., Coudersport, pn. 10:1 col.LiEs BIIITtI. E. A. JP:SE& - SMITH 4 JQ I NES, DEALERS IN DRUGS, MEDICINES, PAINTS, • Oils, 'Fancy Articles, Statfpuery, Dry C, 7 /oods, Groceries, 4C., 3fain st., COudersport, Pa. 10:1 D. E. QIMST.k;D, ,DEALER IN DRY GOODS, READY-BADE .Clothing ; Crockery, Groceries, &c., Main st., C4ittdirsport, Pa. • 16;1 3.14-.).r, pEALER IN BOOKS 3 STATIONEAY, MAG AZINES 'aud Music, N: W. carper of Main sad Tfiird sts., Couttersport, E. R. HARRINOTOI • sj I . IEIVELX.,Eft, Cridersport, Pa., having engag ed in Schornaker & Jackson's Stoic w'ill cagy On!the Watch aOd - Jewelry I?O:sioesi t.hefe, 4 p il e assortment of Jew elry..ccinstant‘ly ' atclps and .leweyi'carefully repaired, in the ,best style, oniye siiortcst ootice—a}l wArk warranted. ' i):21 iftptitY J, autsp4), ijiPCCUSOII. TO JAMES W. B.MITII ? ) PEAUR IN STOVES, TIN & SHEET IRON WARE, Main st., nearly opposite the Court House, -Coudersport, Pa. Tin and , Sheet Iron Ware made to order, in good style, on short notice. 10:I COUDERSPORT HOTEL, D. F. GLASSIURE, Proprietor, Corner of Main and Second Streets, Coudersport, Pot ter Co., Pa. . 9:44 AELEGANY HOUSE, PAMIIEL M. MILLS, Proprietor, Colesburg Potter Co., Pa., seven miles north of Cou dersport, on the Wellsville Road. , 9;44 Plettei. Ruh From thel.l. Y. Evel Post. SO.IIREODY• ELSE. ‘Coine here," cries the master, m vole mend, • To an unlucky urchin,—"and . hold hand; I'll teach you, you villain to make sue You're the head and ringleader of al boys." The boy,. blubbering, exclaims, somebody else" • " .$1.40 .25 2 50 4,00 Says mamma to her daughter, "I'm.s . 1 --. • To see. ou. go mit with,your shoulder Non attract the attention of -"Dear nama, when the men stare let West, - i They, no doubt think it's you—or s . else." sys, the,wife to her husband, " and ,surprised To_see.you.so tipsy—i. mean so dig, Pray, jvhat,4o you think your nei h t,1 1 1:1k, When a Jast of your age !gets' stu "The.t;ll think," says the toper, I mebody,else..! "So you're,,found,nut at last," mad , 0, a Pet; i • • 1 "I law vou . last pigt walking ho 6 . 1 . • Bet, With Miss Betty . Bouneer—deny if 1 ... You. deceitful 41 .tr,eacheroas, wi • man." ! Says he, "My siv.setlqve Jt else." • "When You came home . - lastdnight It twelve o'clock, 1 And you left me this morning so i tud, i nsleep as a rock;" "My dear," cries the husband, I. Ain petrilled quite ; My business detained me frornhoine all the night." • "Goodness gracions," says she, "vr l i as it tome body the Y" 1 • 1 I 1! The coquette strives, with all her attractions, to win l' 1 • An admirer for whoin she cares' nqt a pin ; On the way to the church to fastein the knot. She stops, saying, "One thing I'd lost for- got — ! 1 - . , 1 I think, on the w oie, I'll have somebody else." 1 , The ''arson, brimfut l of doctrine 'and zeal, Thinks the hearts of his hearers lire harder than steel; 6 , While they, 'altho pricked by theircuMseience within, ! ! 1 Each would shift l to his neighbor the burden of sin, • Thinks toe Parson, no doubt, means some 4p4y else. II I I 'Tis thus with mankind, of every csindition, Sonsebodfs, the objgct pf every sus'ilicion, And if anything'S wrong ,- some one eissi is to blame—' As As somebody else' has ,su.qh a.bad mine. I'm truly,rejoicedyru not sppabody else, I - „ „,, t=crit A Word abot# _WeSteriPLEWIA- grattianaia Inireiteii(Ex perlence., Correspondent?! of the N. Y. Daily Times. . MOUND,CITY Pulaski,' 111., ivae 130, Is:It "Mushrom" cities aro only ladeginous in Amerieg, andiare not, by aUy trica, the least apriosity the countryaffords.— The "emigrant" ): from the E ti is pros peFting for settlement—rides over the ti. i prairies and plailis, "fetches up 4 at a sol itary cabin, and i is told he is in "iVesuvius Q ty ! He stares: but no shim noihouse is in sight—nothing but the ( wide . ex... 1r panse of the /,. plain and :he creek coursing through it. ' Vesuius City ! ))orhaps it - has been laiowo 1 i up and this is the site .1 1 it once occig4ed. Ah, ygdant New 'Yorker, you are not a fast man, I perceive. The "city'' •is just in the process of heing blown up ri and soon will be sdinflat'ed that it will take a large 'sheet to map out its beauties and mag nificent dimensions. That plin will be all; streets and I t hlocks, peopled by thirty theusand inhabitants; ' that ';creek will ber richly laden steamers omits muddy boSom, and railroads will sweep in from the four quarte,rs of the horiztr with si ps ies of premise to Vesuvius! So, at least, he'is told by he 'disint rested host in whose ca in he tarries; f 'd won by t the facts, res and. fancies, which the shrewd "proprietor" over has it , command, the emigrant priests and goiis 'home for, his frAsilYk ,dreaming on !his !;say of the I ' I city that is to, inflate. his purse to huge dimensions. '' One hundred Other:strap gets Pe talgja iit and "entertained" by the host of .. reswkrituk and ilext season sees one hired and .one hniises on that lately solitary plain—the (** tu a i mmu city has emerged, into life ! 1 , , 1 This ils t 6 history . Of 13even-eighths of ,1 the towns and!"eities":which,nOw dot the maps of loW i a, Minnesota, 1 1 Wisconsin, Kansas' and iNebraska. And it is but fair to say seven -Rights of them are grand eebotea to -?higeiples 'el Ike, • ilelo4.4cy, 40 14 Pissekhntiorr of 0614 Sitek4ittiv :4114) Vqips.l CIOUDERSPORT, COUNTY, .PA. ! THUIND4Y, JULY 23, 1857., successes—for the "proprietor," at least, wbose fortune is rapidly made bir, selling land, which cost him one dollar and twen ty-five cents per acre, filr,ten, twenty, forty, fifty and one hundred dollars per foot front, by one hundred feet in depth. It remains to be' seen ha the purchas ers fare. As it is very true that fools are not all desid, these first Ipurchapers are generally ' auccessful in tettivs rid ,of their interests atadvenced rates, and thus success number two is thfr result. But the' fact,., stares the . atudieus observer steadily in the feet, that," in most-iestin ces, these places cannot Ponibly attain to any very considerablegreinth, for there is not country , enough to support them, sup posing the land to . be divided up into eighty-acre lots, or, as most generally the case, into farms of one, twO and three hundred urea each: Nbr are there the resources of manufactoris to fall back upon; for it is a fact, which the intelli gent observer will not fail to detect, that the great concentration 'Of capital, ma chinery; enterprise and appliances neces sary for successful competition, are now centering in Chicago, Cincinnati, St. Lou is, &c., and only in a very limited degree will the interior and "upriver" towns be able to compete with, anc live in spite of, the monster lenlerprises which are now ( demand, fully answering to. every agriculture in ev ery branch of trade, agriculture and household life. -11enee,_twhen a proprie ,tor descants to the new-comer of the trade and Commerce which must centre at the city, the allowane of ninety per cent. may be safely made—and purchas es should be made accordingly. If the . "city," by .any good fortune, should reach to a populatiotrof Wu' thonsand, the pres ent prices of the lots are lentirelyi dispro portionate,to such success. Twenty, for ty, sixty and .one hundred dollars per foot—common !prices of land in these "cities" of which we are now writing—is too much by fifty per cent ; for, add to this first colt the neeessaryimproveme.nts of opening streets, ..grading, of .building everything ab initio, of taxes and inter est, and it will be perceived,that ; property in New York City is eheaper.to-day,than the prospective value of real estate "Vesuvius City." It is not our purpose to disparage ) these enterprises "out West," which are now absorbing so much capital, so much energy, so much talent; but we would 1 prevent misconception in the winds of persons proposing to leave old homes, old associations, old occupations, to seek the new up - on these Western lands; we would have them so (or rather Come—since we write rem the West) with their eyes' . open, ne.d : thus incur fewer disappoint ments ler ,the Allure. We have met with so many disappointed persons in our travels that we but r9ent what has been told us, confiraild as their statements are, by our own observation. Let ,ws give an instance: !MI acorn- nt your a noise; the bad "It was qcked, I so bare, hom-we e in the omebody grieved ind— .o'i% will id with "?'was oleo in ith Miss ti can, bleed old omebody was put A farmer in New-England, living com fortaply by his thirty-acre possession and his trade, that of wagon-maker, thought to better his fortune, anoil that of his two daughters and son, by emigrating to lowa. He readily found a purchaser for his snug and really beautiful home, and with three._ thousand .dollars started INVelt. Arrived in lowa he visited many of these paper towns, and finally made a location in a thriving village, near the:geographical cen tre of the county. Property' commanded pretty "steep", prices, but he succeeded in buying out an earlier', settler, agreeing to pay one hundred dollars per footfront for the lot, and eight liOndred dollars for improvements, consisting of a small one story frame house, slab shed for horse, -well twelye feet deep, ar44 e i all-board fence around the premises, I lie turned the shed into a wagonahop and commenced work, - paying very. high prices for every inch of timber which he had to Provisions were very high, and; econo mize as his good wife would, it was found ! that ten dollars per week were necessary for hip household wants. He could not get money for his In a word, he could not make ends meet; and, at the end of the year, he sold out for fifteen hundred dollars whit had cost him three thousand dollars. Ida family were dis pirited; hut' there was l now no borne for them eacefit in •gthn West," and he was en roOe tot; Kansas when we left him. New, this is not a sing le experience; it, is one nthUndreds—nay, we believe of thousand's, Who part 'with comfortable homes in. the New England States, in an NOw-Tork; in Ohio, to try 'quick for tunes in the West. Ind we think a five I years'_!experienee in 'frontier life, away from good society, !.froni, schools, from Market, from all that readers living de- sirable will 'make a sad Showiu4 'against the raft — 9rbusiness u may success ilithese new Stites. Taking , into consideration the privations a'family must neCessarily suffer—the abseriee from , 1 friends and'-familiar society, the want of good schools and goOd! preaching on the Sabbath day, thegreat distanCe from mar -1 ket and consequent low pric'es which must attend grain 7 raising--we think the ad vice to all well-to-do farmers and mechan ics in the old States, to stay where they are, is good, sensible couneil, which we give ,grauitiously, after considering well upon the question of emigrntion in all its lights and shades: • tours, ' SißtUantAlts PEW. SPEECH FROM A :VETERAN OP ONE, HUNDRED AND SEVENTEEN! YEAns!---- The Chicago . Tribune states that at the Pioneer festival, at Madisoa, Wis., a very interesting speech was made by Joseph Creelie. He had lived one century and seventeen years, had been three times married, and, of his nine children, only one, the seventh, survives,, and she has reached the allotted three score and ten He speaks of "grandchildren almost with- Out number," and says " I come down to you,, fellow pioneere, from a former century—an!old man, with the habits, customs , and feelings of the simple-hearted, contented race of.a centu ry au°, with few,wsuats, and no ambitions aspirations. . I can with truth say that I love my native land ; I have cheerfully risked:my life in its :defence, in repelling the British and Indian foe; and 1 trust there are none here to-day;who will fail to stand by our country in everylhour of trial and'danger." Think of the experienees of this white haired veteran ! He has seen this mighty .nation burst the bonds of Colonial depen .ence and rise to the first, rank among the nations.of the earth. He was twenty-five .when Massachusetts began :hor resistance .to the stamp act ; he 13:T the French and Indian :ware, the wax of Revolution, and was in the prime of life when Washington was elected President. When he was born Frederick the Great: sat on the throne of Prussia, and since that day Na poleon Bonaparte has played at Corsica, studied at 'Brienne, conquered Europe and died at St. Helena. What a marvellous lifel The steam engine, thetelegrailt, and *publican prin .ciples and institutions are' : younger than he.—Ncw Haven Palladium. SINGULAR EVENT.—Ort Saturday last, Mr. Samuel M. Dockum, at his furniture manufacturing room in Daniel steel, emp tied a hair mattrass *can the sack, and rolling up the ticking (abOut ten yards) in a compact form, placed it. on the top of an old secretary, which ,hati-been sent in for repairs. The latter article , -was lal' against the side of his'work bench, an , was slightly elevated abole it. ' On Mon day morning on entering. ;the shop the ticking had been entirely consumed by fire, not a single square , inch of it could be found. In the pieee of furniture on which it was laid was a hole burnt equal to a square foot, and charred beyond, and in the floor was a place burnt of half an inch deep. The mystery could. not be solved until it was found that a panorama lens on a pedestal Which had been sent in for repairs, had been aecidentatily left on the bench before the window; at just such a distance as-to bring the focus of the sun at in early hour of the Morning,: directly on: the cloth, As the shop was closed there was no air to produce a blaze, aud it is probable that it was mouldering for half the day at least. Had the building burned down, the *martian that the fire might have originated in this way scarce any one would have listened to. • It is a fortunate circumstance t6t it is a rule of tfie shop to have all the shavings cleared up every Saturday night,. as the observ ance of that rule probably saved the build ing. •-The escape is as providential, as the cause of the fire was singular.--Ports mouth Journal. =I 'ExrPLOTiIENT:voit.WomEN—/njustike of Men tinvqrds Women--Necessity - for 1 . additional we uptitions for I.- , Wo.mere..— sa y. 'The London Morning Rot ys:: . "Excepting doniestic service, there is no remunerative employMent for . Young women of the humbler classes.- Slop-work leads to Slavery, starvation and death.— What elite is there? Few girls are taught book-keeping, and consequently, few find employment in shOps and officim Even lace, ribbons, andall the leading articles of .female' attire sold in our 'shops chiefly by men, snot this gross injus tier.. to Wonien ?. If the , only alternative be, on the one hankidlexie. i ss and alluring vice, and on theother slop-prork and star vation,- elm - we wonder • that many, who are by nature loving, sweet, tender, beau tiful and good, fall 1 before the cruel and corrupting influences which are; made to bear upon them. , I " The injustice of men towards women is real, but it is wit intentienal. In ruder times, the business of life required a strong arm,' and capacity for physical en durance._ All thisis now.changed : but, nevertheles, piofitable occupations requir ing no bodily strength, and which are peculiarly suited tolwomen, continue from custom and routine, to be monopolised by men. ReforMatories and missionaries for outcast women i do only an, infinite small amount of good : still far b it from us to discourage them. Of this, however, 1 . i we are firmly convinced, that so long as women are not trailed and educated so as to be able to exekee those remunerative employments to tvh eh they are specially fitted, sir long will (they: be actually co erced into crime Sit misery. If we can not rescue many 'of the 'present race from their evil ways,. wel can at least, take measures to save; those who are now chil dren from being for ed, on reaching ma turity, to select the dread alternative of starvation or infamy " _.., VISE HOW TO EDUCATE OUR , Cim.s.—ln. stead of educating very , girl as though she was born to be independent, self surporting member q society, we educate her to become a ins dependent, dependent, a hang. cr-on, or, as the law ilelicately phrases it, e a chattel. l n -,so respects, indeed, among whom a plan' ity of wives is per mitted, aiid who re,,, d women purely as so much live stock; or among such pe. - ple women are, at all events provided with shelter, food and clothing—they are "cared for," as cattle are. There is a completeness is s+h a system. . :But among ourselves we treat women as cat- I tle, without . providing for them as cattle. We take the worst part of barbarism, and the worst part of civilization, and work them into a heterogeneous whole. We bring up our women to be dependent, and then leave them without any one to depend on. There is no, one, there is nothing for them to lean upon, and they fall to the ground. Now, what every woman, no less than every man, should have to depend upon) is an ability, after some fashion or , otheri„ to turn labor into money. She may or Imay not be compel:. led to exercise it, b 4 every one ought to possess it. If she belong to the richer classes, she may hav to exercise it; if to the poorer, she assuredly will. Caunca STIWCK y LIGHTNING !-- HOOPS MELTED l Sabbath before last, a violent thunder storm passed over Nei Jersey. 'At Jamesburg, near Amboy, the Sabbath School bf the Presbyterian Church was holding j its meeting in the afternoon, when the fluid struck the building. It entered the roof, making only a small hole and descended by the chandelier to the centre- of the 'church, where it exploded. Quite a number of adults, as- well as•ehildren were prostrat ed by it, and their. clothes burnt. Yet no fatal result followed althonA some hours, and even days, followed before per feet Festoration took place. But the re markable feature of it, remains to be told, and this , is given by a f clergyman who re ceived it from one presant. It is stated that' the ladie.s who wore brass hoopS in their dresses, were uninjured, but the hoops themseloes.were mclted! The elec tric fluid was thus diffUsed, and perhais lives saved by this novel species of con ductor.—N. Y. Evangelist. AN exchange myth "The Roman forum is now 'a cow market, the ,Tupean rock a cabbage garden, and the palace of the Cmsara a rope Walk." To which the - ion:faille Yournal adds: "And .Aibland.is the raideizeilof James R. Clay.". . v ~.FOITB : CEJAT ..:v;, S' 41 . 0 _PER'S oMx`' A Nova. PUNISIEMEid:•-414_ heyo a vel 'milieus regulation of the internaL, , police of the school it Ilitoldiain, is SwitrOand, 'and intended to heep Children from playing truant, which they, accomplish effectually by working,'not upon the child's fear of the :rodi , ' of his studies, liat upon the pareat i ii lora of"money. That is to sayi if the oliil dren are absent, and as often as thei ire absent, a cross is put against the parent's . name and he is made •acconntable i and is - fined; if he does not give satisfactory,res sins Tor the 'child'elabsenee. all the- WhiPpingsilir Iths;j*tiusuistit-: administered by the 'Parent, and thera. fore, it being sure, if there be a finifor the parents to pay; that the mount of it will be fully endorsed - upon the child with a birch rod, the. pupae taking good" care to be punctually at school..'Node. , Unguent calk escape, for no false exonse main manufactered. To DRivE AwArßATa.—=Some e: - since a correspondeat of the Boston a grater, recommended the. use potash;. for that ptirpose. The rata troubled him'. very much, having entered through the , chamber flear. they uppeared in , great , numbers and were very troublesome, so that he felt justified in resorting tie:- • tae= meesures to effect their 'expulsion from his premises. He pounded- u Tot. - ash and strewed it aroand the holes,' and: • rubbed some under the boa*, add on. the sides where they came thronglk-r- The next night he heard- a ague:ding among them, which he supposed waa from) the caustic nature of the potash that gat i. among their hair or on their. Imie feet-, They disappeared, and for a long time he was exempt from any further annoyance. LOOK. ON TUIS PICTURE, THEN , ON Taxr. —The Albany Journa,/ _saps: Eleven, States voted for Fremont and u*ete*foi; Buchanan—nearly two tUone. In the eleven. 'States-, there are 43 iioo' Free Schools. In the nineteen States there are 37,000 Free SChools. In the. eleven States there are 2,000,-. 000 of Scholars. - ' . . In the nineteen States Chore ars lAgiO r , 000 of Scholars. In the eleven States there are 8091 L ibraries with 800,000 volumes . ' •1 • In the nineteen States there are 393 Li braries with 530,000 volumes. In the eleven States there are 12,000 Common School Libraries. In the nineteen States there are. 250 Common School Libraries. • . In the eleven States there;are 235 mil; lions of copies of newspapers. ". In the nineteen States there are 161 millions of copies of newspapers. A HEART AND HAND WORTH HAI"- ING.—No person who has any! reverence for the good; the ~true • an& .beautiful. in human nature,' carrhelp admiring thecnn blewomau of whom the followii4 reeorcl - is made by a letter-writet in the West;;: "While in Gratiot county, Mich., dur ing the recent fearful famine, he saw a woman . who, with affectionate deiotion sustained her sick husband and Om' 'chil dren on maple sugar, and lean several days before she could' get:other relief; and, when, at last, relief camelshe had to carry the provisions several mbar= h6ir back. "This woman had takencare Of her sick husband since last:August, and her family of two 'children; besides' Which; Ake made 100 poinds of maple 'fing4, Cleared the ground and hoed hi Oro of spring wheat, and plantedisome col i u and potatoes. She Was habitedin titter ed garments!' I sarAn eccentric clergyman, late y alluding in his -pulpit to the subject family government remarked .that it is, often - said ' , that 'now-a4lays 'there is .. &frilly government . But it is' .: . - , 1 f . _ , • ilse! There is just as much fa mil y government now as there ever, was, j t' as much as in the da)r's of ourfathers, a grandfathers. The only' differeiiisi that then theold folks did the pie ' ' 43 now it is done by-the youngronas.7, larVithen -Dr • If.'zikeLawyer: A. were walking arm in, arm, a : Wag isaid-to a , friend, "these tive'are equel3o*lP highwayman:". Why? leas- the nepease. "Because rejoiimi the .a?agi-"itital4W yer and alioeto—lour. • •:L .: • fortitude suffers xot,the, to dejected with any eVat,lo., ance duffers it,nat to.be drivm from esty by any alluretnente. ; .' .- '?~E'~k: