SLNOLE COPIES, } TIM POTTER JOURNAL, ',BURIED EVERY THURSDAY MORNING, BY Thos. S., Chase, i'zrtions );wises or Professional Cards, each, :et exceding S lines, per year, - - 500 Ircial and Edito o rial Notices, per line, 10 tar All transient advertisements must be pidia advance, and no notice•n•ill be taken i stivertii:emcnts. from a distance, unless they re accompanied by the money or satisfactory a!'cteace. 'glltslitt,ss 6'405. IMMUUUMItifiIIu tttt t tt 4111111slimanstinflantultunau JOHN S. MANN, ATTORNEY AND 'COUNSELLOR AT LAW, Coudersport. - Pa., will attend the several Courts in Potter anti M'Kean Counties. All tusiaess entrusted in hie care s will receive .prompt attention. Office on Main st.., oppo- Me the Court House. 10:1 F. W. KNOX, irroRKE7 - - A'r LAW, Coudersport. Ps., will regularly attend the Courts in Potter and Se adjoining, Counties. 10:1 ARTHUR a. OLMSTED, , ITTORSEY ,d; COUNSE[LOR AT LAW, Cuaderport, Pa., K ili attend to ail business tetruted to his care, with promptues and tdc ity, Office in Temperance Block, sev en,' ,loor, Main St. 10:1 ISAAC BENSON. IrTOII:CRY AT LAW. Coudersport, Pa.. 171':i {44%113 a:1 business entru.sted to him. with We Pad promptuess. 01.1,1ce corner of West 1:(1 Third sts. 1u:1 L. P. WILLISTON, .11'1011NEY AT LAW. Well:4boro', Tioga Co. • PA.. Will atteud the Courts in Potter ant IllitAn Counties. 9:13 w. K. KING, !Ltrxr.Yort. DRAFTSMAN AND CONVEY ANCER, Srnethport, .31'Keau Co., Pa., will mend to business for non-resident land 131ders, upon reasonable terms. Referen teg given if required. P. S.—Maps of any ps,n. of the County made to order. 8:13 0. T. ELLISON, 111-CTIGING PHYSICIAN; Coudenport, Pa respectfully ittformi the eltizens of the vil- Lsge and vicinity that he will promply re !pond to all calls for professional services. Nice on Main st., in building formerly oc cupied by C. W. Ellis, Esq. • 9:22 CoLLINs Slant JONES :EALERS LY DRUGS, MEDICINES, PAINTS, 0,1?, Faacy Articles,Stationery, Dry Good, 03:eries, 4:c., Main st., Couderspor.t, Pa. 10:1 D. E. OLMSTED, 111LER IN DRY GOODS, READY-MADE Clothing, Crockery, Groceries, &c., Main st., C; dersport, Pa. 10:1 M. W. MANN, : * :ZALER IN BOOKS k STATIONERY, MAG AZINES and Music, N. W. coiner of Main lad Third sto., Coudersport, 10:1 M AIM GILLON, ,'+F.nnß 'yid TAILOR, late from tho City of Liverpool, England. Shop opposite Court souse, Coudersport, Potter Co. Pa. B.—Particular attention paid to CUT 'TYG. 10:35-1y. J. °LUSTED -S D KELLY. QLMSTED & KELLY, T. 4, - .. ER IN STOVES, TIN & SHEET IRON ' I 4E, Xola st., - nearly opposite the Court }louse. Coudersport, P. Tin and Sheet Ina are tr.ade to order, in good style, on :host notice. 10:1 COUDEITSPORT HOTEL, r. CILASSMIItE, Proprietor, Corner of Lit and Second ,Street:, Coudersport,' Pot ter co., Pa. 9:44 ALLEGANY HOUSE, EA IL 31 MILLS, proprietor, Coleshnrg Putter Co., Pa., sevea miles north of Cou 41Wirt, ou tlte. WellaTillo Road. 2:44 OLEAN HOUSE, J A 3 IES . HUMPHREY, Proprietor, corner of Non and North St's, Olean,N. Y. liorA C/ rriage runs to and from all the Passenger TrAins on the New York. and Erie Railroad. . . ~ . . . . - .... . ~. .... '--e ---------- --- ...- • .. . . .. . .. , . . . ' N C - 3 r • ' -- ~. . • it ... ; . . , . .. /. . .... ........ ..... ~ i . ... .., i ; • • ~• - . 1 •-', li • • . . . . ~ . . in c -v 4 • - . .. . - . . . . . . , . . • . irti 5 0; BA M But some of us have hearts and minds 7 So much the worse for us and,,kou; For grant we seek a better life, - What can we do? 1 LO We can not build and sail your ships. Or drive your engines: we are weak, And ignorant of the tricks of Trade; To think, And speak, Or write some earnest, stammering words, ?lone is ours. and that you hate; So forced within our , e!res again, IN sigh and wait.• Ali! who can tell the hitter hours, The dreary days that women ;pool? . Their thoughts unshii.red, their lives un known, Without a friend! Without a friend ? And what is he, Who, like a shadow:day trzci night, Follows the woman he prefers? Lives in her sight? Her lover, he: a pliant mart. Devoted to her every whim ; He vows to die for her. _o she Must live for h:ro We should be very grateful. Sir, That. when you've nothing else to do, -, You waste your idle hours on So kind of you! Profuse is studied compliments, • Your manners, !our clothes are fine, Though both, nt times, are somewhat strong Of smoke and wine ! Whilt . enn we hope to know of you? Or yon of ug? We act oar parts We love iu jest: it is the play . Of hands. not hearts I You grant my bit tP i r worth , . nre true 01 1.1'11.-1-3, nut a you and me: Your love steady as a star; But we shall see. You - icay'you love me: have you thought How much these little words contains? Alas l n world of happiness, And worlds of pain • You know. or should. your miture now t Its needs end passions. Can Ibe What you desire me ? Do you find Your all in me? You do. But have you thought that r • May have, my -.ay :: and r.neies. too? You love me but have you thought If I love vou ? ' • . But think again. You know me not: I. ton, may be a bultertly, A costly parlor doll. on show For yOu-to buy! You trust me wholly? One word more. You see me young: they call me fair I think I have a pleasant face, ." And pretty hair! E. A. JONES But, by-and-by, mnftee will fadt;;- It must with time; it may with care What say you to a wrinkled wife, With thin, gray hair? You care not, you: in youth, or age, • Your heart is mine. while life endures Is't so! Then, Arthur, here's my hand, Idv heart is yours. eimitt Not long since, I had occasion to visit one of our courts, and while conversing wi h a legal friend, I heard tlfe name of John Anderson called. "There is a hard case," remarked my friend. I looked up on the man in the prisoner's dock. ' He was standing up, and he pleaded gefilty to the crime of theft. He was a tall wan, but bent and infirm, though not old. • His garb was torn, spare and filthy ; . .his, face all bloatied and bloodshut; his hair mat.. I ted with dirt; and bis-bent forth quiver ed with delirium. Certainly I never saw a more pitiable object. Surely that wan was not born a villain. I moved from' my place to obtain a fairer view of his face. He saw my movements and turn- , ed his head. Ile gazed upon the a single instant, and then covering his face with his bands, 'he sank powerless into his seat, ' " Good God 1" 'I involuntarily .ejaciilat. ed, starting forward. "Will—' I had half spoken his name, wher(he quickly raised his head, and cast upan me a look of such imploring agony, that my Debotzd fo for February POEM'. Id you lay e at my feet it my heart, sweet. Life stand wide; o woman 1 She t beside. herein you move . ; or coarse, or fine; ;iste your gold d wine ! ke that too !) four blank walls t light is there? .ow fulls ?; vel out, ,d till it ends: col -girl notes, our friends. notes, the tortured keys end we please .end our flowers sickly bloom!), n our glove, the room. DOWN MILL. A PICTURE OF LIFE i'l'hloiOes of -57i-tp qq() tile; 3lisseli)4los . ert go. tongue' was at once tied. Then he cov ered his face with his bands.' asked my legal companion if the prisoner had coun sel. 116 said no. I told hiui to do all in his- power for the- poor fcllow,s benefit, and I would pay him. 'He promiSed, and I left: Leonid not remain and . see the man tried. Tears came into my eyes as I gazed upon him, and it was net until I had gained the street and Hulked some distance that I could breathe freely. John Anderson Alas! be was asham ed to be known as his mother's son. 'That was not his name, but you shall know nu other. I will call him-by the name that stands on the records of the ceurr, • John Anderson was my_ school mate, and it' as not many years ago—not over twenty, that We. left our academy togeth er—he to return to the home of his wealthy parents, and Ito sit down in the dingy sanctum of a newspaper office for a few Years, and, then wander. across the (mean. I Ras gone some four years, and when •I returned I found John a married man.— His father was dead, and bad left John a princely Fortuna. , " Alt C—," faid he to me, as he met me•at.the railroad station, "you shall see what a bird I have.eaged. My Ellen is a perfect lark—a robin, a very princess of all bircds that ever looked beautiful or sung sweetly:' He was an enthusiast, but not mistak en, for I found his wife all he had said, simpry omitting the poetry. , She was truly one of the most bountiful women I ever saw. And so good, too, so loyin: , and so kind. • Aye, she so loved John, that she really loved all his friends. What a lucky follow to find such a wife. And what a lucky woman to find such a hus band.; for John Anderson wa. as hand some as she was. Straight, tall, manly, and a face as faultlessly noble and beau tiful as ever an artist copied. And he was .good, too, and kind, generous and true. spent a week with them; and was hap py all the time. John's imother lived with them, a fine old lady as ever lived, and making herself constani joy and pride in boasting of her son, "dailirg buy," as she, called him.. I gave her an account of tny adventures by sea and laud in for eign climes, and she kissed me when I left: She said she" kisse&tne because I loved her darling. -I did not see John again for four years. I arrived at his house late in the evening. Lie was not at - home ; 'but ;his wife and' /Luther were there to receive tee; and two , curly headed buys were at play about El ko's. chair. I knew at once they were my friend's children. Everything seemed pfeasant until the little 011C3 were in bed and asleep,' and happy, and then I could plainly see that Ellen was troubled. She tried to hide it, but a face so used to the sunshine cy,uld not wear sorrow concealtid At length John Caine. flits face was flushed, and his eyes luokedinflaincd. lie grasped my hand with a hearty laugh— called the "old fellow, old dog," and I must come and live with him, and many other extravagant things. His wife tried to hide her tears, while his mother shook her head and said— " sow his wild oat's soon. My darling can never he.a bad man " God 12:rant it," said I to myself.; and I welt knew that the s..tne prayer was on Ellen's lips. It was late when I retired, andl might not have dune so even then had not John fallen asleep ih his chair. Om the following naorning I walked out with my friend. I told him I was sorry to ace him as I saw him the night, before. - "Oh," Said lie, "that Was nothing.— Only a little party. We had a glorious time. I only wish you liqd been there." At first I thought I would say no more, but was it.not my duty? I I knew his na ture better than lie did himself. His ap petite and pleasures bounded his own vis . inns,' I knew • how kind- and gentle be --was—alas ! too kind, too generous ! ' "John, could you haii,e seen Ellen's face lastevening, you would have trem bled. Can you awake het': unhappy i"— fie stopped me with, " Don't be a fooL Why should she be unhappy?" " Because She fears you are going down hill ; " I' said. • "Did she- say so?" he asked, with a flushed face. " No . ; I read it in her face." "Perhaps a reflection of your own ; thoughts," he added. '" I . surely thought so when you came home last night," I replied. I can - never forget t he !look he gave me then—so full of reproof surprise and pain. " I forgive yoii, for I know that Voti are my friend, but never speak to me wain like that: I going down hill. You know' better. That can never be. I know my power. I know my Own wants. My mother knows me better than Ellen does. Ah. had that mother" been as wise as she was loving, she would have seen that the wild oats, which her son was sowing Would surely grow up add ripen, only to furnish seed for sorrowing. But she lov ed ahnOst too slitnaldv say; too blindly. But I could say, nO:more. I only pray= ed that God would guard hiin, and. we' conversed upon other sukjects, could spend but one day with hitu, but we prom ised to correspond .often., Three years more passed, during which John Anderson wrote to we at least once: a month, arid sometimes 'oftener; bdt at. the end of that time, his letters ceased cowing, and ; I received no more for two years, when I again found myself in his native town. It was early in the after-: noon when I arrived, :Mid I took dinner at the hotel. I had finished my.nleal,-and was lonng mg, in front of the -hotel ; ; when I saw #. funeral procession . Ninding its way into a , aistant churchyard. Tasked the laa& . lord whose funeral, it Mrs. Anderson's' he said, and.as he spalieluoticed a slight di-opping of thPL head, as 010101 it cut him to say so. What—John AbdeNon's wife?" Nij," be said, "it is his mother." and as be said this he turned away; but a gen= tleman who was near overheard our con versation, immediately took the thine himself. ." Our host does not seem inclined to converse on that subject," he remarkett with w shrna of the shoulders. Did you know John Anderson ?" He was any school mate in boyhood, and my bosom friend in youth.. He led me to one side and then spoke as follows: "Poor John ! He was the pride of this town two years ago. This man open ed a hotel at that time, and sought cus tom by giving wine suppers. John present at the most ot them—the gayest of the gait, and the most generous of the party. in fact. he paid for nearly every on of them. Then he began to ;.t.o down hill, and he has been going down ever since. At times •true •friends have pre vailed upon him to stop,. but his - stops were of short duration.. A short season of sunshine would gleam upon his home, and then - the night came more dark and dreary than before.. He said he never would pet drunk any more, yet he would 'take a glass of wine with a friend.' That glass of wine was the gate to let in the H o od. Six year ago he was worth sixty thousand dollars. Yesterday he borrowed fifty dollars to pay his mother's fun'eral expenses ! That poor mother bore up as lon , as she could. She saw her son—her 'darling boy' sho always called hitu— rrour-ht home drunk many times, and she even bore blows from hint I But she's at rest now Her 'darling' wore her life . away, and latonght down her gray hairs i n sorr o w to the grave ! Oh, I hope and trust this may reform him." " But his wife? ", " Her heavenly love has held her up thus far. but she is only the shadow of that wife . that blessed his home six years ago." My informant was deeply affected, and so was I, and so I asked him no more. During the remainder of the afternoon I debated with Myself whether to call up on John at all. But finally I resolved to go, altho' I waited till after tea. I found John and his, wife alone. They bad both been weeping, though I could sae at, a glance that Ellen's - face was beaming With hope and love. But oh, she was changed —sadly, painfully so. Thdy Were gladto s'ee toe, and my hand was shaken warmly. " Dear C---, don't say a Word of the past," John urged, taking my hand a sec ond time. "I knew you spoke the truth to me five years ago, I was going down hill. But I have got as tar as I can. I stop here at the foot. Everything is gone 1 but wife. I have sworn, and - my oath. shall be kept. Ellen and I are pink to be happy now." - • 1 The poorfellow burst into tears. lis wife followed sult,,,and I kept them cdm pany. 1., could not l help crying like a child. My God, what a sight ! The once noble ; true man, so fallen—become a mere bridi -on glass, the last fragment only reflecting, i ' 1 the image It once bore, a pone suppl leant iat the feet of hope, begging a graint oil warmth for the hearts of himself :int.! w}fe. 1 And how I had honored and loved that i I man„and how I loved hint still: 61, I! ' hoped, aye, more than hdped, I beliefed he would be saved: .A.nd, as I gazed up. on that, wife—so kiting, so trusting so true, .so hopeful still,- and. even in the midst of living death—J prayed more kei.. vently than ever that . God Would , hold him up, and lead him'back to thei.topof the hill. , ' - In the morning I. saw the child i en; now grown up to intelligent boys, . nd thought they looked pale and wan,. t ey r smiled and"seemed happy When tbei - i l i fa therl kissed them. When I went away ;John took me by the hand and said, I . "Trust mc. BelieVe Me now. : I will be a man henceforth, while life lasts' L A little wore than two years moro.bad passed, when I read in a newspaper4the death of Filen Anderson. I started; . for the town where they had lived as soon as possible, for I might help some sue. l, A - . • n fe ii a n r d fu . l . : , !_elentitne l t bad.pass L essed my , 'I stopped _ at the" stately hasp' wbera they had &vett., but strangers occupied it. t. Where'is 'Joh ni Atidersoa r" I asked. Don' now, -Val.-sure.. fle's-.been . gone these three tribriths. , .• His ;wife died in the mad lacpuselast weeh." -• ' . • "And the children ?" •••• • -. "'Oh . ; they died-Before shedid." -.lStaggered back.and hurried from the place. • • •: : . .• • ' I, hardly knew which_ wart:went, but instinct led rue -to• the-churchyard. found four 'graves which had been- made in three•years:' The mother, the -wife, and , two children iirthen. • • • • " What has done this.? I asked my self: And a. voice answered : "The Demon of the Wine table!" . But thisl was not all the work. . No, no! - The'hext:day. I.saw-,--oli God ! tilt; far" more terrible I I, saw-him in; the court room. But this was not the last. I saw ray legal •friend on- the .day theltrial. - He said John Ander son was in prison. I hastened to see biro. The turnkey conducted we tolls the key turned in the huge lock—the pon derous door swung npou its huge :hinges with a sharp creak--and I saw a:dead body suspended by:the neck froni.a grat ing of the window I looked at the hor rible face—l Could see nothing of J. An derson there,- 'but the face. I had'seen in. the court ilyasl sufficient to Connect the two, and I knew that this was•all left on - earth of huu-b had loved So well. ' And.-this Was the last of the dernon' work ; the, list act in the terrible drataa! Oh, fronn'the first sparkle ofthexed wifre, it had been down, down—down until the foot of the hill had filially been reached When I turned away from the cell, and once mem walked amid the flashing sa loons- and revel halls;1 wished that my voice had powercto thunder the life story of which I had been a witness, into the cars of living men “A. Sudden Deatb.” Of all incidents which it is the daily duty of ajournalist to record, none so t're fluently attracts his attention as that of "A. Sudden Death." Other incidents may be more frequent; assaults and bat tery and municipal quarrels are perhaps :oftener among, the items; but in the way of short, prompt tragedy, of a dire event in duodecimo, of a sensation story in six lines, there is nothing more marked than a sudden death. "There's a woman just dropped dead in the Sixth Ward "This .morning one of our most .respectable citizens was found dead iu his bed." "A. gentleman, while walking in the street, was seized with sudden sickness and expired." One is found at his table; papers strewed around, a half finished: letter before him, One, in delicate health, plunges into a cold bath—arid - had he been' hurled into the middle of the Atlantic and left there, it could not have hurt him more—for an hofir or two after: people hearing tio sound, break open 'the door and find him killed as• effectually by a few gallons as 'though a few bayonets hadbeen employed. Talk of a bombshell exploding in the midst of a small tea party—of roaring gunpowder and riving., tearing iron masses, blood and smoke and shattered limbs, where au in stant before all was tea-spoons and small talk—why what is such a bit of-abrupt ness, compared to steppine out of Life in to Death ? : . . We are told that on New Year's day the Emperpr af the French surprised Eu g,euie by ,opening a door in her bed-eham her. No wonder that, he surprised her; fee - what. she had always supposed was simply the entrance to a shallow closet, revealed a beautiful roolu,l of . exquisite oriential architecture, filled - . with thou sands 'of costly ornaments cud gifts,. all in the same style; all appropriate to the• new ,rooni. : • The Emperor had observed a great. fondness in his , wife for a•pecul= iar• style, of art; and- gratified it in. this manner. 'Furniture,lpictures,ornaineuts, jewelry, 'columns and carpet's .were.all. in her favorite "otder." • How much - a sud den death seems like , stepping •• at,' once from a familiar room; ; when, weJeast ex pect it, through . an ,ixnknow.n door into a mystic,landi into all : that is most differ ent...-Yearful. change,- tremendous trans ition I—..what. simile 'of Teems,, what Jig, urn: of doors, gives •the . .. faintest ! approach to tli.; dreetest .of all;cbanges to . which the ertiOdlis liable-- 7 auct,this . ehange in, the twinklinof atieye.! ... , . • ' - It has been kfayorite Cindy of philos opherS; :fond of -educing, the. unknown from the tinown,-that the:future life would correspond ,to our, tastes,_and tendencies in 04; in Ifact to return to the Imperial anecdote—Oat an Oriental hall Would be Lopened to ,these 'of Oriental tastes,! and the . gled or bad choice he its own reward or p iisliment. • All ,speoplation - 7 . ail ~t idle.... Yet one thing is Still_ true-- - ---there is. a tenicedoits °transition, an awful chap c—aad all the catastrophes; plots and - - oaderfa metos ever devis: ..... . ph es ed ininovul, poem or pliy, ihrivel up into NMI FQTT:'OENTEI t 'paltry peverty,' before the Marvellous ex- perienee - of the lady or gent:email just'. fallerr dead audit may be, just ehronielea in the ; ,; guratititat. • Ibr4ePo.lter . . LetterS on Phonetics.--No:17.- 1•: - The Beitpfits iviiichiwiNdd result froth; • . ' adopting the .1 - ?h,o4tib..Afethe#d. lire have only to-reverie the oensuietr. passed-upon the-ordinary spelling- to rive: at an: estimate of themew....A.chllt -- once instructed in the_eletocntary.sounde' and the method of conibining *tem, ,to.; , Yether with the ; characier.4 by,whiehltheY • are conv entionally represented, will knot?... instantly, as soon asi he .'sepit ;a• written symbol, what sound to*,otter, and as_ soon as he hears a Speten• -sound, . whet- symbol he is to trace. j_ Within three : , months may . this knowledge be - atquired 'by a child,of ,four years, ,!or an- adult ; of forty. The gate of knenledge,wonid he, thrown- °Peri with both its valves:, To. read, would be to hear; jto write would:. be to speak. • Other - . nations wohld bp readilyable comprehend our language—the casiestio: . the world Ito acquire, but 4 for its. present, 'orthography, and destined to be carried . lover the whole globe, by , the energy of 'its speakers. 'The .Years ;now wasted .by, learning a, dull catalegric could be saving, A. small portion:Of the, time 79Uld,be • pleaSantly spent at the commenceineat of .. a child's schooling, or ,before. he goes, school, under the care Of his mother,, in : - acquiring: the true 'Sounds or language,. putting - them- together, .'!and *meeting them with the- symbUls for writing; thus_ 'giving Win a practiealaequaintance Witit analysis and sythesis, and a feeling for s-unuetr'y y and law. also 'learn the advantage of knowledge and.its, test; - he will find that he knows , because , by. lapplyinr , th e simple rules ie has learnt,: can discover new results. He" . will .thus be able to understand (vaguely of . course, at first, as all child the use ofg taught,- 1 .--tho use of 'go, lug to school. - Heisvill see the.value of teacher's 'instruction, and will: yield. him' not a blind; but an intelligent obedie nce _:: Hence, we may look forward to Boat' change as a national blessing, to be earn estly striven for with heart and hand. Mr. Editor; in lOoking averyonr - paper I untieed,ja report of a_ tTeitehers' eiation;" vervintetesting. The ResCdutions.adopted I heartily sup port. The Rusoluton - offered by Xi.- J. Bird,!; "(.‘ Resolved; That the word method 'fis the best Method' of • teaching pupils to Iread,") shmild like tusay , few words on. lam glad it is accepted, 'and as .1 . ,)0f course"; cannot be thereat the Red School House in Roulet," - Tastititne the righq or privilege; to say a few words on it. Iltake the negative of the-Rego lution--4t -is tot the.best method of teach ing pupile to read-- In.:one of my former -letters I ;have. adverted to this .system, - which is ! !also known as the i" look and. say!' method: The teacher , points word. and utters the soun4nd , proceeds in this w. 4. with - every; - word, -.until the child _recognizes iorlien shown 'again..: lii this *ay the child learns to read-with % .- out learning a. single elementary sound, 'as such, : Or.the• letters, which are the rep-' resentat4 , es of sounds.• . ••• • , . . But this method doeS not fail to display the System of our orthography itt.. native ugliness.. Sooner or later spelliv must be,"studied".find.then contradictions, absurdities, inconsistencies, - ambiguities,. and a long train of evils present them selves tO the learner., The test method - -; of teaching a child to read is theOtonetif. method. i I speak • adviSedly when I say ; it is .the best . nrethed a/sO of . teaching. the , . l present 2471pAilosophicrAl, cumberisotneeod :i difficult system._ ,The. transition .front Phonetic. toßomanie Made. ‘. Dr. Ston e , Of _BostOn,, a true' philat . ,t - thropist; institutedaniezperitnent in .or der to qhildt the. valfre of :the, phenetie. sysom,':of which he publiShed,thefelloW aecdunt Fifty children , , of froin tWeinda;halt, to seveti. years of age, have been, *tight to readiat a private , phonetic seheel,;by Enima L. Lathrop, - in :the,. \\*ten... street ch.ipcl, wheiv-persoes:inferested are :invited to attend on any .weekday:: fro Mien to eleven O'clock only, The first'. dais is eompoSed 'of twelve children commenced the study Of. thephenetie tear in September lest, (about six, ttienths . past,) since; Which- tinto IEO I ,I*CA - eon absent from Selieel on the average,Ahree: tuanthsleach,in editskuenci of sickness. . : Whets- in . the schbol,they:havii 'recelie about- hOuiscti§tiaetion:o4ily,itiOad.' ing and the an4lyzatiOti o of iverdsl inainder of the tithe having beeit'deVoted: to other exereisea,'anid'te the rest' of the schobl..l . 'ln . September titro‘tif.;the chid=` tired - knew - their' letters, and could spelt" out' a - few' easy word'; ; but the • majority ' and the Se. who are new - the . bist'sehelitia," conid',Mx, then read at All, and (lid., lot' even know their lettere. - .76,141 'of di ekildre4l, frog titree•Und-a-ltaV to, fotir:ii:, AIME 1 ' 1 1 =I