VOL XIX . ije ,c,4;:iteitot: = sle3 , MEMO - 11,1 aiiiiti in iu advative. r I SEM 1Z tTE4 - 01? .:IVVIT.TISING Ir.EMIIIIMIIIIIIMI .t.. 7 tit. 121/L: 2 in t ,t, tr; ;., I .1 ' .1 , 2 RI €..;110 •i 4, I 4r, igi i. , j 0). :44 111 2 ~,.• :,:' I 1 50' :1 13i) . 4 (LI . 5 ott 7t 01 11 lid 15 t , , 1 , ‘'..,• _'. , .., 1,01 ;i1 1,0! 71 00'. 6 110. A WI 13 0,1 14 111 1 , 1 , • ~ , I 2 ~,I 1 ~,, 1 , 0 , 7 0 I ~ i , O l ::', 10 •,‘I , 1111 1 ',1.00(.0 , , i 0411 ,1 o'l. ‘.l it I', 10 ill 1 '2.. 00, .1.,1 110 , . 2.8 141 3 •100(1,•5 I • :1 , 411 1( 80 12., o.;11V1 ii,) I i 8(;'1:i 481 f 11i' 88 i; ‘.l. , •,18-; 1 `.; 0 ; 1 : l'.l o'l'lB ; I!•'i kr' '..r.! tdis,'3s til l l 1,0 trii t V. art 11: 151!1 7 It,) :3 0ttr, 4 4 :111 . 3r, »ojC.l)(to,'loi - 1 I'll li —-•— - 1 1., 10, .111,-titt, It; ..31.tit'atctl by lit , Pwit i» !..tnt. tit / ...I.:MU. %.011 1!1 pii t tl 4.• 1. t• .. tale l It") .t tut., 111 , 1 , e, ~ v. II 44 , i 1,0'1,01,11R 101,11 be pa‘..l for before fn. • 1-ttt, •• <... pt . "» v , at lt .1».111».., \,at 11 hall-Y l '3l-4 - s t..,.... ,, tit a lystit,t• 0 WI, IL.itilit.,l. .; '.‘,... N”ric.v,iii the I:;ilt.t.rtul coltmlw., .11110 . ..11 a „1 , ,, , 15. •411. , per lit». t A It tiott•ili•tti. Nttllz• ~ I t t-tAte,l fol tet , r; Ilia» irtl. It,t.it.•Nttt z r.... I» 1,, a‘ ,o 111111». 111»eills per line it t. r, ig..,:. it • ... lir», : etta i‘tt•:t.tti. , till' s 011til t . ui 11‘ t, ' a.a; II 7.4 I ; .1131 1„t tos,lttaly will t,c c!“.rged 10. cent= 7,1 pet :,t regular rates 5 till, s or $5,110 pLr year. ~~csin.ess Cards J. 11 3i rifi El ItFit tsr & Johnson, t r, of ".11,,1ivaia.et , ..13, Toktio.A.,ue3, Table oi „ cf,to,t, r 3, t ail mod see. Shop, Witlu st , ti F , uvdry, IVtiktLoro, 4-July 3, 1572. A. Redfield, I I.AiNL: A . AND COITNSELIAJIL AT I...A.N.—Collect , pi ptly attiuded to. 0111 i, u, ct th, At. Jam.. \\- ellsboro. . Apr. 1, C. IL Seymour, r 1T 1.0,', v.,. All Lucille:is en ti,~_icU l. , Lu , acC aul c r, W. Merrick, 1 WICN.L.V Lkmeu i Cone's oloch, net,. h..L to nu AL,ltatur orthe, Yd notyr, 1l ~ilobvro, I.l.—Jan. 1. 1672. ME 3liteliell Cameron, Trop,NEys AT I.Aw, ID9nrance dents t,,lice w Cl/11% or y., ‘,llllanl. 111101 bloek., otc,L Welloboro, Pa —Jan. 1, . _ William A. Stone, r - roLNEY AT I.A.W, over C. 13. Kelley's Dry Good :Iture. Wright & Bailey's 1.:1 , c1, eet. 1.1,461.'0r°, Jan. 1, 16;2. Josiah Emery, • n "1 - 1 ORNEY AT LAW.—Ot t , orp,,sit, C._n t Ilomle, N. , . 1 P.inly . :4 block, N‘illia i.polt, Pa. All brv , inesh i rouiptl) att,mtle.l to,—Jan. 1. In - . 2 J. C. Strang, r,: NEAT LAW & 4 ,, T ParT AT FORNEY )lll.'t uLd.B Nilc ?, • , i , P.l —LID 1,'72, C'. N. Dart-t, E'll t i 1 t v. ail ,11 gist. I).2tte.• s-it.si ti holt t l .au any tititig. 1- 0.11 .. 1' 1110. h. V. ell, t .1. B. iles, l'‘)11'.I:V fI. kV , . - ii,t p t - t huz i t orit.t. I 1.. Lt 4 111 11, 1 I . ()Xi t• (.11 0, I.N lOW - NV , 11-1...r0, Pa , Juts. I, 1-72. \ rp( Thie lx Ow zlhthort 3L7,:t.c: - of the Erte Rail )av Ct,rnpany 10l the sal, of Weso.(n. Tickets in Corn -I..a,s;iage u - ,111.1.2 .21iec1.,1 only on Tiukcts I,arellau,d it tliu Lowin..n3 's uth.u._ „(o, itln kUllli Northern Central Railway. Trains Lrri re aid depart at Troy, slue° Juue 9 .0 4.11, 1872., as fellows :. \ N.lll. II II Ala , . bOUTHWARD. S I agti s t 4 1:,(1,tc91 , 1, 407 p nl Tlallo. Exploaa, 915 p dal], . 15 pto Plulada Lxpreas, ul5 p I..xp 10 20 ain Mail -652 a in 11. FISKE, Gaul Sup't. Jan. 1, 1b72 C'y I ft r ill M D. -- S 9 l i - WHOLE DEALER IN Foreign and , Do - site Liquors e \i \NINES, $c.,5,e. Agent for Fine Old Wli Ades, Jan. 1, 1672. ; , CORNING. .Y. Houghton, Orr Orr & Co., , , , Buggies, Sulkies LUMBER WAGONS, SLEIGHS AND 808 SLEDS. We are prepared to do anything in our line on short notice and in the beat manner. Satisfaaton 'guaran teed. HOUGHTON; ORR'& CO. ' HASTINGS At COLES, Agents Wellaborg. Stony Fork, July 1, 1872. E. B. Y0tr....a3 Booksellers and Statiopers, Wall Paper, . Window Shadee,- „ WindOw Fixtures, i'lasical Instrumento, Yankee Notions, PiCtrire - Frames and Glass, • --- Pictures, all eorts, -- ---__Picturo Cord, Law Blanks. Justice Blanks, Blank Books, all sizes, Newspapers. Magazines, Writing Deal s, • Artist's Goods, Law Books, Medical Books, Religious Books. and every article in our line of Glide —New York Dailies at One Dollar a month. —Elmira Dailies at 75 Cents a month. —Subscriptions for a week, or month, or year. —Orders for Books not In stock promptly attended to —And Express `package received from Now York ev, (try day. —We aro Agents of the Anchor Line' and the Onion Line of U. S. Shill Ocean Steamers. Passage tickets to and from any point in Europe at the lowest Yates. ' ' —Sight Drafts sold on any Bank. in Europe at cur rent rates of Eschinge, . Jan. :IC 1872-14 Mrs, C, P, SMITH , now recoil-114f new and elegant designs in. 1"..43/OT4CrSr CA-COCO/JOS, 'invitts the pubila to call and examine goods and andl pric S.—No trouble.to sbow goods. .b. 28, 1872. . Mrs. 0. P. SMITH. . . -._ CARRIAGES . &- WAG - 6ft l'-- ,llE•undersi g to4iis prepared to tarnish Carriages; 'Wagons, Sulkies, .he., on short notice, and Onrea -1 le terms. H. H. Borden ,of Tiog:_,_ and B. t e t ler of • Latk - reiteerille , entS, rir ,at . . at , I o places, or my shop in . W ag edsboto; iintreitantllle' 4 beforlinixtbaidzi k elstiwhare i ..„— I - - -. ,- • , 714 unit. --- • . --, ~.- 7-- 1 1% . fi: ' WiapitEii • ' soot Whi abo wor) . . I _. • , . .. . . _ b . „A, e 01 1 4 , ?, ii; , . • • dc• 24 ' s• , i .0.•0_,z, • .....,..:,,......litp. ,• y, i - s' l ,4; :NrAf-16, • #.-...-,,-- '' . •'.; , ,,..,, -, ' - --ii.:14','1' 9, -,40- - 01 -'s : ' .-.. , . ,11 1111 IN.: tit . rt:• • • _ p.. 0 . i A - 0 1., - t , ,p-- - - : , . , ~. % rfA --- -,... , --- 1 .---- ,, Q.,• ,,, , , Nzap / ..,...--- , ..., .„ . ~..„ it, 0 , r...• -- :ft - . '-' i• 7 V -. " 4'••': ' ' ` -•/ •••-•"•- :i- ' ' ' ': •4 i0. 1 , q.t. , I '0 .• I 0 •• •r0 7 " :•4.* ..' 4 ''llt: k6a ‘' Zlti - LigrA -) ' ' - . ' . .,• •1 1 t ' . A ' . • 1- , . . • . . I , " ' 'rime Table Na. 4 INEI Time 'Table No. 3' Monciay June 3 1 05 p. ni. Emil . j.), ILI 4.... ;. u. GORTON, Supt L. If. SHATTUCK., Su Catawissa EITIMEM Erie Railway. iTc;twa. d :N0.., 1100 am 9 li. pm 11 00 12.55 am 12 ^ ,9 .. Nu. 1. gloom 4 31 rm ti'2i ' 10 30 " 10 20 " 10 20 " Sl5 Sup 203 " 705 Bit. 720 Dft 11 50pin 620 rim 11 20a m 1120 am 12 45aul 60 "12 10pm 12 Itlpm 143" I 7 22 I 12 30 " 12 50 " LGCAL TRAINS nt Sunday', frnm 04, - ego ftr iiornetia I: tst~ arl A DOll LOC 1L 'lt A [NY E.CiTIVAITO JNO N. ABBOTT, Pas'r Ag't STONY FORK, PA 1 Dlanufacturera ofj PLATFORM SPRING, TRUCK AND cuittß% E. B. Young & Co., (Successors of Hugb Young .t. Co.) aul Dealers lu E. B. YOUNG 'Ac -,CO 3%/Ellll3ae.r3r and (4EO. 0. DERBY - TT At . E in t ii,au oty with the largest T st.N. k. 4 ti( BOOTS AND SHOES htolight ihto Welleburo, Lad les' Aid and Cloth,- Bal Ladies, Misses, Children • and Baby's Shpes. Geivff - Cloth Boots 4. Shoes' Prince Albert ,Calf Boots, Boys' Call c.• Kip Boots Youths' Boots: - • 10g.4 R. R. BR! BLOilLlgrs.G. .... 10 00 u. . _lO 20 p. m AT CORNING. US p.m 1.. .. .8 20 a. m In f let, all Muds of ?dens' and Women's 'wear kept n a ti.'st-rbfs= Shoe Store. The best. sewed Women's Slides E%:::.' oilif. i ell is ttii UL.lftiiCt. We dety the worlil in J . , . _ :.Ft7.E.B. Ttojet It. It. • kdi • If you dou't believe uz. try us. We buy only the best stock, and bare us good Cordwato.‘rs as money con .. 9.00 n. m ..a.ou p. / C. 1,0 p. 3u _9.'25 a au LEPAIRING done ncztiy, and with cii3patch co: all kind; censtsutly on Land. I.)aSil paid for rfide.3, Deacon-S.l;lw'; our silt ivcs with a ch,:ice per-)cmally seh', Led tor th).; market, •se respectfully solmit a fur shale of tra,le. Small profits and quid: return ," we believe to be a g0(14 business maxim and h hold the best ,goods, i , so M.) the ehoapest. W keep a ) shoddy. Our Colortment is sufficient to nice all,sizt and tastes We in - ate our patrons and the prehhc %floridly to call and oar stock.. No trouble to show g.ood.i. Always to be found, one door nth fC. L. Kelley's Store, Main Street, Wellaboro, Pa. May . 1572. riEELY !c FISIILEIi. N. 7.1 . 1 ,70. 3.* JO pin 700 p m 252 am 225 a in 305 " 523 " t r; 42 " 6 " irtxA - ticiitore4Alv4vr4 ---- 4,A A. LL I.llids stylcs and sissy of Pictures taken and I 1 executed in artistic manner at D. H. Narmincre'.3 G - attery. cppositt: Coue 'logic, Wellsboro. Portraits on Porcelain Plates. liotliing finer can be offered than these beautiful Por celain Pictures in a velvet case or frame. Their soft ness ant delicacy are superior to anything produced. 011 ;fOll paper 111. cal •.vaut a of vtoire.:ll, go to Nalttauorr'. , • Ti you a aut for vt.l3 Le-t tLat Lad, p,(.4 to ti.darnorr'-. If you , A'allt 50171cf.t.17t.7 that Itle you, go to Nii. moor.: .:Ira,rotype.ol (,tl,(r oined aim enlarged, lie C.lll d.. to it ut leusonuhle dri any otri:r man. They n.ll be laiii , hed in Indiaha:,Uri or Wa crt.'“hirs AN II dUSIII.I.I I'efsunsv,i.hingp;cturcd aha rhiltiren, A 1 . 111.111cb nut Ftatuiog Almeria cciuntuntl ,- vu hit - Ilk ' , All Lityls. ut Pictures Franked to Order N. B - D. n't ini.tak6 IIP plaf oN..e A. B. Easthinn's iltal itk3,1.114. Aiall ?.1, 1•:72. t; New Boot, Shoe, Leather G. ,W. Sienctrls New Shop,' New Stock,. and Erg- , YTHING from a Ruud Cark t,; a Kid Gaiter. Leaf ./I_,Ame ~ t Ladies' Rid - and Cloth Dal- Gents' Cloth, Morocco, Ktnd Ca Gaiters. Oxford A good line of OVERSHOES, and a full line of \\\g ' FINE BOOTS, 1 n price from $4,00 to $7,00, pegged and sewed ._, STOII BOOTS Leather at the lowest rate ,as usual: ° The undersigned towing spentAwenty, years of his life in Wellsboro—mach of the tun on the ,stool.pt penitence, drawing the cord of affliction for the,goo4 of soles, believes rather in hammering than blowing- Wherefore, Le will only remark to his old \ tc ,l4. istorners and as many new ones as choose to give h a call, that he may be found at hie new shop, next.door,tO lf r . T, Van Horn's ware rooms, with the,best and ch. te,„ eat stock In Tinge county. • - C. W. SEARS ; . " VI . ellsbpro, A . pii ?.i, 1872 „ • • • • rangin from $5,00 to $l5 .MPORTANT TO FARMERS: W73.r. WE-;(3 T' undersigned, experiencad, piactical cooper le mantifactraing a first-ciao* article of work, con, sistirq of I . , Butter Firkins, Butter• Tubi, :Barrels, Owing to the influx of firkins and tubs into this_vil• lege, creating a monopoly and combination which will, •unlese 1 act speedily', overthrow rue in this branch of busitiess, therefore I shall sell direct to the farmers, from my- shim, from the let of August, and continue through the 'season, 111 Cooperage corner of Water and Criafton streets Wellcboro, Pa. July 31, 1872-3 m. , • -;-_. ...".. . ..- lIELsON, -Tuna Co. ,yi. ! , ~,... _ . ..., .- 1 - - : 7, S: 'HI.BcI. D.amptiell" i' . r . ~ RE priepared to Issue Policies In first iburi Coln klwiles on all kb:l4Bot lusurable Property. against Fire suelLightning at reasonable Welk' , We travel end marlins all risks . personally In. the cotintleibt Tioga auliPotter_. ._, • . -; :.- . ,-. J. U. VANICIP2 ' lielson. Trob.:l4 . lrre-17 ' ' ' sT; D. D4W/lINTAD:- , WELLSBORO, TIO DERBY & FISHIER,, c: - .l,aiging of li i i CUSTOM - Leather and findings Pelts. and Fara Clood Picture /i )• - ai 1111 Old flagi4( ri-ot pr, EM=B AND FINDEcG STORE.' \ I THE FIELD AGAIN class Work I morals and Gaiters, Ditto Children's and Misses. and Prince Albert Ties. and worth the money every time nd Fiiidinga Churns, Waßh Tuba&c. FIRKINS at TUBS AND CTOVEES nt FOR CASH ONLY. qener4l .Insurance Agerici;:' A011:3 FISEILER . ... .. Whey onrAeti 71; with et itel cureP•i. • They nulledoe ii lllLtielvt,t. tonne, ILI hid in th, ,, Weird city - : -.' My burden o 1 Ain and eklitv 7. ' .1 1 Rut yet in any drief and madness, •-. Through the Ming di my wild unrest; How I turned With , ti. et- fond yearning To the Lute upon my beeinit I And oft as 1 toe ed in torture (in my bed ot erime and care, Lire a smite from the tar-oil Iteare. Lay my blessed baby there; Till I thought as I lay and watzhed tier. Wheli / smiled anal are.wered me her pouting lip- , ro4elonia, What her futiire late migld be, „. • . Ahillodt how I, :it eit aarliutt How I kissed her tiny tei tt, Till the burden lof b giew lighter, ' The sinnud the shank gr ew sweri; But with storms 01 linrning - lasses And a rain or !blinding tiara anielded my own Mart's treasure From the shame and the scorn ot ye ea Row I sat in my chihliees sotl nw AAA. wept in any empty robin With a curl andia ai ; stained That told nf o) = h:untitled biotan ficw I blessed, how - r (wised itiiu yonder, With my jealetui heart ire striie. For I knew that the rich 1414 n loved Ler, The light of his There's a palacel of peerless splen4ur • . In u great broad street bard , - And at, night wh.,en, the darkness deiri.ens Longing, I linger nigh, While I look through the lighted windows, With my torn hearktiirobbitn; dlow, Just to-see her, my sweet, my darling, And to - bless Ler—sobidng to .- Last night they Sad guerts up yonder, And ho stood 'Death the chandelier /n bl 'ze of queenly beauty, While I hirkeel in the gaslight here ; lioti I longed with a mighty longing To stand with 'ray saint apart, And to strain hei, with - eager kisses, Clogs, close to' my bursting heart I ' a I 4 I * . I _.... Would God that thia.i . .) . .e .Lat torr..rza • - - Could yeah me mid 1,111. c /sae dear " From the soil at r ia the siaiu ‘ - :,t siimin'7. Like the love of the 3legeialeue I But. perchance, in the happy 1/raven, When she ainyia by the jasper i Ch, ... She may hear how this iced heat luved-rer--- , And her prays a may' picad for me. 't ---Wit.7/..,1:5t , r. Ci.•v , m.:! . ___ sat in Dr. Tobie's office. He had been reading a letter Ivhen 1 entered, and beyond 'a simple salutati?n nothing was said until he folded the missive and had it, aside. His eyes were moist as belinished , the.. perusal, and he wiped them with his handkerchief. Then he got up and shook hie warmly by the hand, and after a few passages of friend ly banter he said to me: - " Sit down, old - fellow: I've got a story for you." And he laid his hand upon the letter which he had been reading. bore you; it's a film* , sketch, -- and the eol oring you can put in for yourself." I seated myself, and the doctor told a 9 follows: "Twelve years ago f was called to, the Poliee k eourt to give my testimony c oncern ing the result of la post ni;?, tc ot the body of a marl who had been killed in a.street brawl. This cage having been disposed- of, I took a seat' within the bar to watch the Ni'beesl of justice, revolve upon, other cases. They came up from tke.prisoners' dock, one by one—the old, the middle-ti:icd, and the young—representatiVes of all degrees of crime and degradation; and 1 wondered, as I saw 'them passed off to purckhinent, how many of the potir creatures bad teen abso lutely born to a !life of shame; how ninny had been led thereby surrounding., circum stances and influences over which they no control; - and boW many had fallen from a better state Bir - utgb.erhuino ch o i ce ; At all events I could not put away' Elie convie; tion that tan was al field for Missionary ef fort. But neverinund tux moralizing. ,On-ly sutler me to stiy that utter 1 had mentally tired a shot-at what I conceived to be mis directed missionary effort,' the (bought forced itself upon me—' IN hat have I done in the way Of redemption?' And I conelu dCd I had betterwairuntil I laid 7iedeCifie l l myself from ih4tion before' I blamed 'oth ers for misdirection of action. " I had just passed this reproof upon in . ) self,, when a prisoner stepped up from the dock who partichlarly attracted my atten tion. It was a b,oy, not mole than lourteen years of age, and rather small, at that. Ile was light of flame, and, I thought, slightly under-sized; but every inch of him was finely strung and firmly set, and his form was beauty itself. Ills fa( e NI, it. thin and pale, and his features of a clei4i Grecian cut. 1 saw himit t irst in profile, and his wa vy hair, of a sail y hue, straggling into ring lets here and these, swept back lions his full brow. I thong 't 1 had never seen a more tempting study. When he turned his 'face toward me 1 iaw a pair of blue eyes, land found that the view, thus obtained of his features was cc:tinnily interesting with, the other.- His clothes were sagged; but not dirty, and there Was no dirt upon his hands nor upon hid face. This struck - me fisrci bly, because most of those who, had smile up from the prison cell had come bleared and giirumed. J " He answered to the name of ,Dick Prin tle, and Was up for•petty laraenyraud the officers who presented him said this vi - A the third time he had been up tor like offend ing. The judge nodded grimly, tor heliim self recognized the lad as one who hal.l b 6.- fore passed under his sentence. Thej buy could not plead innocence, for he bad \ I eeu caught in the very act of pilferrug, at id he acknowledged. Lis guilt. The judge's brow was black with judicial thunder, but he did not deem. it worth while to veut much of it upon so ingignificaut an object. I ` `Su this is the third tinsel' he said., The boy started and jtrembled, and • I thought he tried to speak; but the awful voice: of power sounded •again` You'll conic to the gallows, sir! dtk you Iwo f that? You ale incoiTigi -1 hie! Haven't y u got enough et, pistil lite yety' 'The boy's trembling ceased, and he looked defiant. I He stood_ ero t, his , blue eyes flashed,,an his finely-cut nosttilslwcie taistended. - t P.y this time I had called to mind -% hen 1 and I& here, on a. former occasion, I had seen that sit e boy.-,I I had been culled iii his mother's, deatlilbed three years before I. rernernbere thp xtrune—arid]—and 'I re membered ib Curly=lieaded buy who bad. held her faithshand; and I 1 onendieled thatl had then It erd the d.) ing woman's story..' Hei bu band`hattouce been captain of a ship i and.accounted a seaman trf the very first classi- but runs had broken him down„,find Mgt him, a cOmplete wreck, Upon• 1 a dark shore. She had, antlered more than she could tell—had sunk to the son mini feirel where Iliad found her—and was only too glad to die. And, dying, she had lett her boy the inmate of .a. den of criminals; and, in her obliviousness rut' spirit, Conse quent upon a 'long suffering wherein only these children of night hadbeen her ft lends, she looked thankfully upon the keeper ut the den When he promised to be a ttiend •to the buy. j . 1 " I thought of all this when the in ;goner stood at the bar, and before the seutiqice had been pronounced I stepped crc : er and touched the• clerk of the, court upon the arm, and told him I would like to !MN e the boy placed in Ply charge for a inonili. • The clerk whispered to the judge, and the budge beckoned to me, I went to hi, anti he told is* he baited m it would lie of nu Use..---- fhe little riniza'ls 'utterly incorrigible,' said he. ' VIA islhe third time within the eaethist he hls been up for stealing.' • ~ -o• I look"ed n the little fellow, and as' I narked the finely-eut-lines of tilt handsome Tate, so•defiantly set, I thought to myself that if _lie wes:iputlered to grow up into a 'manhood of crime be_ would gist- suciet) trouble; he would play no second part - ni ,the dram ' a Of life, were it to be' fair (4.'1(4 And I whispered to, the judge my thoughts He had been al classmate of 'mine in college, and Was willing to please me;.und the sen tence, Which A few mbthents before had waited upon his lips,• was suspended, and theboy wai placed under bond in, the'aunt of fifty dollars--which bond ienti - Otl Mit -lie_phould - appear again in - court at the apt; rikticili Tone month. - It * wad nue, my ,picr.: potte Id bail hfin . out at that' tiftinZlint the little .teliow seemed sbghtly, - liewirde4 when the officer sent. LIM h'act to.the dodt; acrd lie may have been morebewildel;ed stbil when he fonnd - hiniself consigned to the jail' instead Of .being tlent to the peniten tiary: - ! ' . `On thb folloWing - day, I -wept down, to the-jail with tin order.from the shyrig t and• was admitted-fto- the -hors cell; Uls fakt, OrliPanot wbeitta low is* 1414 1 10, that ta EEO J, gzi,Tirr.n ISE CO., PA., TUESDAY. OCTOBER ?,2, 1872. Magdalene. DT r.DwAnu RENAUD A LIFE-SKETCH stint I saw, as by inspiration, the latent goodners of the poor waif. I sat down, exiled him by name, and 'asked' him if he remembered me. " lie remeinbered me Very .weal as the doctor Ivlio had been callt:d to his mother's 'lying bed. . .„ " ' 1i lA' said 1, ' I ivipld have helped your mother then had it been in env power, and I have come now to help you, - if you will let me.' " twill I, will Viv help nw?' " Ile looked at me again in the sante-won dering way. IN91) von help me to_ help yovo' asked. " Ife eauoa,alS- incoming Oh !'• he vii tt l, sill you give,lne a chance!' fiimi that was what I had come " • I have never had a chance,' he said.— ' Ever