RE OEM =Mil SINGLE COPIES, VOLUDIE. , 4;tIII3:pippR 40. THE 'POTTER , JOURNAL; PUBLISHED EVEHY TriOSDAr EIDREIHDi ‘ Thos. IN wheat all Letteri rand Vcianntinications ihould iultiressed, to secure 'attention. T e rms--Invarlahlrin Advance: $1,25 per Annum. • '• • Terms of Advertising. ! s q uare [lO lines] 1 insertion, _=_. . 3 IL Each subsequentingertion legs than 13, iSquare thrwe months, - --- - 2 50 4 00 5 50 " one year, .6 00 • itule and figure, work, - pct. sq., Ins. : 300 Every 6ubsequeni. inizertioD ; • 50 f. Column six months, . lB 00 - _ 10 00 per year. - - -.- 30 00 " - - 16 00 Double-column, displayed, per annum 65 00 " , six mouths„ 35 00 u u three " 16 00 " one mouth . , 0,00 per square_ " niue 0(10 lines. each insertion under 4, 00 ?arts of columns will be inserted at the saiue rates. . • . . . ~ Idministrator's or. Execittor's:Notice,, . -2_oo .tuditoel Notices, each, 1 50 Stizrilfs Sales, per tract, - . 1. 51i taris , e - - _ 10 0 .. • ..... Divorce Notices; eac h , - . ' . 1. 5 4 4 Administrator's'Salcs, per square' for 4 • insertions? 1 50 Builno‘s far Professional ,Cards,: . .each, tot excediag 8 lines, 'per year, - 500 Special and Editorial Notices, per line, ^ - • 10 err All tramdent advertisements must be laid in advance, and no notice will -be taken cf advertisements from a diMance, unless they CP accompanied by the Money or sthisfactory reference. • - g1i5111,E5,5 Calts. mamoutimunmiusnummusunturumuminmunstha;umql JOHN S: MANN ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW, Coudersport, Pa., will attend the several Courts in - Potter and-Wlieuia Counties. All buttineas entrusted-in" his care will receive prompt attentioti. ' Offic - e'on Maitkit:, oppo site the Court House: 10:1 .17.: W. KNOX, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Coudersport, Pa„ will • regularly attend the Courts in Potter and the adjoining Counties. ARTHUR • G. -OLMSTED,. ATTORNEY S COUNSELLOR AT LAV, Coudersport, Pa,, will attend to all business tnrrusted to his care,„ with promptues and fdefity. Office in Temperance Block, see ped door, Main St: 10:1 ISAAC BENSON ATTORNEY AT LAW, Coudersport, Pa., will attend to all business entrusted to him, with ure and promptness. Office corner uf IN7ct and Third Ets.' - " - 10:1 C. L. HOYT, CIVIL ENGINEER, §tiItWEVOR and BRAUGIITSIAN, Bingham, Potter Pa.,will promptly and efficiently attend-to all businesa entrusted to him. First-class professional references can be given .if re quiredl6:39-I c J. W. BIRD, SCRVEYOR, will attend to all business id Lis line promptly- and ; faithfully. Orders limy Au left, at the Post Office in Coudersport, or at the house of H. L. Bird, in Sweden Twp. Particular attention paid to examining lands for non-residents. Good references given if requested. ' 11:30 W. K. KING, SURVEYOR, -DRAFTSMAN AND CONVEY ANCER. Smethport, - Alliean Co., Pa.. will ittend to business for nun-resident land holders, upon reasonable "terms.. ileferen •s given if required. P. S.-"—Maps of any part of the County made to order. 9:13 'O. T. ELLISON, - - PRACTICING PHYSICIAS,, Coudersport, respectfully informs.the citizen's of the vil lage and vicinity that he will isromply re spond to all calls - for, ,professional services. Office on Main-at.. in building formerly oc cupied by C. W. Ellis, Esq. :1:22 COLLINS SMIT.II SMITH 'JONES, BALERS IN DRUGS, NIEDICINES.TATNTS, 0113, Fancy Artieleg,;.itationery, Dry Goods, Groceries, sc., Muhl st,, CoudoNitirt, P. E. _ PEALER IN DRY GoOD;S, READY-MADE (lothing, Crockery, Groceries, ac., Main st., -Coudersi.ort, M. W. -MANN, r • DEALER IN BOOK,Ii & STATIONERY, MAG AZINES and Music. NI W. corner. of Main and Third sts., Couderiport, Pa. 10:1 _ • ~„NARK GILLON, APii Fni; and TAILOR, . late from the City of Lirtrpoul, England... Shop opposite Court house. Coudersport, Potter Co. Va. N. g•—Particular attention paid to CUT TING. 10:35.-Iy. A.:. OLMSTED. OL3ISTED & KELLY, DEALER IN STOVES, TIN k 81IF;ET IRON WARE, Main st., nearly opposite, the Court lipase, Coudersport, - Pa. Tin and Sheet , Iron Ware made to ordet in good style, on thort notice. 10:1 ------- - „ COUDERSPORT :HOTEL,u. P. GLASSIIIRE, Proprietor, Corner •ot Maio and Second Streets, Coudersport, Pot ter Co., Pa. _ . 9;44 ALLEG:A:NY_ HOUSE,' SAMUEL 31. MILLS, Proprietor Colesburg Put;cr Co., Pa., seven miles • north' of.COu dinner; on the Wellsville load. 9:44 • ler -- . -' . ' ...• -...._ ::- r ''T ~ -:, :. .:H ra!: '"*. 'C '4-I.V '-':' "' '''''. ''' ' .. - . :::' . -' •-.- , • ' , .; Z!. . . , ', . . 1 1 „..... ~.. ;.;:',l' ..; .:,,..::: , i).i: , '- , 7. --, :: : - ,',. -:il:: .: : .:;•-. ... ~ : ,fig 1:':. c ::; 1 2 ....7 - ±7:•! , , ,T. , - . 1 .... E.. ).1 ., ) .,.:, 1 1 °lik ,11 , , ... _ ~..,....:-, -......-., ......„--. . i :..... ~,:: , .:„.,, ,„, :,,,,,...„,,„,;: :„.., „„.„ , 4 4,....... ...._ ~,,,•4 :,,. ..;.........,, _ ..... , ....„. .,. i .l( t. l l"C.:i VI .r.l•-!: :...,- ,-,--. -.. • ii--•, ,,, --. • i -:1. ' , , ,-.,-- --:-, ' ':, . ~.,--, , ,1. . i !..1 •*: f ' '.:,--.'':''' - , . . , Vi, : _; l 6, ;' , l' .-7 ' '7 r : ` : -' , -7 - -a-"•%.:.;":::: ;i 4 . 7 . 7 . - , ..: : :. . . . , •i- ; : - LI;, ::: ~ D ; ----'5.4%:. , -- ~7 - . •-- '' -• ' - '1;" - ' ' r- j -- - 4 ', '...... i- . .:,:, . ,-..., 'j .. . - , -:,, • -,,, ;,,,L? , - c ',. 1 -; -.: '-, ' Ell MOTIIERWRS'.' God help and shield the th4herless, • :The stricken, bleeding dovei. For whom there gushes-rM, •ich fount 'Of deep-and dreamless love 1, • The saddest titles grief confers— For who so lone as they, • - Upon whose path a mother's love. Sheds - not its holy ray? - . No, gentle form above them lbendS:. • To soothe the couch of pitiu; - No voice so fond as her's essays - To calm the feverish brain. Oh! other tongues may, whisper love In accents soft and . But none on earth so pure as that; A mother bears tier child 1. 50 SI 50 Judge kindly of the toothed*, i A weary - lot is. theirs, ! • • And oft<the.heart that gayest seems, load of sorrow hears. - No faithful" voice direets'the steps, Or bids them oriivard press;. • " And if they gang.a kennin wrang,'t God help the motherless. . And wlfen the sinful and the frail, The tempted and the tried,..' Unsp . otted one! shall cross' thy . path, Oh I spurn them not aside: , Thou knowest not what thou hadsttmen, With trial even less ; • ' And when the lips would vent reproach, Think, tiny were motherless! blessing on the motherless, - Whereer-they dwell on earth, Within the home of childhood,. .Or at the stranger's hearth ! ' Blue be. the sky above their headS, And bright the sun within ; Oh! God protect the motherless, ; And keep them free from sin ! ; ; Cljnitt trating. Lecthre by Rev. ilectry:_WaCd For trite sayings, odd eloquence, start liug effects, good sentiments strange); ex pressed, an oratory which at time: is . aldios; explosive in its power, - Henry Ward Beecher is certainly without a rival .in the United States ,His eloquence is Jundotbt ed, nervous, terse, !and strong---and i • yet with a peculiar independence, the : rules of - rhetoric are entirely set at; naught, showing that there is nothing' . artificial about the orator—that all is natural,' the gift of genius rather than the acqaire men tof study. WheneVer: this gettle wan delivers an add-ess in Philadelfiliia, a large cud an intellectual atidieuee, is sure to be attracted, composed et pers..ms who admire eccentricities of thought and language that is impressive. more so, in, deed, than if he conformed to flie rules of the shools, from theltistituteS Of Quiiic tilian down to that .interesting volume, "Blair on Rhetoric " Were he to adhere rigidly to Set-regrilationii, his coMpositiens might be smoother and more even ;f but they would not be Beeclierisms; iii id' ii - 0 , : latter are features in his style ;Ina eio--;u: lion that. delight the public. ;'X hetln;;- whirling along the. Hudson, Il“.utalinff over the hea-,•ina• sea. conten:piatioa Piel verdant Meadows or the fields ; of Wa-Vin,7l and golden grain, aseeoding the moon-I tains, or sailing in ituagitation : amid the] skyey depths ofazure - spangled tv i ill! ,atirs, I he is still Beecher amli everywhere atl home. Only he climbs not with toil; but I reaches the 'loftiest with a; u bound; I skims the ; ocean with tmegiettb rapidity ; and at times seeius to comprehend all,na- , tura in his - mentai grasp. The sensation! he produces in large assemblies !is, att times, and especially when in; an :ardent I frame of mind, almost electrical- andlthe I • more so, , m- consequence of thel.tinexpect-' led bursts: and quaint eccentricities that ' irresistibly -_ excite feeling ;and; evoke eu-' . thusiastic applause. Beecher on the platforM is t-hinself alone." I-I.is hearers; `last evening, at/the,.Academy iof Music; were 'very numerous, and hia reception I was cordial. Nobly did he respond to the I latter in his discourse oil:the Burdens of Society. I. After a suitable introductton of his Isubject, Mr. Beecher said that'all our ma chines; strong, efficient and usefulas they were, were. contemptible by . the: side of a , man, even'when we have .. viewed him ; merely as a physical invention,; but that !miracle:Of Godoverlastinth, framer' so -1 ciety---Ithe -- existence of infi c 'Ultd . cumbers! 1 of men, etieli with: such ii - flatutng world I of passion,' with such pcewer in every di : 7 l 1 reetion, ranting to and trot with a great' liberiyi - ctirrying• each his:own purpoies—l I 'meeting; inflecting, swerving, and:passing Iby each other,—endlessly .icerntniugled. • yet always guided iff.tlie turmoil of liter by the subtlest instincts or by the streagth of laws—the endlesS conflicts, of thought .or imagine - thin,. the springs Of -affection, the wild flashes"Of Dower-berupassions,t this crowd of eight l hundied- million men. round the globe; and, their diVersitics of physical nature and physicaVstate, -fur nished the moat extraordinary spectacle which the world could present;.: :000, TO never" tired'of the mem]; soltbat he :were apon• the - lam:l,' Its depth, its width i '-its abai3dance, its vicissitudes, . gave effdleSS Cacho:neat ; but the liquid ocean of were JONES S. D. BELLY Yl'.lll.;;P4s , Pf Dawockaiii, l'issehiiii4iiop of lidalitlj! . Kifoato:'F , . feDs7 Wt. • 1 , 4:4- LIZ tl5 U.ol3ltEr ,From the Philadelphia ingairlT Beecher: THE BURDENS OF 'SOCIETY POTTER 'COUNTit i I : PA., THURSDAY,:.IVLY water drops, what " ` were they eoiiipared with the woill's • 'eternal cointnotions, Where' each" 7 drol) •isz an!-: . organizing ••tind. eternal God,and:•where the streams and the currents spring forth, from ~its.own bosom. The' lecturer then'advertedtothe-forin atiOn tif - ta6ciety:' , There% Wax-nothing so strong; itnoww to - 'Mari, as' society, and_ nothing that contd ., bear • such •haidshipS, - that - could' survive such abuse,- that could grew up' Muderlsuck pressures, that - could carry such hurdenSi t at. tonlii - Work-health.: out of such. diseases sorrows 'as are perpetually inflicted on it The first bur den which he would =titbit' was that:of despotic - goteriamentS.'.:•-•That man need= ed laws and governnients. had-been said] and celebrated : until -the Voung'imagina-,j Lion 'Was. daziled:,with- the sticredness. - ofl this:so-mtlled diyineidea of government ;i .but governments, in fact, Were veiy sorry commentaries ... on the thecines of govern- I thentS. - The 'divine inifure of govern ments had yet, he thought; to'be disCov ered. Upon the simple necessity of law bed been built up structures of !,7„overn went so vast - and so complex, thOt it had' 'often taken ip'.the whole: 'strength of a, nation just to - . endure its 'government ;I and then it had no stren - ! . ith to do anything! else. Some governments arc likb idols— divine 'at a distance, but devilidt when) Close at hand.;"as a warrior- deterntined.l to be impregnable might, ottler. from his armorer mail strength thick and so unpleasant,, , that his. whole strength Might be required to carry' his Very arthor,leaving nd powerl for defence, for' swinging- 'the sword,. fur I thrusting the - spear. Theprineipal busi ness or governments; as of the wise doc tors, was to let people tpone, , and to oblige, them to . let each other alone. Alen were Made to - take care - of theinSelveS.• There could be no substitute for the.element'of. individual preservation,. and the instinct was just as, strong in society as in thmim divual, I:was : doubtful, therefore - , wheth er man had"not been as Much injured by governments as benefitted by thein. arehy imis an - evil, but it was not alre woist•evil, though described as the crater.' of a Volcano, or, a bottomless pit;. and a nation; without, a goverment _presented a Wretchedness only - equalled" by thaf r otn nation' with - oae. More crimes were corn- 1 mitted - ag,ainst the peace ofsociety under despotic 'governments by those who ad-, ministered the laws, than by those upon' Whom the laws were administered. - In free' governments the criminals were -al most all under the laws; in despotic gov erunients they' were almost • alivays above it. On the principle of despotic govern ments, as administered , in Europe to-day, every king should be a.slave;. and thoSe who now sat in ashes should wear crowns, if croviis should be worn: by anybody. The air was full of.this notion of the ab solute power of governments, and men dragi•;ed through life' with only enough life t,i linger in perpetual blight without, dying. Goviuuments produced inore.ta-' want of them had ever done j they had heaped up difficulties in the Way of the developetnent of that spec-! taneous wisdom with which' God :,ad pro-, vided - mau for his elevation: The of the world were. generally, the world's rubbish, and its state.snians - bip - generally nothino but its fully. An astronomical , , rovernment, to help the' world" to - turn over and revolve in its Orbit, would be no, moreiridiculous than many. of - the govern : merits - the, world, has now. Kings had had great trouble with their people, but the people bad bad- inure trouble With their kings. The•foree of the people lied been wasted in building .up: this shadowy something called a than as it it were anything more than a name—and ,That, name was a prosperous peqh3. hut fan tastic . fools, - ,eillied wise men, had each Mbulded . and cut, and scooped out • his idea 'of What a state should be, and-then attetapted to crush the people into it. Educate a man; citable him to develop the faculties that God gave hill) j' let him ahine—aUd that, Was the - State! This 16S the first biirdem that society hadito bear, arid if there we'rki,no other,.the - ple - fa'aility with vhich it: show ed: that no cainel:Was.::eYer= fitter flit:the labor of the desert than society was for going across the desert of human history, carrying kin...sand oovernments. • •• "recorded of Pericles, or Some flier great , des,, that. his too large - for his body - . So with States and peoples - - All their tronbleig.too often in 'their heads. :The second burden lie woultinatue was Slavery, and _this, was but a' variation of i4e other, for slavery, iti all its forms ; Was btit despotism struck in. Under every iniidificatioti it was a mischief:m(l a waste. It! began by "destroying' the liberty of the! weak; it ended . by corrupting-the strength of the strong:: 'lt Was 'tt,kingdont Of or; ounized sin, for which All terms that in theatcd iniquity . tsere too weak and too ,tspecifie, and-the, language had yet 'to in- vent, that, - ,. thiehly pOpulafed . - with all the conceptions of tneauties and hiAsetiessi'should 7- be able to express the gbilt.and AbtninatiopA.of Slavery. ;What eter collateral or incidentaLbenefits,iliere Were, in:Slavery:belonged - to-the earlier. . . . . !periods. of 'society, for • all men. were: then! . 1 nearly- , Ori - • a leVel;.•and society , had . not igrown• into•:.strata. or.classes. : ::As , :the fworld , progressed These distinctions arose, and• it, was a - •bless - ed-thing•l that _men were not-all-on one - level:- : , -;It. was the perver, sion of classes - that -Made them ace.ursee It.was because . inen• dropped the-trunch eon- down—not:beeause 7 o4 - dropped ~• ~. {knits and - benefits 'down-4hat . classes. !could be madeiitjutious.- • In otir: own :n nition the greateit - Crimes' against- honor, -against - good , faith, against humanity; had been committed under the influence of. Shivery," and there. was- no nation _so yOuuglas we that - had broken - so imanytreaties; - no nation so young 'as we i that. had been so .perfidietts in its treaty -1 1 making:policy, er that had ever exhibit ; ed so Much inliiimanity iu their treatment iof the owners of-the soil. : It Iwas a system which sunk a man .below !humanity- 7 a slave was no - longer:a man but-a - chattel. - '.till yet these were foimd good ministers .poking ,Op and .down - the 'Old Testament land the - New--to : know `whether slavety was a sin or not.. . Such inen- Were not bOrn for the-piilpit. .It-was once thought there,. was a connection be tween morality and the ' pulpit---between virtue mid - retiehinm ° —but that was an old legend. :Slitverydepreeiated the poor , man's capital, the value -of 'his :work - .—' 1 Whatever made: work inereased-educated 1 men and Made Oieni - happy. - hit servile . . j work. and free work together, and one will Islay theother. ' - i - Where there is freedom, 'Work. is appreciated —it is honorable. When we speak of able men succeeding 'in life, we say' they have- worked their 1 way up. -Work is dignity !-- Slaveryy - waS It that evil which:assassinated the tueim - s-ef living to the - free laborer. Slavery de troved the Chr l stian idea that wen ought .tojiOve, ono another.: But slavery taught. 1 thatllte weak sere thelawftil prey of the, Istrong—confrary to the teachings-of the l Saviour Then it was a burden tliat-tpg at!variance with our:republicanism, con: trary to out constitutinn;_ which while-we' I honor - we violtite--for our nation : had a light.liouSe at , ' the top -and-al dungeon-at the bottom. - Then it festered pride—and as men - grew rich and independent, theyi were above their- brethren ; .and wish .to' live alone: . So that. one class is at the top and another at the bottom—and the.hot. i l I tem looks up and envies the top,and the top looks down and, despises the bottom-4, 'as if a tree were to look down and despise its root and the earth that grew it, mit:, ,gar. . Make the .fouudation Of- a house, drong,• and- then . the su perstructure will; be safe, and can be made beautiful. Slave ; curses and :blasts the bottom and at I . last it curses and blasis the top. And (this is the effect of-the burden of.slayery on society. Mr. BeeCiter's remarks ou slavery created much sensation, and elic ited great applause, in the midst of which. the lecturer said—" Eight years age you would,nOt have done Se.l"—(Lau.diter ,--. and applawie.) . . ; The third . burden of society was the burden of War. There was a Mystery of violence, a mystery of .hlOod, in the natu ral history of this globe. - When •he facts were looked fairly in, the face,,clestrutitive• ness would be found to ht. the organized necessity of animal life. • That destroying should sometimes be 'interealatedfin the experience of the iinitnal creation was not strange. - eßutlutan mess just as fully a de stroyer :as' his Inferiors. - A lnnane - 'lien . would violate pod's- law---and if•it tiger were to join the-Peace Society, he would starve to death. - Man, however; was double.. Ile eni•ried in hiS - Maitre. earth and :pmt.. lle was ditine and 'animal. In the .one dPstrtictiveness ran; 'in the other love' was wade to be supreme; and in the e M i dietiof life the struorle was be tween those two' 'principles: War had been both, thel business and :the, paStime, of whole races; of MeM,.• Blood had - always been _sweeter : to :man' than wine... TIM spider. ate thel fly, the bird ate the.spider, and the hawk ate; - the bird, "and' all for .hunger';'but the bOy-Shot,ilie hawk; ..aad why ? For fun.. . When a wan. killed ani mals -for the legitimate :supply . of human wants, and With the least :amount of tor ment, What didwe call him - ? A butcher. When, a: mail killed 'for the; mere wanton love of killing, - and, itiflieted thegreateSt. possible sgony; what was .he called ? l A sportsman: '-All the dower -animals were more oconoinie al in their: destructiveness than man. The-lion never killed but to - I. , I eat ; should not Man , be made -to---do - ..tne same Ir. Wien the President of the .1J nit- : ed -States sent out a - ship to--bombard a: nest• of poor Wretches, and killed twenty or Keit was it mere,useless.- waste.- • Uni versal eennihalisuu• would••be preferabtc; for it would' involve 'leis - destruction .of life: Where; however, war was the ,p-at riot's defencel of a sacred right,: it was 'a duty: . . Death"theti was as sacred: as mar tyrilont at any- stake.' But. wars .seldonn. had been-freemen's-heroic offerings ;.-nt rich oftenei,had- they been the'Rings ambi-• tionot the people's fever..:.. , War Was some ! titues• good . husbandry,- notivitlistanding, for 'when nations were hardened.doitn and stupefied : lbyl• long 'oppressions, cannons made better furrows than plows., and can- non balls hetter . seed - than-Wheat.: - The energy ..; - Of AeStructiveness was not ,yet abated, truth ! in_ regard to the wars of. the lasten yeara, that they SlinWed, tin indispesition on - the parrofeiVilized-naticins anylonger to fight at houie. England and Frandn ;.went to India,l to. China . or . - tof the , Crimea; the United. States. did their fighting 1.11 co and : at preytotii. .11 - rar was now trans ported4kini 'our' own'tioo - iii tho Ugh - Wars had net -yet ; ceased: ' ' • • • • • Thu endless: - weapons- of war I ever creasing, ;the; - ports - , '-Cherbourg,,::-Ports tnouth &c., . ail shoW the love„ of; tvar alas l a; pastime of whiCh 'bat ions and krng,s .are - foOdl • In ,inan' destruetiveneSs is too often Wanton. In the lower aninials - tlicy destroyed -life because they were hungry. To-day you alp - ally ;luit caught in a wob you are snapped andljeCiiiiiei. a "spider —then a. hird : finds'you and you find your self a nightingale, until Caught by a hawk ,--you:e6ange. again—and thus ..you pass through,ainetainorphosis.„.gut joys, cruelty as . fun, : as . 'imfiShiMig,- after' angling for a long time; you hOok• hiM and cry,. " have him-4 - 1 have ltiM,". and the welkin rings with cheers- from, those who behold your' skill aS a, sportsman, and , as the poor'fish wrin-o-les — aud bounds in agony, t you exclaim—. What caPital"Sport that fish giiies me !" - We blanfeanimals - of .pfej,"for their cruelty, which in; them is but. aiittireatid - then.we sit down and enjoy jour roasted, chickens„ which - 'were, killed-, fur, our delectation - and not to ap pease ,aur Mine:cr. Mr, Beechei.',g closinu apostrophe and'.cathing censure 'of 'seas very effective and. poiverful. - Alas! the sea. was never so burthened Wit,h.tiects as te-dayr— r and ,artnies, were never More . mighty or numerous. Ali! kings, love it still, acid peeplelove it still'-the former wake 'war for oppresSion at oneiend; 'and Democrats .for revolution or slaery at the other: .The next burden ,he mentioned. was. that of old and waste institutions, 'Which, l 'he said; were like the bark of trees, in that the" bark'' had' nourished the 1. trunk, and dove its appointed duty,. it" ought to crack and. fail:off, and: and:let a new. baik. and the tree grow: _Old institutions Were like bark, not alone in that; but be cause' thby-were.full of 'aphides and in sects and vermin, who 'Ave;ro "so satisfied with their own quarters that if; the filleS-. tion as - t 6 the removal of •thc-bark mere concerned, they . would oppose.. it unani mously. .Sickness was • another burden which was wvery grievous one,. though very little-consideredin political economy. fie did nut . tnean tea. sickness, but the sickness that shortened a man's breath, that wade a ,man less .than strong, less than (tough : that made •a man ; work . half a - day when he should work twelve hourS a day. or foArteen. • Society, like a great factory runping, on .short- time, was ; de prived of a. fifth. of its power beeause sick ness -invaded it; and this,ia an' peouothi cal point of view,..was. : a. tremendoUsAmr ! den and evil. , . . Intemperance was ahlytlenounced—and Mr: 4. favored Asylums for the Inebriate. In .New .York there-had, been 2900 appli cations fur admiSsitin-00 from 1V1i1130.. The lecturer then alluded briefly to the buytiens of'. dishonesty and ,faisehoOd...as . they .affeet society, by increasing men's cares and out-lays to provide against hieing robbed or cheated... .Truth and . integrity were justly : lauded: .. eoneluSion, he said that though he pointed out evils-that needed attack and resistance, it was nut i.one who did not bplieVe that the time abd the nations hadrOod behind: the', and . tbat the world 'was. yet to :be' higher and -better. than it had • ever been. :: 'But as . it, was. theyirt:Rous man who bore, the burdens and, paid the. expenseS of society, and "nut. the . rough who inflicted them; it Was the right.of thc . Virtuous man .to ex ert all his influence : in making. society better. , While, : lie said,'you' have terest iu it,, a4d whila 'you 'haVe a rig:ht by the very laW.of SelfPraservititittlo,tak:e partin all public measures for, the'eleanS-: lug "of society,.municipal say=-wore than . that—you, are botind to 4u it,. your saered duty ',to see that the . community which you live is ikept clear from vice, fiPin '.froni the bur dens that . *OO, se heavily oq . it, and that a are such Juischief. to yoit..and to. yours. N,or'do, I think that any thanla a virtu- 1 ous man who; when' he' has . Said;'-‘,LOUr ',': Father in Heaven,and'has',blesSeethe :children in the - household, has,potlepked with equal. fervor outside of the sanctuary and, of the familY; into . the 'ammo pity Where lie dwells, , tuid Las not sworn' that - Spare no .labor :ifs' a, citizen - 'to cleanse-,the people front evil,- and build it. `up in:virtue. • And bye - . and. bye, when ituen shall have learned- this and the: ages I shall.,have. ripened this,. we shall, begin to see emerging . the fair proportions.of that glorious ; nation - the . poets.: have dreamed . of, Which hris dawned faintly • through thc-proplipcies of old, which has. never yet-beewseen ;...I,uatiotvvhose:fo'uti ciations are justice„ a- riation,,whase.laws are righteousness; •a: nation, whose ; heart is love and mercy—ptire, true. and'Stront , as.6od.'eau:inake it. • r 4 ; , ,t. 4,44;.7 IN TERNS.-41.25 1 We -c• ,:: : 4 . ^.-n J-7-.:: s -2,1.--:•-.1. -.-en , ; We °mate to say Oat. durtfg the,134 7 , ter part of th lelre;:itirr t ' L tCeeligi; pared life' a va l ne 'of:0'0104 10 I:,h,e‘r growth of a Plant.' ThelTetit*FOofitOg growth, thttste_Okio!?, rapid ? pkibeffiloig*, soya and ff4ig:Thae - XPri/9147- /14 3 t4outthtthat-frthicercatibii'lo4,lld'Opiftrg, orarist4aglliit'e WO . gro Wili:Ofilie: l rat' —froni_ our B,iilotii,'Cii oniiiiiii c liftlfil t o the stem—and'doci'ivlll:*ppesifilio ros ---1 soth 4111:16'6";',1ii., - '2l',liin ‘ iiobiitillaa: ' W. age:to - age beeeMe better iticatetteitik. it was much bettei - now'thaiiiiiiid iinig 2. -,and eight We , bat lio"Ple Ifilitt , thOhilliy - waidd soon ririVe, khen,,..we.;.Shorthi,-M i l thr6ugh Divine aid, pc•fee,t It :i - JR41e..49: 1 P!,.'' ing society, the industrio us paid_for,llo; idle out ,of the i s taxes, the. temperate fc the. intempergiq. _' . ‘vbn, iic , goViiiiiiietlii bad Men often tiiieiridOCMCo - -fiti4.4ae (the lee turer)i r would:de:all . 11_ii.,14 power and recommend all othefalo 00;01in ilkie, power to:Vote,at ciectionS":foi:,goa,4§,i r -- for-,tho,_tai 7 pa t ,yer,S ,iiaid,„lll'n . , , glie,' . for . , watehinn: raseals . ,wiren . :thotfiebbientaljil arrested'on etand:the Sala - 14,1i . tii , 00.04..!, or Who , P,a00. 13 &1 11:.etitgketiit'whOe - C611"; vide& ' c 1 ! -- ' .''' ',- i."z ,, tir's 4 - .44 .. , -t. -•- -..., .• •- -e . ; 1 ,I,'* ., M.'"`. If therowcro bid g ove r nments T0'1.600 1 to blame, ion Loa eitiiertifliviii,'a r liiraYal at fault, whefi bad ones werd:Cleet&t.:`„ b `T''' The aboveliS neee , iiarily'4'briirsketOt of the more - material.anit sahentpoipLizt. the address, Which. Ivas ~rePe444ll",chPo'T.l' ed,_ and at the 'plose r -themrafor w ? s-Eseet,-... .ed with enihnsiastie - aWaination: .- - .. r, , • - . ..: -- ~..,.: :..-,aa-.._ ,; THE, G aolyikd USE , SLLINCI7 sit DECi:NT F 3;1 lidES.-t-tigVi: imppßeptildt we.Oequire bad ,habits is te,, E be, seen. ky, the aptuesS Wit y whiehsOlne - Tal4it phrases: •It young lady in lifer 'motlier!slartor; rounded by - nil the ..applianneS!7of:LveWttii and rCPIYI; rogatory7byekpressive_phrase, tYon„ ; bet," If yon'asit ,herneentnpanY * yiiii to a - eon ee - rt;lS.be ipitY reface by' that=la=' conic : ekpreSson, • 6.. , 0ver „should she choose: to., aeeept4ottr itivittte3 tint], she will ,si2,mify her intention by.*#43ft l u g, iiob course wilLsir:?':',slll)ulij way prove rough aril iinepeti, the will in= form you tht - !1 - Jeir,dith-iini a Travel road I travel." Shmildsshn4ishlo aiivaiyce.itryi of:her friends irt . your,g,onaVpiPl9.9) , B,l!.% - will tell, you that, heis,.yf peqnet The • mother tellS fief .. babe and her b (Vs to ge they're r and even thenhililinif e,ateh-the'taint; tint defy parental .authcirity.by Can't come it ! ." . , Like a,deluge,:of.unnicatk water, slang prase.; 'are sweeping over 0;4 land, debasing" Mid degradilfg 'that p 00 . 7. er'which distinguishes rtinfi'froni,tifutnl San Francisco lic.isprian.' - . HOLD HIM SOMEDODy.--7-110 Fydittor of the St. Fan' Poi!ecr ,":incG..Dcntncru - gets off the folloivih,,r , • - "In Y I.LIC jA:IS ti*nord.=—Theelenieribi are • rampant•liviiir !spring: .-The:.-bidtfut. leaps after the bounding waters. The* is thick with herald-birds aOrtent gegritrs Of The trooping..soath winds-411;d sweep from the latitl of -the , fierce, Ang 1 14.4 sua-god. t. And- they come.elbmitchykse4 armed , with- thunderholtsigthiug , or crystal walla of ice r ito:pieceeiklie. : potter!! clay, and: filling the _ragging broach glory I Shiver; end; bretkthe alabaiter baStions of the winter,.-14ng neath the switiP;ii*-,beatn•oftliltempesk - catapulta,-‘-beneath .the:-.lucent t laneu : l4 . 44. radiant _panoply. -the chitdr,g l V9f:ihil sun. - On then, - niist 'bearded,.,-.PARdetiv of QuetzalcOats, l an 'the , gieelt-141Ingt th e: victor, .4 pri rig ; -flaun te : froip- the-etneli : ing battlements. mud; you:lino*. i' WHAT • 4 I.TIIAT7'•WA'Sf Fos: - -44Among my little frikmds-theie boy who is yery•Philosophillyzinelined. lie is rarely satisfied - .witiv , thejact-tliat, a thing bne, hi - Avants tolinowaßtho whys and wherefores ofits - eiistetice.% the other day ei 3 Oe ' - waS witching -.with' eager • interest the! diinembermenti.ofithx,body corporate with:thany:question's[ai to.lhe precise objet andjbearing of tbeditfermit sew - them separatedxitin frnlb•another. Finally, the .corfise:waiviti thetcondttion of Many of -oitrAive.raiiti. ctans-- it -had -losti itsbaOk-lc).Q1le• effittia JOe . regarded this . dijeeted...mellber,w,lh close at ten tion . tor a' minutes, ; , exelaiMed, vitli an air :of triunipli . .• winit Ades' for' q: Vi hat ? i ". asked,. Ate diasectOtt:oUtho hog. -.;;; • - •.. : • ".:Why(' 1 said ,the the tail to "I'T „ . 77... 7 •77::-.7•7 fra - - Nur ar, says b Co - rreigOndent 'alba GerSilehlan,i , feed hilt - se:4.s4lth clover hby, au - it wit l; : pin.c..tinres out ~of ien t pro , deer:. the lieqya; Good' ivieel . Thiittly•Vary . and oats are,the best , feed and a. quart br two•Of.ski.p . stuff at Fligl . +Apbo wants 1 oosenii3g. 7.... ;- .. ato • Somg ore ow (les this cogent a vice I bachelors - :'1" Begore iottheix"iv4iiiinin who will - lift you t tip, , iosteadl'oftpighing you:down-41u moreantile.ph.rasei,get liojd of a piece of,e4liep , wY4 'ynouMt !lien may i .:improye,,their heatl6 iii -the CoinNitiS• of iheir.'biviCs . ex;*b that . the - con?pany couverla prosef-§,ouol . ,for,„thc _ = ,T MI .., 7'; ,:..,.'.•? .::,d1:-`01 I::: .1 13...4,5/4 BE MEI
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