GLE COPIES, B: NUMBER.` 28. VOLNIE TIE POTTER JOURNAL, .PUBLISHED'EVERY THURSDAY MORNING, MT /rhos. S. Chase, "To whom all Letters and Communications shoufd be addressed, to secure attention Terms—lnvariably in Advance : aatp=Annum. Terra* of Advertising. Squttre insertion, - - - I a , 3 " - - - $1 50 Each subsequent insertion less than 13, 25 I Squnre three months, . '. "50 Q. ~ s i, ~ fi 400 1 - ~ nine " ------ - ` 5 50 1 ~, one I: year, • 600 Rule and figure wOrk, per sq., 3 ins. 300 Every subsequent insertion, 50 E. Column six'. months, - 18 00 .1 .1.1 , u'"l h 10 00 - Ig tt 700 1 " I, per year, 20 00 4, .4 . 1 _ 16 00 Double-colnmn, displayed, per annum 65 00 4ta six months, 32 00 - I a ' " - three " 16 00 it I 'I " one month. 600 r velliitt:s, imcb insertion under 4, 100 Parts tacoluMns Ii ill be inserted at tae same rates. , i Administrators of 4 Esocutznis Notice, 200 Auditor's Notices, each, _ 1 50 Slierifri Sales; per tract, 1 50 Xarriage Notices, each, 1 00 Divorce Notices, each, 1 50 Administratoes Sales, per square for 4 insertions, Business or Professional Cards, each, not ezceding 8 lines. per „year, - - 500 Special and Editorial Notices, per line, 10 10e-All transient advertisements must be paid in advance, and no notice will be taken of advertisements I from a distance, unless they are accompanied by the money or satisfactory reference. 1510i055 eatls. JOHN S. MANN, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW. Coudersport, Pa.. will attend th , ..! several Courts in Potter and r Kean Counties. All bissiecas entrusted in his care will receive prompt attention. Office on Main st., oppo site the Court House. 10:1 F. W. KNOX, ATTOTZ.! , TEY AT LAW, Coudersport, Pa., will regularly attend the Courts in Potter and tilt adjoining Counties. 10:1 ARTHUR G. OLMSTED, ATTORNEY & COUNSELLOR AT LAW, Coudersport, Pa., will attend to all businPss entru,ied to his ce , ,Fe., r.ith p:oloptacs and Sdolity. o:flee iu Temperan.:e flock, sc.:- Gad pOor, Main St.l.u: • ISAAC BENSON ATTOUNIT AT LAW, Coudersport, Pa.. will attend to all. Uusiraess entrust , ,d to him. with care an .I promptness. Office comer of Vi - e,;t aid Third sts. L. - P. WILLISTON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Wellsboro', Tioga'Co., Pa., will attend the Courts. in Potter and WlCean Counties. 9:13' R. W. BENTGY, BUSVEYOR AND CONVEYANCER, Eny- Mond P. 0., (Alle,gany Tp.,) Potter Co., Pa. : will attend to all business in his line, with care and dispatch. 9:33 W. K. KLNO, SURVEYOR, DRAFTSMAN AND CONVEY ANCER, Smethport, M'Kean Cu., Pa., will attend' to business for nun-resident land holders, upon reasonable terms. Referen ces given if required. P. S.—Maps of anyj part of the. County made to order. 9:13 • 0. T. ELLISON, PRACTICING PHYSICIAN, Coudersport, Pa., respectfully informs the citizens of the vil lage and vicinity that he will promply re spond to all call:: for professional services. Office en Main st., in building formerly oc cupied by C. W. Ellis, Esq. 9:2:2 • COLLINS SMITH • - •SMITH .k." JONES, • • DEALERS IN DRUGS, MEDICINES, PAINTS, (Mg, Fairy Articles, Stationery, Dry Good', Groceries, .tc., Maia st., Coudersport, Pa. 10:1- D. E. OLMSTED, DEALER IN DRY GOODS, READY-MADE Clothing, Crockery, Groceries, &c., Main st., Coudersport, Pa, ' 10:1 AL W. 31.A.nr, DEALER IN BOOKS & STATIONERY, MAG AZINES and Music, N. W. corner of Main :sad Third sts., Coudersport, Pa. 10:1 E. R. HARRINGTON, JEWELLER, Coudersport, Pa., hal - p g. engag -4* a window in Schoomaker & Jackson's StArg sill envy on the Watch and Jewelry jausigegs there. A fine assortment of Jew elry .cogstantly on hand. Watches and Jewelry carefully repaired, in the hest style, on the shortest notice—all work warranted. HENRY J. OLMSTED, (SC.CCESSON, To .U3IES W. SIIITEO pEALER IN STOVES, TIN lc SHEET IRON NVAR, Nair. at., nearly opposite the Court Rouse, Coudersport, Pa. Tin and Sheet froolVore mode' to order, in good style, on slaort notice. 10:1 COUDERSPORT HOTEL, F. GLASSIIIRE, Proprietor, Corner of Main and. Second Street; Coudersport, Pot ter Co., Pa. 9:44 • ALLEGANY HOUSE, BAIL EL M. MILLS, Proprietor, Colesburg, Petter Co., Pa., seven miles north of Cou 6er•Sro2eon the W2ol.sviiie Road. 5i444 . . , . - 41 , -..- , . ' - ' l , ' r -.- :,' ::-.: ;. .'. : 71" - 1 -.'. -,,.• -..; - - „- i , . . , .. , 4 -......._ . " . --•• :- - . Animmoviorimmonsemagio. .. . -- I " , 'l , . -: - ~ 4 9- ' - 1.., , .'' . -- -.: _ 1 •-; •.. ;- ...: ' .-. . 1- -C. ~ ', ' ' , ; .:-- - . , ..': • , -- ' ;._ : _ " • ' '' r ' . . .. .. . • . , -(4 - 0° •,-- ''-.- ..,-; , , ~ ~. t -. 0 . i . .... . . r ...‘.,......;,,,,. . ,„,.., ...,... ~....,,...,.,. ~,,oit ki :-., ".. . ; - ,- , I - - , - .( ' . i•-• - - ' eiw • 1 - 1 ! 110 (,) - AP' ... • - • ,!- .. mb A.----1 1 P ••'-.11. .r . , ,t , , _ • :- - ,-...;,. ..: -•• , •,' - -_ . . _ Their motions are so gracefis As here and there they' flyt ; They seem to bring a blessing Down with them from on high They lightly tap My Window, l But quickly haste array ; Their language, to my mind, id A mimic. roundelay. They play, with fairy harp-strinLa Suspended,,on the trees, And dance to their own music, By motion of the breeze. -I • . A carpet they are strewing, ' ' Of beauty, on the plaid-- With brooklets intermingling, Their forms are lost again. per square 112EI I love those pearli;uow,tiako Now showering from t.hove-1 But, more-than these, theiror Deserves our praise and j t S. M. tt3r,lN. ELEVEN Mn.c. Pa.. Dec. 1851% LETTERS ON 'CHILI.-NO. I. .. Introductory—Testimony of Traveller: — Wilkes, Gins,ißayard Tti for and Heruclutits—Ealciit tr:c. of 1 chili— Provinces—Ricent—Fulitre !ettcrs. 1 'MESSRS. EDITORS :—.71.105t f of your readers, in common with our enquiring eauntryuien generally, are •probably but little acquainted with those distant States of ti oath America, whose "Winter, stern icier. of the lit teritti year," is already over and gone, atAl budding Spring; time is even now just ready to give place to , early &Burnet (NoV. 5.) • Yielding v., hind requests from your; wives and other friends, I propose,from time to time, to give you some of the re,. sults of my observations in South Ainer.F 7 ca, and especially iu the so styled Repubi• lie of CHILI. Much that I have myself observed in Chili since 1554 haS, indeed, - been ready described by other writers.. I have,li in fact, been surprised to . find that sold much has been written in English, regard_ ing that and other Spanish Americanll countries, during • the last quarter of all century. Still fullef, but not so reliable', or valuable accounts of Chilian affairs have been given in Spanish, French, Ger man and Italian. • But I will not . trouble you with even the names of these writers at present.— Capt. Wilkes (1839) and Lieut. Gilliss, (1849-52) in their Narratives, have given us a great amount of interesting and reliable information respecting Chili. In their iis.its and explorations in South America, as well as in that of the lament ed Capt. Herndon to the "Valley of they 'Amazon," (1851-53) and recently in that of Lieut. I'age to the La Plata and 'its adjacent countries, the Navy Depart-, \ment of the United States are deservingl of Mir warmest gratitude. They certain ly have mine, - as has each of the gentle.! I men who have thus contributed to en- 1 I large the bounds of our knowledke in re-1 .-ard to the countries they have visited. Unfortunately, the published accounts of these travellers, being in the form of. voluminous "Reports" tp the United States Government, or to the. Naval De partment, are not circulated among the people as they should be. lam happy to be able to vouch for their accuraey,.as far as Chili is concerned, and only wish that what Capt. Wilkes and Lieut. Gil liss have written coneerning Chili coitld be read as - extensive l ls - as possible. It would do good to those there, sitting "in the region and shadow of death," and to us, who enjoy so' many privileges and blessings in our own more'favored home, if the condition 'of thingS in a country -- like Chili could be 'accurately made known. L7ME=E! _ I do not pretend to say that-a.visiter, as Capt. Wilkes was in Chili, in 1839; or a resident and !traveller for two or three years, as Lieut. Gillis wasiin 1849 --'52; or as I was in 1855,; '56, and 's7 can know or tell all about ezerygang there. This . has not, asyet, been as to ally country in the World. At yet The accumulated testimony of 'travellers, from lltrodotiis -clown; has Timishedi us with COUDERSPORT, _POTTER OUNTY, PA., TORSDAY, JANUARY 14, XBs'., irrigindf _ I: - I For the Potthr 'SNOW SONG. A thousand pearbisnorr-IlalOs Aro dropping all around; Their beautiful and rare shapes ro Are lost upon ; the gnd. They bury Woodland flowers To blossoM in the:spring, They're coming down in shoWeo, Embroidering everything. They wreathe, vitt' silver froSt-*ork, The tree-tops ever green ; I And, in elfh nook and crevice, Their tiny forms are seen. Ilritis Di, Ci7aol.. From the Am i eriM,a Presb y terian ~~~..., jam- ..„ gjeboleo °to ?i•jfiiiiiies' of Xille PehNekoi9, 40..0 Dise.l . oioqiior of ilioNbit;, titekfOo f(.01,. nearly-all we as yet knoviathe earth and of man. And this slow and confessedly imperfect tucatui of coWcting information is about all we shall have to depend upon, for the future. The printing press itself only give.s utterance to the testimony of the traveller; as to some of his experience. Bayard Taylor, in the tropics and in the polar regions, sees many things, and feels them too, in his soul, which the pen can not .portray. So did Herodotus, the fath er of history; and his racy narrative is beginning but recently to be more and more believed. But enough by way of introduction; perhaps too much. Gnus " extends from the Tropic of Capricorn, on the north, along, the Pa cific coast, to Cape Horn on the South; and between that ocean on the west and the .highest crest of the Cordillera of the Andes on the east. It reaches from per petual summer, in the Desert of Atacama, up to the icy domains of the Polar Sea, at 56° south. I say up, for the sailor says so, and so would you, reader, if the Norh Star was 30° to 40° below your horizon, and the pole of the earth pointed up to the same degree in the heavens above• % ) , ou. We say down to the Equa tor and up to the Poles all - over the world. Chili claims, then, the whole southern temperate - region on the Pacific. But there is a disputed boundary line be tween her and Bolivia at 25° south, and between her and the Araw.canian Indians at 37° 30'. Except a fort (Valdivia) on the coast, at 40°, and a small and wretch ed German settlement in 42°, Chili oc cupies 'no territory south of 37° 30', save the forlorn penal settlement at Port Fam ine, in the Straits of illa , rgellan, and the island of Chilo6, off the coast, in 41°- 43°. =I The length of territory claimed is not less than 2,200 miles, having an average breadth of about 70 mites. But Chili really occuies 'less than 1,000 miles on the coast-, and most of her population lies within an extent of 500 miles (from 30° to 37 0 ) along the coast, and reaching back to the Andes' for about 100, miles distant, and including an area of 50,000 square miles. Comprehended in this are thirteen provinces, mostly named from their principal cities, as Coquimbo, Val paraiso, Santiago, Concepcion, &c. These provinces are governed each by. a chief officer, called liztentlente; who is appoint- - ed'hy the Chief 3lagistrate of the nation, to whom alone he is responsible for the. discharte of his trust. Most of these In tendAites arc military men or civilians whom the President wishes to reward for political services. They are often :•t_:aoc ed from province to province to prevent affiliations with the people, or to preserve their loyalty to the government. Some of them are very worthy men. Such is their character generally in the presence of a large foreign population, as in Val paraiso and Concepcion at present, where any overt acts of injustice on the part of this-officer would be severely reprehended. Numi.rous small - rivers—mostly •tor= rents, that is, dry in summer and full in the rainy season— descend front the slopes of the Andes to the sea. These, like the provinces, often take their names from the city near them, as the Copiabo, Imperial, &c. None of them are naviga ble, although two or three have been im agined by the .Chilians to be so. At tempts ba-ye been made, to navigate, by small steamers, the Manic, at Constitu cion, and the Biobio, at Concepcion, in 11,lie south of the inhabited pail of the country but hitherto without success, owing to the shanown:%ss of the waters.— ;IThe Imperial, in the Araucanian country, is said to be - navigable, but the Chilian ilgoverninent has never been permitted by ilthe -natives by experiment to test the ! fact. But, for the present, I close. Hereaf ;ler' when treating of the manners, relig ioni , education, arts and prospects of the .31iilians, I may hope to give you what 14v ill be of more interest to your . readers. Chili.is, without doubt, foremost of the Spanish States of South America in all respects, as I shall aim to show before I Cease writing. 13. * This name is always spelled by natives Chile, and pronounced Chee-lay. (Italian) says it comes from the Araucos' word for snow, because of its snow,y summits. M. Gay ( French) says it is so named from the note of a bird ; but I never could find .this bird there, nor any one who knew him. Pur dlas, in his Pilgrims, says, " It is rightly nam ed Chilli, or Chilly, from its cold." The down Boast winds and uniformly cold nights .ther• Might make one feel that Purchas was right. The Paris Courier says that Mrs. Reardon, a young American widow of al most boundless resources, who will here after reside in that city, is the original of Flora McFlimsey, in Butler's satirical po em "Nothing to Wear." , I THE Washington Star tells of a church in that remarkable city where it part of the reli gious exercises consist of kissing.. WHY is a loafer in a printing office like a ,shade tree? Because we are glad when he leaven. • =ME 50,0 P..... , grittt6ttiUarç When . Erelliad fed her lord a*ay, And Cain bad killed his brother, • The stars andjlowers, the poets say, Agreed with one another, • To cheat the cuiminq tempter's art; And teafh the race its duty, By keeping on its wicked heart. Their eyes of light and beauty. . , A million ileeplis lidaythey say, he at least a warning ; • And so th, flowers Would wateli by day, The stars front CVO to morniug. ' On hill and prairie, field and lawn, Their ditry eyes upturning, The flowers still wateh from reddeningdawn Till western skies are burning. Alas ! each hour of daylight tells A tale of shame so crushing, That some turn white as sea-bleached shells And sonde are always blushing. But when the patient - stars look down On all their light discovers, The traitot's smile, the murderer's frown, The lipsl of lying lovers, They try to shut their saddening eyes, And in, Cho vain endpavor, • • We see thin winking in the skies, And so they wink forever. Here is al bit of advice to young ladies, setting forth how they may know whether a young gaoant is really courting them, or only _paying them polite attentions. The confonuding the oue with the other has been the source of very much trouble, both beforelland since the ern. of Mr. Pick wick and M,rs. Burdell A young man admires a pretty girl, and must manif6st it. Ile can't help doing so for the life 4!)f him. The young lady has a tender heart, reaching out like vine ten drils for something to cling to. She sees the admiration, is flattered ; begins soon to love; expects some tender avowal; and perhaps gets so far as to decide that she will 'choose :I jvhite satin under that gauze, &c., at the very moment that the gallant she half loves is popping the question to another damsel ten miles off! Now the difficulty lies in nut precisely understanding:the difference,betweeu po lite attentions and the tender manifesta tions of lore, Admiring a beautiful girl, and wishing to make a wife of her, are not always the sonic thing; and thorelore it is necessary that the damsel should be on the alert ,to discover to which chiss the attentions paid her by the young gentle men belong. • First then if a coung ionn greets you 'in a loud, free and, hearty tone - ; if he knows,,precisely where to put' his hands; if he stares you straight in the 'eye, with; 'his mouth wide open; if he- turns his back upon you to speak to anotheri; if he tells you who made his coat; if he squeezes your hand;, if ho eats heartily au your presence; ,if he fails to telk very 'kindly to your mother; if in short he sneezes when you are singing, criticises your curls, or fails to be foolish fifteen times every ' hour,.then don't fall in lore with him for the world i He only admires you let him say what he will to the contrary... On the other hand, if he be merry with everybody•eise,,blit goiet with, you ; if he be autious to -see if your tea is sufficiently sweetened, .aud your dear person well wrapped up when you go , out - into tEe cold ; if he 'talks very low and never looks you steadilyin the eye; if his checks are, red and his nose only blushes, it is enough. If he romps With your sister, sighs like a pair of bellows, looks. solemn when you are addressed by another gentleman, and . in fact is the Most Still, awkward, stupid, yet anxious of all your male friends, you may go ahead and make the poor fellow happy ! Yonne.' ladies! keep your hearth in a case of good l'eatlier, or some other tough substance, until the right one is found be yond a doubt, after which you can go on and love, and .court, and be married and happy, without the least bit of trouble. There are'some things which should 'be; ac stuck, up with a pin'," over the fireplace, The following advice, by Beecher,l is one of them. In his 'sermon on the money crisi, he says : "Take cote of ,yourselvei In the first . place, Overy:Man should take care of his .body: If yOur body fails, your energy is gone. It must 'nut fail you. You want food and .sle,ep.. Bleep is to a man's brain ' what the rain is to our cisterns, with this difference—that our cisterns hold 'a sup, ply for severrl days, whereas cur brain holds a supply for one day only. Sleep over night is the, shower that tills it up. _We- owe it as a duty to ourselves to see that this eentral . power be not exhausted by sleeplessness: is : a duty._ to sleep ienough.. .4 man Who cannot sleep may I • From the Atlontie-Mauthl) 'NATURE AND HUMANITY. sow. to Tell. n - This Up. 71 .7777- , . .. i • as well stop business, and putJiusiness!in: the hands Of the.doetor. 116 Who broods over retr-htit pldn's' will end his days in a lunatic Riyhtut. l Both sleeituid food are greatly under-the 'control Of the will. They: must be - treated as you 'treat refrac-. tory . ehildi• n, Who'refuse to - eit . when set ting out ugOn a journey. If they, say,' I can't,' you are to solty, ' You .shall," you must l' - Then, briccire of sAStitnting stimulants ...ir nutriment !". This time, is one which ilk . inake ten thousand: men go • down to ad 1 nkard's grave. Brandy may I take you through; but it villibe out of the, wrong gate.. Beware; too, of nervousness: A hot - brair is like a new, candle put lute! a hot vend estlek..'lt 'ins_ off at (mei end,. and . milts off at the other ; and iS all gone lir a moment. ' Don't talk. too mach. It is wondelut how much a - . man May Mk himself away. Men talk over their troubles going up. Broadwaytalk • them over going ,over the Terry—talk in their houses. Jfeet your friend with. a ckeer lut lace. Do not make a . reel of your', mind, to wind and unwind your, business! upon.- every day. Never let New York cross the ferry with - you. Never let h it cross your threshold, ,any more thanlou! would a wolf. Rest yourselves at home, leaveyorir bnSinessbehind you, and change the curreatMf your life every night, in tho company of your wife and children. If necessarry,igo home to a bath, It would do you good to bathe every day, souse of you. Bathe in music. Try that. If you have no piano, no band,of chorded instru ments is half as sweet as the voice of azi,•A. n • ‘ ., tf.owr STORT __.BYLIJ ~... ICKENS,- affectionate wife and the prattle of chit-1 i dren. Don't go borne to burrow in your ens tells the following story of an !! •1 eau bed as an animal burrows in the, earth to cat Oa his captain I , ictv n ey in age , o h i ? i m em e the aom c b a le ptain•- had hid-. yourself. Jr you have been in the , 0 0, eara ii young p-rsonil habit of riding out, don't s . ell your horses. I attraction—a phra.i.; I use as one being.. en-" Take your ride as - you have been accu.s-i tirely new, and one 'you l!never meet with in• toured to do—morriimz, afternoon,' and; the newspapers. This Young," lady Watheloved , iitn . sely t by five yoanggentlemen palsengers; evening. Love music. Find recreation. she N li rtil ut ao4e'pw.ittihei tar peg:;, GO to the Philharmonic. concerts; go and a re i t y l :,.Z.Y.` buy tickets to thein,•if the times are hard - ,lerence for either. Sot khowing haw toMarlse music will do you goad. ! Beware of flit- up: her determination in. this dlc ina, shei, sociableness.: • Now is the time to let the consulted the captain. .Th a e.captain- being: rpla of an original tUrn Of mind. ia s. to the" bucket go down to the very bottom of the ,soring- , lady: 'Jump Oyerb u ard,,and marry the well of frie 3 dship, and let it bring 1. 1 uP ' man who jumps after y oil.' The youbig,, lady,: cooling dra ,ghts." 1 struck with the idea;:anOeingi naturally food of bathing, especially in-Witrth 'weather, it:s.: it . then was, took the advice of the eakaini who' hail a boat manned i case of , accidept:._ Ac cordingly, next morn mg, the five•loversteing on:deck, and looking dev'otedly at the young lady, she plunged inth the sea head: foremost. Four of the lovers initnediatelyjumPed in:aftet.-. her, When the young Iddy_and her fodr,ilov-- ers we-e got out again, sire says ,to the_ Cap, - fain : 'what am I to do With them now, they an?: so wet ?' ' Says the captain, 'take! the 'd r y,. ,one f .. And the young lady-did, and She' Ma 4 r- - ri..:11 him." MARBIEb LIFE.—The following beau tiful and true sentiments from-the pen of that charming writer, Fredrika Bremer, whose observations might well become rules of life, so appropriate, are they to many of its phases : "Deceive not one another in small things nor in great.. One little singl:, lie has, beihre now, disturbed . a whole :carri ed life, a small cause has often great con sequences.. Fold not the. arms together and sit idle. Laziness is the devil's cush ion." Do- not run much from home. One's own hearth is of more worth thaa gold. 3lany a marriage., my friends, be- . gins like.a rosy moruing , and then falls away like a stow-wreath. And why, my friends? Bemuse the married pair neg lect to be as Well pleasing to each other after Marriage as before.. Endeavor al way s, my children, to please one another; but at the same time keep God . in your thoughts. Lavish not all your love to day, for remetuber that marriage has its to-morrow, likewise, and its day- after to morrow, too. Spare, as one may say, fuelforthe winter. Consider, in:ydaught ers, what the word wife expresses. The married -Woman is the husband's- domestic faith ; in her hand he Must he able to confide house and family;; be able to en trust her the key of his heart, as well as the key of his eating room. llis honor and his home are under her keeping—his well-beir o. is in her hand, Think of this: And you, sons, be faithful{ husbands, and good- fathers of families. Act so that your wives shall esteem aad love you. tine, Art of Conve:frs!ng. .I.4adaru.De Stael,•one of the most ele-I rant convcrsasionalists the! world has ever! known, was by no means a. handsome wo-! man, so far as mere beauty of feature is concerned . ; but Byron, the; ost fastidious ; of beauty fanciers, 'declaredshe.could talk; down her.face - in fifteen- Minutes, at The! end of which time-she been.* positively! beautiful. The .art of conversation is a rare gift, and to be cultivated as one would i cultivate any desirable art. With some,l it is spontaneous faeultyl . with all, it can: be acquired in. greater or less degree of; perfection. An old boak'opon etiquette, ; among an immense deal of. twaddle, con-' tains some .grains of.sfiund sense, which would profit all to heed. On the subject of conversation;.Ure are told to " interro . gate without display, not' to interrupt a' profitable spe,akei, nor desireaMbitiOusly to put in a woi j ;d of one's own, to be. l ashamed of receiving, or to. be grudging, of infOrmation, nor to pass' another's knOwledge for cue's own." And again,. that the "Middle tone of, voice, neither so, Jo* as to be imMdible, nor ill-bred from its high pitelt,' is the, most desirable. And, also; that ,"one should reflect first. .what he is going to say, and then give it utterance.; be courteous wheA addressed, amiable in iocie intercourse, not 'aiming to be pleasant y facetiousness, but culti- MEM 11111 111 Ili Er FO It '1 1 E015:4145 SSEL 7 ANN:int, - Ivating - gentlenea w hi n IlaTshness is ever: to lie' put usid - in Censuring;' Advice i to Youth:' Elgliteen things im- 7hic yotq ple .k resider themselves very Toliti 1. Loud laughter. , ... . .. - ,r, 2. "Reading when others .a e. 3 - . Cutting fin Or-nails in co 4. Leaving mectinobe:fore it isl 5. Whispering in meeting...•.-.. G. :Gazing at strangers. . . 7 Leaving a sVanger•withoitt i itA want of reverence .for - sun Reading tdoud in company 1 shed. . 1 . • T r I,J.Leceivnig a present wail° ." . • 11 tation of gratitude. • - i being 10. inanife 11. verati ,yoursell the topic 12. Laughing at the mistakes o 13. Joking others in :cmupany. r Correcting older persons tha t self, esill?cially parents. ; • ~. 5. To commence talking before are; througu. 16. Answering questions. when others. 17. Commencing to eat- : as soon set.down to table.. Acid--., • 18. In not listening to what ing in company—nniees I you 4. show contempt forthe;*peaker.. • bred person will not inake•,an olisq ; whilst another: of the company is a ing himself to it: A ris e g n-1 says that in gradingnear.the : crossing of pros(' and Ma 'streets, the Workmen have been obliged 'to 'trespass upon, the old burying-ground of; the -Indians who. once had•their villabe here, and lint afew sktills and bones hate 'been thrown up. Day before yesterday, an Indian witii his squaw and little' boy i lkappened to pass al6ng just as the worltaien struck an..ln-," . dian mound. lie' stopped,. and : Or. n shOrt time silently IWatehed the inewas - they rudely east its 'contents out of their, way, but soon overcame by : kis : emotiou,,_ he, • conimeneed sobbing, and then sat . doWn upon the ground; drew his wife and: little one to him, and wept like a chili.. The kind-hearted laborers in pity for feelings, gathered the .bongs they : 'had:. thrown out, covered"thein ih .the nfotiud, agsin, and retired to another part . . worth until be gent away; ; . it was AncLeo. ,.; a serrowfal scene, an d'eduld not bu:t aTe# those who witnessed 'it. ' -• _ LOVE . FOR THE DEAD.--L•The love that. - survives the tomb, says Irving, :is orie•cif the noblest attributes of the son]. • It ha:s its - woes, it has- lik.ewiseits delights ; . atie when the oYerrilieltnibg burst of &refill' calmed into the gentle tear of recollectidn; then the sudden.: anguish and conviilled- • _ agony is over ; the present riiins,af :thos we; most loved are softened a - wayihto.petj! side meditation on all that it was in; the': day of its loveliness. Who ayoUld" , tOot. sorrow from the heart ; though.it:inay sometimes throw a passing : cloud - eVer-the bright hour of gayety; :or. spre,adia - tieep• - sadness over the hour -of •.gloont ?.',llT.et; who would exchange. it evonsfor - the 'SO*: of pleasure. or the burst ofreVelry ? Nhit there is a voice from.-the tbmb sweeter than song; . there is remembranee'of the; dead_ to which .we turn :Oen from - -the . chd.rm of the living. ".' •IN relation to rents;.. {says the °don, Tii,avette7= those ho have- been spend -:• . mg nearly one-half et their incomee-hi this, way, find it necessaay to economise, 'and i therefore the demand for costly.. houses :a lhas greatly fallen off.. ' We---hear;ef one I cafe where a tenant informa his , land- lord that he contd. not Tay the; Tent,- . $6OO Per annuni,.for, his house and Must_ move. The landlord,,rather than to. ; httvo hit house. vacant offered fii - let. hita keep iit for the present at; s'3oo; , Tli tenant . i still shook his,, lead. Fivally, an, agree: 1 merit was made that he shouldkeep the- Buse until Springl v at:the rate .of $2 . 001 ! per y e ar. , ■ MB II =I CBE .itions. , even. MI o pep. • alking. any closed. BEM a seat I Cr/OM ithoiit some f con- j others. n your-- others plit to as you 19 saT-. ;sire 'to I well • rvat ion I ddress Dick- Ariteri- ME
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers