II VOL. .•I.X. elle:: - A - 044,toe : ',..:,:i : erstinnen sItY:ItY TtrEED2,I" by db , pI.PITa pur annum rn aciyanco. lilt' 1.// / It A. TES OF AD YER X.XS.ING . ..: .. iin 12 tu, i 8 In. 41n. 1,54C0 ---1— 3.X01 I Col. --:_—;.— ~,lb - 1.031;,..2 03 8300 1400 $80040130 $l.l op "" 1 - +'l 8t) 3034 00 8 001 7 0011 00 -16 00 a 600 1 viols 20i 0 OD 5 0 8 00,18 00 Is GO ,: t a,,,a, i 2'51 400 600 7 DOI A 0115 00 20 00 I - ,1 ,Alo , i 1:0 li Uoi 41 CIO 10 00.12 00 20 00 28 00 - : ,,,, t r,.. SGO 804 12 0113 00 15 00 25 00 35 00 vl(o.aLd 8 boll/ 62 00 20 00 2/ 00125 00 60 00 , i,: - ;12 00118 03125 03 28 00 15 00160 00 100 00' ar6 Onloulated by Ilan Inch In length ,41uctn, 410.11 . 1 buy Lewapnea Ls rated as full inch, Fnrlinn adtertlsetaents =net be paid for before tn.- seept on yearly contracts, when half-yearly in &drum-0 will be'requlred. • ,yric ins In the P.dltorliti colunarcs, on the ~.5 I: , , , anti per 'lino each insertion. Alb: fur lean thaw. $l. • in Saxe:. e..olunin, 10,3012 a pir line If Grua Ace linpe ; cents for n notice of aro -;. !,;:.nizsarlirs of Idanau.ora and Desitas Inserted r. 14 obllkum notl.xe, wtllbe olaarged 10 coats ikGe , tict, j>l7o.l:s f. , 0 per nut fit.l3VeregalAr rrktea )r.v: 2 - .7. CAraie,s lines or has. etS,OO per year? Business Card,s: _ j aeirsirmirx. *. A. J9ILVICO. Batchelder & Johnson, erlatmtartra of Alonumentz; Tombstor.os. Tebbe I CoAltare,:ho. Call and *go. Shop, 'Wain at., Weal*boro, Pa: 7 —July 3,-1872. .I.k. Redfield, A it, kai CY INVCCAMSELL OII vGS Phd m ptly tsttencloci t.).—Dloptiburg, Tio g a cou z. paaa'a., apr.Lulta2-916.,.. C. H. Seymour, 011NEY AT LAW, .T.ENia Pa. Alt busenesu en aatedtohisc&la Arla ccoaive pn.unpt p.ttenticua.— ;ta. 1, 1872. Geo. AV . Al.alr, .... ... . .:Ancit:i AT LAW.—Offica in Dorian .t. COLeb cu;); , t.croaa ball tram Agitator Oflie, 2.9 door, St'llEboro, Pa.---Jan. 1.. 1872. ALiteliell & Cameron ! :to:JETS &T Claim extdlusuranlls Mi;oute. Ia Courertie hMaxus brie% block, over rica;.sr Osgood% store, WeUnbar°, Pa.—. Tan. 1, William A. S one, 10B.SES AT WV, over 13. B. Kelley's Dry Good Wright & Bailey's Block ort Mehl street: Ishoro, Jan. 1, 1572. Josiah Emery, 10F.'51. 7 d p LAR.—Ofrloe cpposits Court Etcsuse, s;- 1 Pts a Lad Cyaitz.r 13tat Ladies' Kid and Cloth Bat morals and Gaiters, Ditto Children's . and Misses. Gents', c10th,..41 - oroeco, wed Galt Gaiters.'Oxford • :and Prince Albert Ties. Ja good line of 07ERsHOES, and a. of FINE BOOTS; ranging in mice from to :TM, pegged and e d CUSTOM BOOTS Prom SS,DO to ,SI.S,CD, and worth the money ov,-r7 trie The umaerst&ned. haviti.s spent twenty years of his life In Welleboro—much of the time on the stool at penitence; draNcing the cord ref eatc tlon for the good of soles, believes realer In haumieriLg than blowing. Wherefore, he will only remark to his old customers and as many new ones ea choose to give him a call, that he may be found at hie new shop, izext d6or to T. Van liore's ware cooing, with the olnap. est stock tri Tiogneounty. r best and i;EARF, Wellehoro. April 24. "Wit -WELLSB . 2 / 1 - QttiVit, ;tit(' Welisbort•, 1,4 . .14157F•ting C ts;TO u • ikv on E., Leather and Findings kind° caa,tutirly un 1413a1/. Year - ft t r' «y IfF.IIIIY VISFILEIt Good Pictore Mat.t.ta. '.:CAII.-V+I.OIVE T 1 1.." rra r+ Orr (.0-1 i 4; elas3 Vjork! Leather altd 1-Thldinge. at the I , Ysreat rest, ss ugmal NVIN OtOODS :1 FOB Li BUY ERS Bought at preeettt Vitt:cii are cure to 1.1, , , utue4 Ikher as coot: ' Trade Igecius. Flann 0 , 0 laths, at CASSIZERES: - • . tpt DRESS GOODS, ; PAISLEY SHAWLS, • BLACK SILKS. • Domestic , cottons; i 1 , . 0: sailletise.ble makes. 'e shah. soil these Goods CI.I.T.AP, owl eve r..arty Buyers Good Value Crf their money. / J. A. PASSONS/CO. No. S. Cooor-..1.3 Nock, Cortdeg. N. T. Rep t,17. 1872.-tr.' „General i nsurance / Agency, Nr.;507. 4 , TIOJA Go.yre.. & J. D. Cairipheil, - au 'prepared to Igaue Podc:ee. iu nrrt cluz Com. pastes 02 all kinds Of Insurable rroporty against dire and Llgbtning at resacinable rates. We gavel and Rossains all risks , personally In the outmtles of Tioga itgl Potter. CAltioaraW 11111101 i 104.11112147. - • - • TIOGA CO PAL, TUESDAY, DECEMBER :3 1479: l'hc Ohrisdan — 's Fatlierland, . fly DEAN ,l'Als'l-TY. --* • Where is theChtlatian'a ratherlazult Is it the 11.01 y, Hebrew Land? In Nazareth's vale, on Zion's steep, Or by the Oalitesu deep? Where pilgrito hosts have rus'ind to lave Their stains of sin in Jordan's wave, Or sought to win by brand. and Maxie The tomb wherein their Lord was laid ? anus FJS/ILtil Where is the Christian's Fatherland? Is It thehifunted Grecian strand. Where Apostolic wanderers drat The yoke of Jewish bot.dsge ban at? Or where, on many a roysts: paiis. Byzantine prelate. Coptic sage, Fondly eifesyed to intertwine • Fartif a shadokrs with the Light 'Dirty:, ? 1 Or Sit t 46 Chrikan's Fatherland Where, sitth crowned head and croziorsd hand, The Ghost of Empire proudly flits And on the grave of Caesar sits ? Oh I by those Iworld-enahreoltid . Wank Oh tin those yasfand pictured halls, • Oh 1 'underheapt 3 that soaring dome, Shall this not the Christian's home ? . , Where lathe Tristian's Fatherland? Re atilt looks n - Crona land tdland— I.s it where Ge roan conscience hope When Lilther'S lips of thunder spoke? Or where, by surich's shore. Wilf4 hoard The calm ItelYptlan's earnest word ?‘ i f Or where, heal a '', e the rushing Rhone, Stern Stern Calvin r axed bin unseen throne 2', Or where from Sweden's snows came torth.,, Cite stainless ere of the North? Or is there yet a closer bard— Our own, our . attire Fatherland ? ‘Vhere Law an Freedom stcle by side In Fieaven'e b half have gladly vied? Where prayer ntl praise for years have rung ILL E,ha_kerpear 's accents, INlllton's tongue, n Blessing with donee sweet and grave The firesid e ri. k, the ocean wave, And o'er the b oad Atlantic hurled, Wakening to 33 another world? No,'Christfaut no--not even here, * , By Christmas earth or churchserd deer; Nor yet on diatant shores brought milli - By martyr's blood or prophet's cry— Nor Western pontitrs lordly Ilan*, Nor Eastern Patriarch's hoary fame-- Nor e'en where shone sweet Bethlehem% star; Thy Fatherlan In wider far, Thy native hon e is wheresou'er Christ's spirit .reatbeg a hoOer air; Where Christ-II to Faith is keen to What Truth or .:ouselence freely ivefik; Where Christ ..11e Love delights to spari The route that Clever man from man; Where round G d's throne its just ones ttauii There, Christis,, is thy FATHEULAND. A I was nem erly, and eve that I would to be . very w But one fine years old, U peared from whither he h was closed, a quietly dispo his departur cliecksoo wli -ly signed oth in the variou could imagin much money signed - his ow As years fle the great exp my mind could went to work ey, with whit One cold Iti it,) forty year ante, I was sti bell ,end on oi or rather wha into my house numbed with him, and it ws his identity resemblance tc boyish days. upon him, and tecntrhtt the Iti t caring about and rev* been forgotteni quiet, and kept I called in a pl me that nly uti old a man, antl would be to gTi l sible. _ A year fro ' the debt of 131110BZ the res illness he, fro fragmentary particularly 4 . France. He 14 the forgeries 1 home, and stl well off as pe dabbling in st of his propert was tempted VI The sumaa death found cool veranda my cigar, wh life took a ch his cigar rase Settling hims directly after smoke throng to me asked: 1, " What is the population of your town?" "Oh'. 0n1. , ` -a couple of hundred' thou sand," I replied. I did not like the. Way he used the word town. .. " Seems tojbe an agreeable place," he con tinued; ." haye been here in this house two weeks, and not a person has spoken 'to me except in an.irver to an inquiry. " The case is not exceptional," I rejoined. "I believe you," he replied with peculiar irony. He did no speak again for severtil min utes, but iiib n be did so it was in an alter ed voice. . " I have h..en abroad the best portion of my life, and I suppose I judge everything from ord n standpoint; and yet it is sad to start in t e land that gave you birth and feel that not one drop of rave claims kin dred to you in all the faces that visa see; that not a tongue gives you a welcome, or a lip a smile I say this is sad, my friend: - ; His voice ounded very mournful, and I pitied the ID ii who could utter sucii , words' , I. turned ful around and looked him, in the face.; Els countenance was rather pleasing, eyes blue, and rather large, st lth a clear cut mouth shaded by an iron-craw moustaehe cut short, gving it a stiff, stumpy appear ance, hair o cc dark, but now thickly - mixed i ll with.eilter, and this, too, 'Was cut prepos terously clo . e for the prevailing fashion. " And so S•ou were born to the manor," I' replied in a musing sort - of way. Another I mg stream of smoke from his nostrils, am he rejoined: " Yes; lit t what has one's birth to do with his tax es, feeli4s and pursuits, if the better part his days have been passed in other lands " I moved : and remark " It's strr face of tine .I have been could conic so, like the " Some r answered IN tmusing d Wuldn'tjil the galley's 1 gaied, r a confes - sk man; but v bent on aid I made up tunes con'. crime. " Would cumstaucei happy Pas) told the'sti: tion „tin d But/first pt But t /first / A flash spoke. sir . , ” the comm you. Ire character. “ , 11. o w. me? , I e "Beca. By some am, and i all others Coverly:' , you, sir,. upon me, he reduce prived zu to pus 7' Money I lazge stoci e of er Gootisi /1221 ONVICTS STORY. 'd after triS' tncle John Coy one of Or family expected .e his heir,lfor he was reputed a/thy, and ,NlltS a bachelor:— ay, when I was about seven ale John' mysteriously disnp town, and none could tell id gone. His account at bank dile had sometime previous l ed of his real estate. After , sixty thousand dollars in tch Uncle John had. roistalen r people's names, turned up banks of the thy, and no ono why Uncle John, who had so f his own, should not have name instead of hie friends'. 11 away, I learned to forget , ctation that once, had dazzled ierniug my uncle's wealth, and and accumulated a little mon- I lived in a modest way. •vember, (I never shall forget after Uncle Jr Im's disappear rtled by n loud pull at the Bening the door Uncle John; was left of him, Staggered bent with infirmity and be old. Of course I didn't know s not until he had revealed at I could trace in him any the man I lied known in my Disease laid fastened itself remorse finial _l4 --L.,—...--- 61Wequences of his acts. to have our name bruited lye a story that had long since I persuaded him to remain ins presence a secret. When ysician he frankly informed cle's case was hopeless in so the only thing he could do 'e him as easy a death as pos y that time Uncle John paz.d t. ature, and Are buried him of his kindred. During his I. time to time. gave me Eeme I ccounta of hig wanderings, welling on his sojourn in rofessed nitich repentance for be committed when be left ,'ted that he was not near so Iple imagined, as he had been icks and lout the major part v, 'When in an evil hour be !o do wrong... - - •r succeeding rncie -John's le one day seated in the long, of the C— House, enjoying n a man past the meridian of tir near me, and pulling cut politely asked , me for a light. if comfortably in his seat, he *ard I blew a long stream of his nose, and then turning ny chair a little nearer to tim cat: uge how men wander overith i e / earth when they have a hone abroad several times, but ti•ver nt myself to remain long,amiy, cows, I always came home" leu's absence is involuirimt" he ith a dryness that Was i.nher srilte his solemn tone. - You ink I had served seven years in of France?" -•/` t him, doubting at trst that such n could proceed from a sane Mien I saw,his calm countenance with such peculiar' intelligence, my niiild' that this man's misfor d not/have been the result of yo,U object t,o relating the cir pat placed yo in such an an non?' a- e replied, "why should I? I've ry too often to have 'any hesita- Oiere is no shame in the 'recital.— iermit me to ask your name." iy is my name. John Cover] - Of auger passed over his face 03.,1 I t ' them mid he, "1. - _espected nothing but o , weei art courtesy of it 'gentleman from sotto\ L agret to find I have mistaken your tory;ful and I s '-' ' dare you - address such language to , "in t . claimed. I lost his Ise your name isnaJohn Coverly. i man, I Means you have discovered' who I [ culty tb I herefore have assumed a name of 1 from buj most hateful to my ears. John i used-to he repeated- with bitterness. "Did i the mon -now the wrong that man heaped i from hit, , the pain and the misery to which 1 "'1 11 ad me, and the good name he de- I Casper, 1b pf, you never would have sought 11 knew 1 iur pleasantry WI ou gm" could. ; I ' ! _ A sudden thought passed throush my mho. •IPerhaps, I thotight, "this man has en the victim of my uncle's bad con duct ' L ~.:, , " .t us noespeat too hastily', my dear ! sir," replied. " You Misjudge Me. lam hies ableiof wounding your feelings, and ntiSUll - 04 I had no intention of doing so. .1. Men ifteu bear the same names who never saw 9 . heard of each other before, and if minelrecalls and - unhappy phase of your iife,trelY the fault is not mine." "'lien your name is' Coverly—upon ,your honoj?" " Nes, npon my honor." " Vas it your father's name?" " litre you a relative by that namer" " /Aare 'net." "Then let us talk no more about that, at least. I•beg your pardomaut when I tell' I, t 011 why I, appeared so nrwted just now, you can judge n nether I had cause to lo4e, ray self-possession. i. "31y name is Casper Minot. - My parents were Prench , Canadians, who settled in this country, l'S'l!'die etivernl children were born i to them.- They all died but myself. When I wai ninsteen I lost both my father and Mother by an epideMic which scourged the ' part °eine country where we - resided, My father we a tanner, and did a good busi ness, and towas enabled to give me a fair .education; Bitt toward the close of his days he betrame involved in business difficulties, so when died there was scarcely enough money to pay the funeral expenses. Of mores I ilti to seek employment, anti my own town hifered me no hope of finding it there. Aqihow, I didn't care to remain among theta) whom I had known under bet ter auspicift. I went first to o e place, and then to nether, and so fur evens), years drifted to qvany,parts of the e untry, never finding rauthing at which I could succeed. " At last tired with thy ill hick, I shipped on board ft , vessel bound to Itrivre. Before I wins half 'Way across the ocean I repented may rashness and determined I would never I try a sailor's life twain. When we arrived ! in port I ran away the first time! I got on shore. ' I don't purpose telling you how for Imo/OILS afterward I managed to gain a live ' Ithood; enough to say I worked at any ern ploymeet I could obtain, and earned toy • bread honestly. . ' "In my peregrinations I reached the city of Nantes, where I mededdhe acquaintance of Monsieur Barbot, who carried Oil au ex tensive,' tannery. 'Be was a man of gene rods impulses and warmhearted. When he knew toy history he gave tiM. employment, and after trying me for a couple oh years, was - F.() well pleased with nisi" conduct that he increased my sttlary and confided' the general supervision of the business to use. "There was living in Nantes at that time an American by the name-of John Coverly. It was natural that I should become ac quainted with my countryman. coverlv seenniti a mood-licarted, cureless fellow, - wils plenty of money, In the course of time we became very intimate. ...Monsienr Btod'ot knew Mill, and had a great affection fur Idea. Once, when Coverly was crossing the street to.our office, I remember Monsieur Barbet saying, ' Here comes that good American. Casper, get us a bottle of wine; he is the noblest man on 'earth.' T " There was a time whdn Monsieur Bar but got suddenly cramped for money—it was one of those matters he couldn't con trol. I had the books, anti knew ell about it. Borbot was much distressed, bbt when Coverly bend of it he only laughed, and taking a check book from his pocket, filled up the amount that Barbet required, and tossed it across the table, saying„ 'My good Barbet, there make ybur mind easy; if you rc oWis.9 2 /Preelf, ' ) 1 11+Dttitt! 11` 1 41on:el'eFfiliff:' hot that 1 obtained leave to visit Paris for a few weeks. Only the evening before I start ed John Coverly made up his mind to go along. We were to start the next day at noon. I did not see Monsieur Barbot when I called at the office the following morning for the purpose of saying adieu. As I was returning to sty lodgings I ,met Coverly.— He tens opposite the biiiik. " 'I have missed bidding Monsieur Bar hot good-bye' I said; '1 am so scirry!' " 'Never nind,' said Coverly, 'we shall not be gone ling. I parted from him just now; he blase fiend you a couple of hun dred francs, illicit be requests you to re ceive, and holes you will enjoy yourself,' " ' How kiji!' I remarked. • ' " ' Yes, he's a good fellow,' responded Coverly, 'll has loaned me twenty thou sand francs. trill a -little short of funds, and don't expo t a remittance for a month yet. Here, Ostler, do you run over to the bank and genne money f u r me, your legs. are younger tbn mine; I will step in here and buy sonietigared - "He hareterne a - check made payable to bearer, signkit;ith Monsieur Bartot's name. I was familhr, wit it his signature. Every officer in tit built knew me, for I 'teansact cd most C2i'clz business there, The cheek wasnitashict ad I returned to Coverly with th e Money, rarer he counted me out a cou ple •',i't hintcheri francs es a present from ivy en:Pm:rel. , " Thee:tat Ntek I was in Peri. 4 Coverly left me,sayinghe had to go into the COlll2- try for ticoupn of a:l3-s to see a friend, but would rioin 9 lat the expiration of that 'time. lever saw him stain. " Shelly after his iieptodere, as I was one eveningtoing irto Of! theater, a couple, bf yens tra4o l rudely seed me by the collar, and witler erns explanatien bore the away to prise . " Thehave ado t 'otati'feshion in France; aipour ficiu is eotke,a lung in suspense when Ito- charged wile a mime.' You get a speedCie' to all evens, and don't rot in i jail bait to yetis' helOri you ti 2 -0. arraigned. The dot:Whining my - nettreeratiou t was infuruo of the mount of the charge oil which 1:... , ts inquisoner. Ot course I pro tested e sunereimen hut it vas received with areredulons shrug of the shoulders. Oat I :thddeY I '.n as brought. up for trial. as in hopes that I would be sent, back toil/ors to be tried them •My tee (pandas in nut city was extemiivc, and I was surhere i ere many who al ,, )tlld t('•iti` , fy to nvpod character. o my lee ad not occupy it very long time; paint' one day sufficed to, convict use. " The l k officers first testified They' fully kiened tie',.and produced theelivelt .. . - Moidieurirh4wns nextexaminea' What testinnmy, gate was in any MVO,. lie stated tle.,4e laid always found tide trust worthy :p thS day I deptsitet p l re f s ro er 7 ta l t v i i o rt x l on lea absknee, But the i of the ged clerk madepavable tobeaver was S oteluene a proof of any cirque than. 1 wrefienced to - the galleys to learn bet tot hitter. Ltried vet) , hard to obtain an ittinw Wilk Monsieur BarhOt, but. wan not 4‘Ctififtii. ' . r:l,hall I describe the seve n lung year,ient nd it pin— mer! It makes mn shahs hen I recall is Never till me dy ing 4011 I target the rcatini.n4rance tif that ,ibl ot o n ray life, , r komp:lnt,ql of my cell by night (for we sold all daylong in the doclisl was one ''iiipel. !Ile wits the most impious ss relver beinild; his wickedness was past Li lie was also a great glutton, end ly frequenoy devour both los own and illp at the same meal, leavine . me to go ks or quitrrel with him. Bet I didli'llf wished to die, for all hope and qty ,en crushed out of me. v eon- I duel, IT, was i 'good, and I gained' the pity unilors. i This did not please Gi pei,'w ti»ually jeered me, all the time small, igion.] • 1 'IV peried of my servitude ex- 1 ph edt pee emerged, to liberty. 011! I how s"• evened to be Ole to go where ' I pleas vent directly to a field and : laid do he grsen grass, pressing my lips on owets. I hail not seen lay Ir: as nrrested. I began v • JOY. A kind-hearted per .ken some intelest in my tits me with money and clothes, - Icantes. I tint Monsieur DEirbot had d was inconsolable. Poor pi. It.‘ , ,v li as with great dilli- Id hm, i' he had retired Lad arely item abcrat as he Ud t e whohikory, evervto - ly had given ti.4 , s coming it,' he exclaimed. !Alt, tics for you. Too bite :Ie guittlessr hut Nv4hk aul,y .my t belie; atto all; th 6 testimony against yon was not dis proved. We were sadly deceived in John CoverlY.;--he was • a very bad man. Large sums og motley be borrowed from the peo ple of Nantes, who supposed him to be hon. urabled They never saw bisn again.' "The good man actually wept over my triisfortnnes. T staid at 'his house a few weeks,;when he furnished me with letters of introduction to some of his friends in Mes.lna, and giving me a purse of money, 1. soon left France behind me. " Fur the nest fifteen years I prospered. It ,Ecerntd es if all my misery of former days was to he atoned for_in the latteryears of my life. I don't think I des6.rved such good fortune )is fell to my lot. But in air my dealings with my fellow men Las, - sure you I have nothing to regret. I cannot re member that I ever wronged a human being that I itnew of. •• There, cc!: )u NO zr ybto - i-y. Pardon me if 1 don't pronounce your name; I am no hypocrite, I don't lilic - it." When Ar. Minot had concluded I was ternpml to confers my relationship to the man who had so cruelly used him, ht7,t second thought caused »le- to remain silent on that ititt,lez . zt, It could do no pomiblo gool, rind would he a humiliating admi3- :11On. l fLerefore expresstid my regret at all the wrong ho had and' hoped there were seW'men in the world like .John Coy etly. r . 1 never saw Mr. Minot again, and don'4 known hat berarno of hinthut I have ewer been thankful that Undo John did not re turn posf=essed of money to, make mg bis heir.---,Sunday Tr'awoript. The Loves of Elizabeth. The sex of E 6 lizalcth of England was la phyaiological blunder. Many of her nmst serious oefects arose from her not havinh . been a man, as nature InUst originally have designed: With a masculine will, a - liitc and a wa-culine ambitiorr she had all the feminine o.eaknesses ivit out any of the feminine maces or channtt. tier vanity was in excess of her pride, and, in spite IA her unquestionable greatness, rendered her ridiculous-through life. She was ever anxious to be loved, and had the `exceeding misfot tune to be least lovable when she loved most. There was no great need of affection in her stubborn spirit, nO yearning fur sympathy in her self,suillcient nature, no inappeasable craving for what the romanticists would call an intercourse of soul. ale wanted lovers more than loy4, ivectWl: lovers flattered her inordinate von ' nod to!ri her, as lovers usually db, that which she .:ecietlythought of herself._ Mlle af.:ver tired of hearing site ;vas the Virgin queen, al never acted na it' she relishritl the arroga ed Loner. Coquetry she i‘ould have cairied to a `peilkus degate7 - if there had been zin thing perlinue in suLlt Ainazoni. Not one of ail the men she nuat desperate and protracted flirtations NNitlt—not even IfaleiLh, nor Leicester, nor -cured a mavt.eali for her in the Ivav ' she ached theta to; but from reasons of .tote, cea from moti7eS of polio;. they pre• tended to adore her. Crafty courtiers as they were, ir must have Lien difficult Jo] them to refrain from laugh ing in Elizabeth's f,ice when they called her beautiful, or v. lien they compared her voice to the tones of, the lute. They had ptisted through n 4 any hardships, but nothing hard er than to address Euryale in the langue.,4e beebluingl to Aglaia. -,Raleigh showed lea keenness Of insit.tist when he spread his rich mantle belfeath her ungainly feet, and Lei cester his Itin_leistanding of charact'er when he wrote t o o her that her lovely image ban ished sleep from his pillow. Of her nu -41e.22213;4111qP. Ulal2-VP/OzlidEfiflllittifijt: moue, anc. Raleigh, and Leicester, and Es sex, and (Abets, have often been written, and not, i , ie to Le piesumed, without a bu sh} of trut . But love is a fine baptiem for relations s fringing from Vanity on one side rind from considerations of diplomat..." cn the other. The Princess in her earlier years appeared to be fund of Seymour, and it is charitableto think she was. ' Pretty s stories have been told of the Coun tess of .Itigttingliarn withholding the ring sent to the Queen by Essex before his eNe eutiou, and of the consuming sorrow fritn. which Elizitbeth sull'ercd after his death:— The stcnies Are dramatic and interesting, their chief defect being that they are entire buntrue. The woman v. - hose reputation ad been almost irreparably injured by her connection with a man of whom she could calmly say after his eNecution, " his loss ia not much, for though lie had large wit In had little judguient," w mild not be likely to be trpuilled by remorse for deliberately sending hef nearest friend to the scaffold. Elizahet. i t could not-forgive in any of her sisters the possession of gifts and graces which she roust have been ptiv:ttely con scious were lacking in herself. Mary Stu art's unparkionable offense was her beauty and seductive charm, and her rival was nev er able to rttgard with kindness the men who, willing to forget the woman in the sover eign, hail sought her hand, and afterward wedded where inclination led. There is a species of dismal compensation in all condi tions cf: life. If Elizabeth failed to awaken in any masculine breast the flame with which she hoped to kindle the torch of her vanity, and if her vestal assumptions were not always credited, she had the good for tune, so surrounded was she by distinguish ed soldiers, statesmen, and scholars, to shine with the light reflected front them, and bear in history if glory not her own.—Jienitm H Browne ;a kddayi, Sumo Great lovers A strange lover was Jean Jacques, thjon ly Erenclnan, says De Stael, who has been totally un•French. The apostle of senti ment, who is de:Oared to have set the rash ion of humanity, he - loved often rather than much; beginning with MudanO'de - Warrens, urand.apd gifted woman, and ending with 'Therese .litivasseur, , a creature of cuinmOn- est clay, .st , stupid that in - nearly twenty years of in imacy he could never teach her to tell the hour - by the clock. After all his tender eloquence ; and burning blazon of 31aman, io t.lecline on such a lenian was like the cccentrr 1-opliist who praised paternity V. it bout stnt and left his children at the foundling ho:;pital. • Few Men; have been more hitt - active- to women than 31irabeuti, who, when written to by one Of - his feminine admirers for a pergonal description, replied: "imagine a tiger that Irks bad the small 'pox, and my portrait is complete." Ile was so homely Oat he was handsoine, and you who wish td find favor in the eyes of the fair should p'ay, if you cannot he as u eomely as Ferdi n-and, to be as ugly as Caliban. Downright plainness in sentimental assaults is as good ash scaling ladder against the wall. And when masculine homeliness owns a ptitent tongue, it holds odds against an average JOhn Wilhes declared that no was only half an hour behind the handsomest man in Englland, for it required him just that. time to talk away Izis face. )lirabeau was clevcrer still. When ho spoke his look's «ere forgotten—he was transformed. The greatest woman-wooer of recent centuries was Goethe, \rho interpreted not Only his age, but his sex. Enamored of Gretchen at fifteen, he continued to be ena , inured, not of her, but of Ann ,•:.chonlifipf, Frederika Brion,' Citarlutte Bud, Maximil iane Laroche, Lib, Charlotte., von htein, and a score of others in turn, until he wed ded Clirisline Vuipius, commonplace, pro saic, in no respect his peer. Minna ger- Steil), the original of Ottilie, be hrid a pro found passion for, in spite •of the disparity of their years. Thei sonnets he addressed to her, and his warm painting of her repre sentative character in the " Wahlverwandt schaften:' prove the fervor if not the depth of his feeling but. ely no manilas been act ter qualified by the intimate and varied experience to Write such a boolt, in which Eduard and the Captain inerely.il lustrate the duality of his own nature. Falling in lure became bviung indulgence a 'fixed habit with the great Cleimiin, and we see him in his seventy-fourth year glowing and throbnitpr over Ifinulein von LC:N%eZOIA, t; hose graudrat her he n4lit have been. lie Was happily constituted for it lover, since he enjoyed the plea=sures of love, and very lea', it eaty, of its pains. u s heat!, was as elast io•as his temperament, and when it ails breaking—in, chronic condition, al most—he uie'pdexl it(until the next time) by writiog uLjx,,)em, fAial Lis &riga. Lim so many of his sex, he loved women rathei than woman; was loyal to' love` but incon stant to .lovers.—Junius Brotoui in Gal axy, A 'LA with Tyndall. , Thus standing and looking ,:out Tyndall pointed out to Us the , great white, snow-clad basin—like a colossal porcelain-lined pre serving kettld without Meta—lying opposite us, up, up among the peaks between the Jungfrau and the ElFer, and called our at tention to the massive and seemingly im passable wall of ice directly facing us, over which ho said he with 'a small party had been slowly and painfully making their way at that same date the year before. The liotlithal, I flank he called it; though, in face of the drizzling, sheeny whiteness, which vas all we could see, the name seem ed something of a misnomer. It was the old story—slow, careful cutting of steps in,' a steep diagonal, theguide going ahead, hacking away in the almost perpendicular surface of the glacier wall the few inches of indentation which offer a bold to the hob. nailed boots of Um climber—QUO from which the tyro would shrink and fall in sheer terror, or be brushed' by the. slightest, crust, but to which the trained mountaineer clings with the tenacity, and almost in the attitude, of a fly on the wall. I could not but remark, hi looking at Min, the spare, but v. - ell-knit, elastic figure, the firm jaw, and keen, determined glance , of the cletir gray eyes, which spoke the man ready for all emergencies, and WILS curious to know how long he bad been training for his moun tain work. It WAR somewhat of a surprise to learn that hiSglambering was almost of recent date, and was first taken up in com paratively middle life, on occasion of a jour ney to Switzerland to recuperate his nerv ous energy exhausted with overwork in his Lydon professorship. Since that .time, ho c , said, he came over every season, frequently very seriously out of condition, but never failed to return, after a few weeks' glacier work, completely, reinvigorateil in hind and body. The same testimony to the inestima ble value, as a nervous tonic, of high glacier air and exercise, was afterward furnished me by that admirable scholar and most ami able of diplomats, George P, Marsh, whose habit it is, or was, on all possible occasions, to pass a considerable part of the summer in expeditions above the snow line. From climbing we drifted ;oft to hooks and literature, espc4ially in ?America. I found my' companiOn singularly well in formed in our literattpre, and especially en 4husinstic al)out Ralph Waldo Emerson, whom he pronounced with some energy by far the i:reatest mind in our literary annals. Such on admiration, coming from a profess or of physical science, sounded'a little sur prising. It has beim amply explained, how ever, by later MU:lances of Tyndall; which have made plain to us that along with his study of material forcep ho has alWays maintained a lively and sympathetic inter est in the subtler refinements of imaginative or metaphysical thought, and that ,side by side with his scientific formula; has always half hidden, a spring of fresh poetic feeling and appreciation which has, in an unevident way, permeated and adorned All Lis severer labors. —Scribm-r's. Twelve liundrea The Opi,',liorie relates - a curious peaee-mals incr. ceremony which took plae6 a few days ago at ilechni, Sardinia; `'Twenty-nine families of eight districts of Anglona took a share in this solemn compact of peace.— The, Bishop of the diocese, accompanied. by 111.•,,b priests sad by the fttutherities. of the country, assisted at the cneineny. "It ibegan' by the Lifson bling in ,a large by the assassinations comMitted or wounds inflicted by vendetta within , the last ten years. Then, Fleeing themselves opposite 'the Bishop and Prefect, they embraced each other,, oby tiro, at Erstrwith a certain re luctance, but by degrees the it:e melted; and soon tLe gretaest cordiality 'was manifested on both sides. "The twenty-nine families,' with all their relations to the fourth generation, amounted In all to 1,200 people, who thus exchanged the of peace. A. crowd iof more than two thousand persons formed a, circle around this,,intelesting scene, which f is,ft'a deep and most plensingni - ipression in all beans. Db.- ling the remainder of the day and 'on the _following muining the most sincere Joy and satisfaction were manifested ou all sides, and will, it is hoped, be es lasting as it was soksmuly celebrated." Son'y is net Enough Allan! Where is .A.llanr," A 11:0111,A:it ag6 he was playing with fli little earl in the yard, hauling dirt anion! the currant bushes.: I cannot tell how ma cartfu:s he c'irried.- He was busy as' a litt man, But Allan is ttore. Wbere. is lift. "Allan! Allan!" 11 " here," at last E::td small voice from the back parlor. " What are you there for':" asked his mother, opening the door and looking in, Allan dict not answer at first. he was standing in the corner with a pretty sober loot on. Come out to your little Cart," said his mother, ." It is waiting for another rim." " P,u not been here long 'null," said the little boy. Itilictt are yim here for at all •'r" asked his mother. . "I puriishinkY, my own self. I picked st)tne green currants, and they` went into my own mouth," said Allan. " Ohl when mother told you not to?— Green curl ants will make my little boy sick ; " said lair mother iu a sorry tone. " You needn't putdsh me," said 'AMID, " T punish myself," . ilis mother often p - ut him in the back Par lor-alone y.lien he had 'been n naughty boy, and you see he, took the• same way with himseit, „ "Are you not sorry for l tusuueying•moth er?" site asked Al/au. " I sorry; hut Forty is not 'zing: I punish the. I stay hc,re a ,tr,ooil while and ,tiave thinks r , - Giains of Gold - ---- -- ---- : patient is' lying, end one let down from the A AVOIII7III who ha 4 never been pretty has I top in the Otiler largo room, with the doors ; never been young. i opemd between the two, will form an ef- Dishonesty is the forsaking of permanent; tectuVl draft clurto r „tr any but the warm_days for temporary, advantages. of summer, and L tvill not be too strong for Providence, it has not been inaptly sait l ipi the most delicate patient who is ,protected provides for the provident. , front the direct ti , aft by the high head-board -:No one preaches better than the ant, and ,of the h o d . 1 11 cold:weather, the ;mildew she says nothiLr, . 'oPened from th bottom will be sffilicient. There never was a great man unlesS thro' cm' very cold day 4, we may trust "to an erg Divine inspith ion. , ... , tire change of air several times each day A -noble heart,' like the sun; shows its • „iii , l;ted by raising all the windowwfora fe greatest countOanee in its loest estate. moments at a time, during which: 3.11 e ,• pa The eoldeskil w iodies Varna opposition, tient must be, thooughly protected by extrt the hardest, sftarklc in collision. 1 bl:mkets alit!a slituvl about the' bead. If - We know Ood easily, .provided we 'do Dm 5; ,•,-.,-, ;Ln: the °My - mesas'; of heati n g. the constrain vurstilves to define hint, . apartments, a " perpetual burner! ) . (coal ay Show me a people whose trade is dishon-- iie-msqi in than roOm, to keep both at an-even est, and I will show you rt , people whose re: ten/per:dare, during day and night, but the t -, , Jigion is a sliain. , sleepingoroom should be provided, with a' Minds of nOderatc caliber al' s e too apt to- wood .teve; ft42.ei brisk blaze answering to ignore everything that clues not come,with- 41 - , c.:oine esten't the, purpose of a fire in an open I in their own retitle. , litrplat e. Many lives have been cut short Gteat vowel's and 'natural gifts do not , lr,- ex,gg,eration in regard to fresh air. 'Air bring privileges to their pOss. , sgors so mtelt ntust, ti , pure, bat it mint also be' warm. ,T 0 as they bring duties. . , • , % li-c;. thislitere skicadd be, day and night, a The superiority of some men is merely . . , Teadr but gentle! heat in the room of au local. They are great because ,their essect- . itiv;ilid. l accoiapanied by an equally steady ales are little. ! • - • , •c , -"-reat, of fresh air.—Scribrieroa i -1.1.! ~ , 1::„ c -, .., The difficult:7 in life' is the same as fire • ~,,, ~, , ,‘:‘, ,, , ,: e, ,,. , , - . difficulty in grammar-4o know when to ;, - - make exceptions to the rules. , '''' A St • i>2ll-noy. XV n A7..r. f6RWALts AND Boors. ..I._ . i —.Slake lime is a (110:1:: box to prevent the Dec- falls but little upon the smooth and escape tif ‘ , ,team, , acti when ,slaked, pass it brilliant, surface of polished steel of bur- ...,, , __,, a ~,..,,._ i , ..t.t0un.,(,0 , -it. - • , v- nished gold, while coarser and less costly , c,, vvcry biK quarts of limo adif one quart objects are freely wet. The gentle dow C/1 , , 4f roek,salt and one gallon of water.: After heavenly t•rate often takes effect upon f 1,•. : , th;;; )oil anti skim clean. To every dive gal rude aye uncultivated, while the rehm . .ti o , lout• et this, add, by sloW degrees, three the tasteful and. the critical are left, lik potash and four frost work, brilliant and beautiful, but ce:11 ' cl'" ‘ 'l''-' r • °I a pound of , „ ts -. • of fine sand. Coloring - matter 'may , go. ~a and dead. ' t be. 'II if desired. Apply With a paint ..t.:...t , A deaf and dumb child was questioned if •,;;,, w hi t e _ N „ , ,,, s h brush, _ she knew why shewitsborn 1.1,415._ ThAt , This wash looks as well aspiirk and is tears rapidly tilled t - ho eyqs of the amitioseu ;!;;;05z as duraWe as slate. It will stop ichild, but in a Moment or two she' dat:het., 'An , (Ii lino, in a roof, prevent the moss froth them away, and, with a sweet smilleplayin , ,,,. , I,A . itin , over, und render it ineotabdstibie upon her thoughtful ecutuenanco, •t.:.i:tt• r, j , h spar is falling on it. When applied upon her little slate: "Even so, Father, : .01. • to brick work, it rders th ' bricks utterly , so it seemed good in Thy, sight." . , impervious to raii it end res' as long as Let no ioung man expect. success or prase - , paint, and the expense is a ere trifler . , perity who disregards - the kind a& ice rote; instruction pious of his mother. \\hut c,or! t The silver beet S being wised -in Canada.be more consoling and' cheering in I ' 6 ' '2 14 .' ' ~a a clop for ploding unde •as manure. ~ affliction than the fonts recollection of , a pi , ,) ous mother's prayer* and tears poured forth Japanese children, are to be compelled - to rind -shed. iu mfaucy .for beloved, her belor oil: attend school bat7ou tare Rea of, six anct , oprinA ~ . ' thitteoz;t4 ' i :•f ~ IMIIMI tr.SEPIT !lAD 811GOEST/Vt.- , • --- What shall we have for Dbuierl • have more than once said to rhy ten ? , "0 dear, what than We have for l llinnemo•day I" and wee no nearer to the f ct. • Latterly I have adopted a bill 9f fare, for the whole week, and this trouble almast entirely van ishes; and notonly with one `but with all,the meals, And thde is my progratame fcirliiii ner, but each housewife will of course make up one for? herself, „I - only offer naLup for consideration: Sunday—Roast beef, relished potatoes, mashed turnips celery or a ooldslaw, and a i accaroni; dessert, rice) pudding or sp• ple . • 2, 1 onzin:y—SouP made of a knuckle of veil or shin of beef, which ought to be enough` for large family two or three times; the roast beef coldf; roasted potatoes, stewed onions; dessert, Peach or apple pie. . , Tile4day—Stow i ed mutton, plentyof gravy, with potatoes, turnips, carrots; onions„cora— manly called an " Irish Stowe' dessert, ap ple-dumplings, the crpt made of luotatoes and -only as much dour as will 'hold the cruet together. To be eaten with milk or cream , and uiolasses, or'molasaes only, or sugar, as. ? to taste... ..0 , Illablaciay—Soup as for Monday, corned beef ftliti cabbage, with aide dishes of tia- nips and potatoes whole; dessert, an radian meal pudding sWeetened, liberally with good molasses, an excellent and Wholesome de* sect.•- .. ~ Thursday---Aleg or quarter , of mutton. ot • roasted,- tvitlt Potatoes cooked under the meat, mashed turnips and coldslaw; dessert, peach or apple pie. , ' Peiday—Pork and beans, potatoes boiled "in their jackets," and what remains of Wednesday's dinner;' dessert, apple .dump!- lings. A.',alurday—Bou'p, Which, if ahere should by none of the "stock" on hand from the knuckle of veal ,or shin of beef before re ferred to, can he made of the scraps' on hand. Then the remains of the mutton on Thursday-and the pork on Friday, with po tatoes, coldslaw; &c.; dessert, a boiled bread pudding, made of risen-bread dough, 'as light as posSible, literally dosed with dried currants or raisins, or both. I offer the , above as a substantial .farmer's dinner for the seven days in the week: It must - be borne In mind that poultry, game or fish can be substituted for anyt of the din-' nets where fresh meat is delta, or some- • thing else that happens once in awhile to present itself unexpectedly. I -- As'to breakfasts and suppers, every house keeper will provide these as ,circumstances - One or; two things,, however,' ,1 would suggest, that good black tetrbe sub stituted for coffee . ' which is sure sooner or later to produce dyspepsia.. Tea is gust as refreshing and entirely wholeedme. That • nothing should be 'Wed that can_ be broiled. Mush, huh, pork-chopS, ;scrapple, &c., we suppose must be,lb,at beyond this avoid it as pinch as poEsiblc. • There is nothing harder On the, digestion tpan-the burnt particles of , 'fat produced by frying. No - person who has not the stomach of an ostrich cartawal low it for any length of • time without suffer: ing.—G6rmantosn, Telegraph. ~~' . _ The laEiziu.priSeasou. , Much as farmers' in the ,Eastern states value tuarture, it is doubtful wbether most of US as fully appreciate it as it • deserves. Pe