II VOL. XX.---NO. 6. • „ , %leg PCJILLIIIItIt t.V.611.1" TC.l:t/I - jet 30.130SLINT3E1g 4 cZ 26i.C15r -- • .t- LOO rekuen .-0,00 pa autitaa Ltl advance. ^-6.1) RATES OF ADTERTiSING. nule. iin s 2 at. 3 in. I in. 1 34Col.XiColl 1 OA. ,! is 07,1 001$0 90)$ 9 0014'44 00 " 3 ;"0 '7 NI 1 1 001 13 uo i L-ii 6 uol +JO (NY, 'I 9 , 9: 900:15 CO; lAJ 2 Alol , *.b.sn 4,1"111 4) C:0 , '2 tr.:3o 00;12 00 1 90 eO/ 23 1;0 ',0i1:3 0.115 0125 WI ;A" 09 '.v.i..tAlitiro,ll2 o i ls 0420 coin ev 35 Go 60 GO 0) , 25 00i23 041.3,1 GOILo r , f,\ litv pp BM ~dilst...ua..ints &recalculated by boo Mali in len el; ouy lase spaeo 113 rated as a fall inch. FO.sel, t tu adviertisenients must bspetdfr half- before in. s Tatou, osSeit.t on 'yearly contracts. w n in. istYla,enallt advance will be required. OSsronss Notions In the Editorial co ial, !l n oth ths .44401 a1l Page, 15cents per tine each ins uxor bon. • u it.: Lees than - ocsi. NOT:CV:4in Local coluran, :Geats per line if ire than rive lines ; and Go cents for A notice of tri - 0 i.nei or less. . NO 7tiCZ:olz.-rrs of NionaTioes and Maxis st 10 m cents atted refs : but ell obituary notl,cs ll be charger l ltrri A a No-riot sEO O'cir ceut aboveregnlar rates. Ilusruess CAILDB 6 lines or less, $5,09 per year. Bmsiness Cards. X. Is. Etlvazums. T. A. JOILItIiON. Batchelder a. Johnson, rldanufadurera of 31onunaeuts, Tombstones; Table Tops, Cionuttra, &o. Call and, sec. Shop. Wain" it., Jpposite Foundry, Wellsboro, Pa.—July 3, Isl 2. A. Redfield, ATTORNEY AND comisF.T.Lon AT LAW.--Collect lons promptly attended to.--Bloasbarg. Toga cour, ty. Penn's., Ayr. 1, /572-911.1. C. H. Seymour, al%)1/NLY AT LAW, T tcojii .111 business ut.- trabted to his caro Grill rucelvo prolupt attention.- 1, 1872. Geo. Ve. Merrick, Arrow:m.l: :u Dow= Osae'4 ank, acro.i.3 Linl troth AL.1•,.?..*:•,.7 Oftce, 21 tio,r, ‘1211.4.r0r0, Pa.—Jas. 1. 21.1tehel. & came - roll, ETOIVSMCB AT I.A.Skr, Claim and Insurance Agent!, 0„ ,llee in Converse & Will brick block, over *aerse Osgood!s store, Wellsboro, Ps.—,P.m. 1, ! William A.. Stone, ATTOBITVZ iaIV, over C. B. SeUeVs trry (Rood SUMO. Aright Bloch on utast arrest. relleboro, Jan. 1,1874. • L. D. Taylor, Puiv. ViPALS LIUORS AJI 'Wholeeide. and RetalL.. , No. S Cone House Stuck, Wollsboro, . Doz. 3.1874. Josiah Emery, A t " ! AT LAW.- -01 nce oPPoolte Ootirt 11011130, 1 18Th. Pur/r• NVillieuzsport, Ps. Au um/tutu IMMO Pa to.--,Tan . . J. C. Strang, .I.ITORNLY AT LAW & DISTRICT ATTORYLI.- 02:Sce with J . B. Niles, Esq., Wellsboro, Pa.-Jan. L '72, C. N. Dartt, igillMiT..-Teeth made with the tinw istracoorniamut. WhinligiTs hatter satisfaction than any thing else thmte. • Ofllee in Wright & Bailey's Block. Wells hem Oct. 154872. J 1 . Mien, - ATTORNEY AT LA'tV'' Will attend womist/y to a nu -4- Z ottr'n;v - leet to ' caralo th e couut.t.'s of TiO±!4. Pottai. ()Mae n the Avenue.,--Weilaboro, Pa., 1,1671. . Jno. W. Adams, - ,sTVARNET AT LAW, volaileki, Twza cour.ty, CoUtutlons praml.sty attended to.---.la.u. 1, 1572. C, L, Peek, aTTORNS7 AT LAW. AlicLaizni ilromytly collected , asfice with VT. 13. '3=.1 0 .1t. 11.uurv:;_ie, T.,qa. Co., Pa. C. B. Kelly. Deal; in Crooke y. Chins cod (,less were, Table Cat• lery end Mated Ware. Also Table cud 11011 S. Fur nishing Goods.—Weileboro, Pd., liept.. 17, 1672. Jno. W. Guermsey; aTT.OI3atTET AT LAW busin , ..ss enttsted to biro will be promptly att.mded to.—Odice is door south of Wickham & Pat - t's stoca, Tioga, Tioga county, Pa. Jan. 1, 1872. Armstrong St Linu, ATTORNEYi3 fa LAW, Williamsport, Pa, tVN:. 11. Smisraosa. aasitis.r. 4rns. Win. B. Smith, • • t'Lli‘4loX ATIORIIEY, Bounty cad Insurance Agent. 0 .Landuntadfoos sent to the above radrels will :c -ostes prompt attention. Terms moderate.—Ertoz vtUs, Pa. Jan. 1, 1572. 2, B. C. Wheeler Will promptly attend to the collection of all chime in Tioga county. Odic* with Heury Shersvood Sou, (tut aide of the public aqualro, Wellthboro, Oat. /5, 1872. Barnes 8t Roy, itn PBEHTP,IIB.—A3I kinds of Job Printing done on 4 kelt notice, and in the beet manner. Office in Bow. Cona'a Block, 2d iloor.—Jau. /, 1872. W. D. Terbell & Co*., 4'IIOLE,SALE. DIMOCILST, and elfsders la Wall Paper R,Te.3ena , Lamps, Windaw Gaga, Perfumery, PalMa &T.—Cc:rying, Y. Jan. 1, 1&72. Sabiusville House. ygcll Ls, Tog Co., I , l.—Bend TN hods, hes beau tlioronshly I,...noystZd end ii U 1:10AV in good cor.ditton to tocculido.tQ he traveLtug tt mupgrlor ninnber.--.J%.n. 2. 1.,79. :✓. Fikicou. M. D., AND ‘.:7l:7“.. , EoS—afzy f ,und ?.t Ids etoe lik door East Mks an - aet. Will attend protnytly to Jan. 1, 1872. A. M. Ingham, M. D., ROIICEOPATIIIST, 0111 - 63 at his rt.3l , lsEca ru Tit, Al et:i.e.—Wellsboro, Pa, Jan. 1, 1.272. Cmats & Cc,„ :nctusT r . vII clsp , :r3it, t • ev,t , , js or. .277 York Gity. SE.L.T.EY, CU*. qa. C:... 1 / 4 2;DALL, 1&72, c2a7.1, 5:J.1041142 Petroleum !louse, Chs% Clizzgto 1.61- 3?Labl2, and good attention. givPla guests. J.:tr.. I. 18Z2. Alm Mary . E. Lamb. 1 11111141.7.EIY.—insbf.a t, 0/1 rte: ft Lergis amd ritblic iv:au - alb that tale Vas k,a.g.:344 fa 'the %Jill:m et? an Farley Cr Aas 13'11/11t9S IL t!ill-toro. and that ste'oan be found at her fore, alit door to She block' of o.:,otiverim tit Its-rzze.-31n3. Tgrz/re. ry has charge cf the making and trirerning departnent ani •xli.l give her attention excittalirol7 to it. -:A0v.12,72-tf. M. Yale Bz, Co. W• are manufacturing soveral brands of choice Cigars •ableh we will sell r-t prices thr.t rcnnot hut plecso our customers. We use tlono but the best Conaset loot. ilimua and YlAtc. Tobaccos We rualre. our crt %Ws, and for that reavx. we DaYe a general assorto-enc of gocl2 Chewing and Smoking Tobaccos, suut l'7,e - a from -char to the /West Afeerechauta, Tostcoc Pouches, tto , whole sale and retall.-Dec. 21. John R. Anderson, Agt. IiPZEOLEt3ALE & RETAIL DEALER .I.ti lIARDWAKE. Stores, ;ran, Steel, Neils, Do , ise Tr:rein:Lira, Mo d:water Too/a, Agricultural Implements, Carriage Goods. Axles. Springs, Rims. &v.., Pocket and Tab:a Ciatim, Plate d Ware, Guns and kiurounlttnn. Whips, Pumps—wood and Iron—the best In use. Manufac turer and dealer in Tin, Copper, and Sbeet-Cron Rootlng in Tin and Iron. All work warrant. Val , —Jazt• 11 tem Wellsboro gitotel t COB. Sf r AIN ST. & THE AVENUE. 141, . - ,11. ' Wellabor°, Pa, ~....... • SOL. BUNNEL, Prop't ilia is a popular Hotel Istcly kept by B. E. Hoaday. The Proprietor vfl/1 spare no palm; to make it a E th.tt l hn 6—llste• All the mgr.* errtvo and depszt from tkv4 Oral. A good basher lit ette-ndaute. ft : a•Livery a - AU. 1. Mt . Notice. _ Ii4ODISA E. WOODABD having loft my bed and board Idilicalt inet canso or provocation, I harebY forbid person harboring or trusting her on my account, geizall pay no debts of her contracting after this Jot. 7.38134t D. B. WOODARD. —ronaitm RAILWAY TIME TABLES Wellsborwq Lawrenceville B. B. Time Table No. 4. Takes Effect Monday June 30, 1872. COQ7GI NORTH. - Goma Bourn. 12 2 4 . stations. Y 3 9 p.m. p.m. 8.02. A.M. p.m. a•m. 150 SSSIO 00 Ar. Corning, Dep. 800 735 600 12 20 430 855 L'ville 900 840 01.8 12 13 423 844 Dep. Duntdug 911 846 628 a.m. 12 08 419 840 tatbron 915 860 033 11 43 405 828 ' Tiogs Village 929 904 069 11 23 352 812 Hammond 949 918 713 1113 3 43 3 09 Hill's Greet. 954 921 7 2$ 11 07 340 800 litilliday 967 980 729 10 57 4327 52 ' Middlebury 10 03 998 790 10 49 3277 47 Niles Valley /0 06 943 747 10 85 119 739 Stokesdale 1018 951 769 10 25 810 73) De. Velieboro. Arr. 10 26 10 00 819 2 48 " Charleston, 10 62 2 OS Summit, 11 12 120 Antrim, 11 45 A. .H. GORTON, 8110012 Blossburg & Corning & Tioga R. R. Time Table No. n. Taken Effect Monday Juns 3cl, 1872. 3 . .rara mo COZ-NZG. A.II.ItIVE AT or.ourrorto. lil 800 a. m. No. 1 ...... ....It/ 45a.m. • 3 "35 p. uf. .. 3 10 20 p.m. . • 15...... .... .: 220 p. ro, " 15............. 825 p. m. Dtpir.T FORM ar.os.lottaa. Altar= IT 00111:MG. No i . ... 2 ,15 p. in. 2:0.2..... 5 35P. xxl• .705 p, so. •• 4 • 10 00 a.m. . 720 a. ra. I No. 8... 11 4514. m. A. H. GORTON, Supl. B. & H. R. R. L. H. SHATTUCK. Supt TiOgS, E. /t. o. 8 - Catawlssa Railroad. Depot, Foot of Plus Street, Williamsport, - Pa.. -71A9.7-. gain?. Mail dew - Williamsport • .k.orotn4datlon cep. Sail arri7e at Willismaylrt; ...... 'Aceor4lotiation ar.rivo at William4port An additional train leaves Depot at Ilardic NY'raspoit, at 9.05 a. m.--for Milton. P.biladelphia. N. York, Boston and intermo,d!ne fteturni,. , l, direct Connection le made at Williamsport with trathe tor the west. etnuge ci cars between Thileaelphia, New Yeti:: aud Wll:taiusport. G O. Wi21313, Supt Try TAar-r. 3.1X/PTED . JU.N. - E 3D, 1872 New and improved Drawing Room and Sleeping Co:.ches, combining all modern Improvements, are run tllrough on all trains between New Yor'k, Roches ter, 81 , fr.10, Niagara Falls, Suspension Bridge, Cleve. laud and Cincinnati. STATIONS. No. I. N. York, L - 9 90 am Ding'tn, . 444 pm Elmira, " 6 85 . Corning, . 707 . Ft'd Post, . Roolmst'r, Arr Hortevlle, " Buffslo, . Virg. Fells Ihmktk, ~ AnDrnon.tr. LOCAL T4l=rs WzsTwean 6 a. m., except Sundays, from Owego for Hamelin. rill e and Way. 5 15 a. m., except Sundays, from Susquelmnne for H.rnellaville and Way. 5 30 c. rn., dilly from Susquehanna for Hornellsyllis aud Way. 110 p. m., except Sundays, from Fireira for Avon ; to Buralo end Way. 220 . m., except Sarcasm from /yasighaartou for 'Ho e and Way. /STATIONS. 1 tio. 12.* .dunkirk.LTO /2 25 pm .. liiag. Falls," 1 4.4 " 1012 pm Build°, " 2 ',30 " ' 1133 " I licanlaso, " 6 03. Sup. Z lEa . ..m Rochester, 1. 4 00 p m Corning, "' i 25 Elmira, " , 863 " H:ng•mtn, •• New York, •• ADDIXIDICAL Loco, TtUZiti ZaGirld-ED G OS a. na., except Sundays, from Hornellsrlile Owego and Way. 6 00 0. xn., dally from Ilomallsvillaforanaque.l2=.a and Way. 20 a. in., except Sundays, from ifornellstille for Binghamton and Way. - 7 00 c. m., except Sundays, from Owego for Stevie henna and Waf. 2 00 p. M., except Sundays, from Painted Post for Elmira. and Wat. / CO p.eioept Sundays, from llornellsville for Susquehanna tuid Way. ',Monday's excepted, between Susquehanna and Port Jervis. Through Tickets to oil points West et the very Low est Rates, for sale In the Company's oilice at the Corn ins Depot. This is the only authorized Ageney of the Erie Rail way Company for the sale of Western 'tickets in Corn ing. _Baggage will be chocked only on Tickets purchased at the Company's °Moe. Northerd Central Railway. Trains arrive and depart at Troy, sinco Juno 8th,1874, , 50BMITIVAISD. 6017111 WARD. Xistarr. Express, 407 p m Balto. Express, Sl5 D m Afall, 9/5 p m Phllada Express, 9/5 p m Cir.cizmatl Exp. /0 20 a m Mail, 052 am A. R. FIBRE, Gen'l Sup't. Jan. 1, 1872 Cyrm D. SAAB, , foreign and Domestic Liquors WINES, &c.. am. Agent for Fine Old Whiskies, CORNING, N. T. J*. 1, 1872 THE NEW SEMIS MACHINE E4° 1;73E,'-'37.2^C11...99 LAtoot Improved, heat*, THE BESS''. HAS NO SPIRAL WINGS .nrEVERY MOTION 'POSITINE.... licteBelf Setting Needle and. Improved TH.E VffeTOß WlLrabe put out ou trisl for tanks crliatag,,,,a sold on easy, ruont.':ny pay=eut.s. Before pii.rcllasing, ozll and er.cmlne the VIOTOP at L. F. Tra39ll.2alorciZiWeLlsbcro, 3fachine Silk, Twist, Cotton and Needles of el! /rinds constantly on hand. N. 8.-31 - achlass of all klzdsrepElred on rattsionaLle terms. Nov. 2, 1872.-6 m. Mrs. A. SOFIELD WOULD rerpoetMly =lrmo* to the piablif 1!;et eb.e has now e FRESH STOCK OF Millinery and Fancy Goods! of ovary descrlptlcn, for the ladies, contesting of _ Hats, Bonnets, Caps, 0/oTea,noelet7, r4.l.tavds, Stilts, Merino and Muslin thaderrireix,Oecaasaitov.ii Wools, Zephyrs a .lot ram Tbankfal for the gener ous patronage of t . e gut, alto hopes to merit a con. Um:ft of th e Jan. 1, $872. . . . . , • .. . ' • ' .. ~, • . . . . , , * ' '. , ~.. • _.:..,;.__...•:..,•• 1 . . , a . COOl, ' .-‘ z p hi • .. glow . I. ' :- . . . . .., . .. .. , . ._ . . ... ~ ~, 1 ' but -.•-., :•c‘CtiliviZtzli•* . : .--1:.-.,,,--- 4.... i , 0:5 -. • , , , . .. :-.- tk.... 11 1i1,_ .. ~, , ....c : .., . / ,) , 4...,•„ 1 „-_,.., m ,...-6.. - i ,\, Vai kt" . - 1, 1 -- .›- : -),,'‘. i l li — . ~ 1, , , b 1i k..7. 7 ::_t ? . .! . : . ........x igr0z77141,..c1T - 1 - ,;_410, v i i: 111 :1; ,., ..: ... .... i,, .. . , lit . . , a ., .. ..,. . . . . .. .. ~.. ,•,, ~. .. ~..,:.: ,:..., . 4- , . ~..,_ , iiv ,-. - .' - r.. )1" r ''''')'t ' ' - ........ ft.rg" "r`. t. i '''W: • °EP cr ~ jo, ..,.. 4.4.,..„ . 1ay„....._ . ., .• . . . c . , ' • - . .. . , V ' • ... . , . ~,1 • r . - ---- _ --.......---.......-.... - Erie Railway. Westward. Z.To. 6. 11 CO am 35 p za 12 30 1 20r. I:~•• 10 37 " 8 308 up 2 60 12.05 am 610 am 12 55am 950'" 169 " 8 GO " Ea 50 arAL N . 9. 8 t 1 437 •• 51$ " 1010 •• 718 •• 29$ • 1 700 am .9301:01 955 1:g0 N. ABBOTT, Gezel Pass't Art al follows WHOLESALE DTA" rp SHUTTLE E. JENNINGS, Agent. E COUNTY NOT To be Divided. , ,' DR! GOODS, HATS AND BOOTS ANDSKODI i OBOOLEST, DRUGS, MEDIC zu-S. tO., tO, ClOVri' TV/ CAVag ROTIND TOP, PA. q 00 a. .a S.OO p. LI .t.).10 p. .12 .9.25 a la i,-im Nei Boot, Shoe, Leather ND FINDING STORE. . Slosaas,,a I No. s. 700 p. 340e1a 6:1,.,` 617 • EMI hop, New Stock, and first claGs Work 1 /0 82 " 720 B 1 1245in..1 4 35 pth 1 18' " G from a EEZ/a CLOIL CO 2. Ltd (WM!. 71 - l of es' Kid and Cloth Bal l- orals and Gaiters,, Ditto Children's and Misses. 1. 7 Cloth, Moroi if Gaiters. 0, and Prince Ties. A ."'r line Lad 72 , 4, i P and, ), ford i ert ) 3, and a full line of ... .' ; 41 , tosig 1.,, vata i the iotrestrat44. ss naval. raigzed faits - lug spe l nt twenty_ years of his leboro—much of the Units as the stool of drawing the oord a affliction for the good selleves rather in hammering than blowing. I, he will only remark to his old customers Lfny new ones as choose ,to give him a wall, y be found at his new shop, noxt door to B. res ware rooms, with the best and cheap. flogs county. C. W. gEnitsi. 1, April 24i, 1672. QM rio. 2 00a ir. 7 102:s 7 45 • 10 52 '• 8 02 ' 1208 Rua 1243 '• d llnc of OVERSRO; A. go, ranging i price trout I , OUST! from $1:,,): Tlnfun life in We penitence of toles, i Wherigo , and as m that he m T. Van H I est stbck Wash° VA gl AR CORDIAL,2 a ffq It is gr. L. Q. C. V' Lung Dls I ifying to us to intone the public hat Dr. ,shart's Pine Tree Tar Cordial.for Throat and t - ses, has. gained ,an enviable reputation from the . to tome o tlantic to the Pacific coast, and from thence the first families of Europe, nofthrough lone, but by persons tbrongboUt the States -uslitte4 and curia at his calm Si Ile he ass, so say our reporters, he is unable to demand. It gains and holds its- repute: the press actually • publishes supply th Uon-- LEM 'at by stopping cough, but by loosening • g mantra to throw el' the 'unhealthy =Lt d-about the tlu-oat and bronchial tubes, and aasdst ter Gone which caul . ~ It removes the canes of irzitericx (which Second •ugh) of the r.r..ocous tf..,:-tobrout: and pro.w.xs bronchlal the uhes, assists the lulga to act at.(l throw off .y secrstiona, Arp.S . paritlea the W 0,94. MO opium, o: ..rhiclt most th.n.r.t au t NIT' :tamales are xhlch aLoy ccug.l4 LUzyrganize composed the atorr.Lac e liver and klthisya, and Iyhr-pbstic and ceti on t :LOLLS, thus 142-ea:Wag to •very .;axt of the • in Its ittrigorztiog tad ptulfylag er'ecte e. reputation which it =tat told above EMIME systora, az! It hue grlttt 811441 ms The urea WO SIIGAIit DROPS. ) P.eLug wad flose their my Immediate diseetton tllal shell not Lurative qualdee by the use of cheap and Inzpa.re liE Dr. L. Q ell Zdviada to 6 p. With Mtn acknowled• fired by an All 1 L.Q. NO. Net, Les WELLSBORO, TIOGA CO, PA., TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11 1873. lltacit crf IN TNE: FbZ.43 6..a.tUi PINE BOOTSI • :ocit. 7,00, Inge had sowed I M. OOTS , emd ato the morto7 every time er and. Findings ART'S PINE TREE 'S GREAT REMEDY SOB THX oat and. I....uxigls. irri.lation 12 free from Aq - ii11.3, lobelia, Ipecac and It bas a ao , :.t.Limg enc.-% on the stomach, the market 'INTCAr.aVX.=.' . ire Tree Tar Cordial, American Dispepsia, Pills, AND ~~ RN R. WISHART, PROPRIETOR. ee of Clr,ulrge. . Wishart's (Moe Parlors are open on • . Ti/radii' and Wednesdays from 9 a. m. or consultation by Dr. 'Wm. T. Megee.— , • associated two consulting physicians of I d abgity. This opportunity is not of. other inefitution la the city. tiers must be addressed to Wishart, M.D., 32 I% Second street, PECCLADELPMA The Old Man in the New Chunk DT JOEIN rAM. They've left the old church, Naney,e.nd gone into new• • There's paintings on • tho windows, awl cushions In each pew; I located up at the shepherd, then iMutiti upon the sheep, And thought what great inducements for the drowsy Ones to sleep. Iles I When ISW the cushions, nail the dowers Ane and gay, In all the sisters' bonnets, I couldn't help but say "Must I be carried to the skies on flowery beds of ease, While others fought to win the prize and sailed through• bloody seas 7" The preacher read the good old hyras sung in our youthful days— "Oh.for a thousand tongues to sing my great Redeem. , er's praise And, though a - thousand tongues were there. they didn't catch the Oro, . And so the good old hymn was sung by a nesr-Saaftled choir. 2 doubt not but the people called the Miele very Abe , But If they beard a word they said, thervebetter eats than mine; Por the neittnne In the new church was a very twist.. •-• tug thing. 41.214 not much like tbei tunes of old that Christians need to sing. Why, Nanty, in the good old times, the aizging sound• ed more Litte Unit:mist) of many 'waters as they beat upon the shore• For everybody knew the tunes, and everybody etug, And the churches, ticCugh not quite so tine, with hal lelujoim rang. , Now Du not an old fogy, lita I sometimes want to scold, When I see our peoplo leave geed ways simply because they're olt1; I've served the Lord, nigh forty years, and, till I'm 'neath the sod, I shall always love the.simple, good old ways of sera• ing God. "The Lord's ear is riot,besvy." He can hear a sin ner's ory In a church that is riot painted like a rainbow in the sky; "The Lord's arm is not shortened." He will seta a sinner, now, Though he may in lonely hotel, on a cold earthadtar bow. But they've left the old church. Nancy, and gone into a new, And I fear they've gone in more for style than for the good and true ;/ And, from what little I heard said I fear that, sadder yet. In beating others churches, they've got badly into dett. thi / • We didn't 41: of lotteries and grab-bags, years ago, de means of/raising motley to rnaße a better show; When the church demanded dollars, 'We Ili, with one accord, our Pat ands down in our Pockets and gave them to e Lord. 717 I sat there at the intetin', 'coking 'round from pew to paw, I s wno familiar faces, for the faces all were new; • When the services ware ended all the members passed me by; I , Tone were there to greet the chi man, With gray heirs and fading eye. Then I knew that God•had taken to the temple in the skies MI the soldiers that with you and and fought hard to win the prize; I some doubt if Christians now-a-ds;•9 will reeoh the gates of gold Any better in the new ways than theydid in the old. For the Lord Icolui not oil tinsel; Ins spirit will de. part When tho lore of worldly grandare takes possession of the heart; Oh I I know the Lord of glory will Pao* through A hovel door, Sooner than through temple portals where r.re no Boats for the poor., Ina little while, dear Nancy, we will lay oar alma down, And from the ging Eternal recuive otlr aairry lOU Then we'll meet the blessed plii,vizne the..t we worship esi with or old, And, we'll worship there, together, In the city built of gold. Over a Cabin Table In the summer of 185- Frank Manly and I were homeward bound from China to Bos ton in the splendid - clipper ship Sunset. Vie bad been children together, and followed many a butterfly in company. In later years we often ran after those marvelous butterflies in pink sunbonnets--those o'-the-Wisps in dimity—in other fields; rath er as rivals, though, than side-by-aide com panions—to confess it. This was Frank's first voyage as master. He was now, at two and twenty, every inch a sailor and a man. I was his only passen ger, running home after some years' truan cy, in a period between a closing clerkship and au opening partnership at Canton.— These were to me delicious days—care-free, and eyery hour with my old playfellow was communion of a rare order. We were chatting one evening openly— for there was now nothing between us but the cabin table. The light burned just low . enough for the quiet, dreamy hour that Frank reeled oft' to me the small-talk of the dear old town of which his memory held an unreckonable cargo. There was May who had married' Janus -17, and the squire who had drank himself from affluence to the poorhouse. He told of young Sidman, who In boyhood won marbles and sold them again to the losers at a hundred Ver cent. advance upon regular rates; who never played on the" Fourtb," but opened a curbstone bazar of loop-beer— of his own brewing—firecrackers, peanuts, and--s. full line of dried-apple tarts of ft low grade. Now he was piously loaningmoney Saturday afternoons—to gain Sunday—at two per cent. a month, and wondering what this world would be without interest. He bad bought a book, "Business in Heaven," which proved to him that the occupations of earth are continued above. He dwelt with miserly unction upon the life to come. The steward now appeared with our eve ning coffee. Then came the usual cigar, and we swung apart in meditation as lightly as two vessels parting company after ex changing sea courtesies. " Captain," said I suddenly, { as if some thing had just come to mind, though the question had been balancing on my tongue for an hour. "Hal," interrupted my companion, "don't Captain me oft fleck, here under the ca'ola light, if you love me." Well, then, my modest old desk-mate, how is that little Amy Woodson whom you used to endow so bountifully in school days with pickled limes and chewing gum?" Xty captain—the splendid fellow,-to show his unconcern breathed a couple of smoke wreaths out of his mouth, and replied with counterfeited sadness: " Hal, I shall - . shalt never have faith again In the pOwer of pickles with school girls, and I am a doubter forever of the virtue of spruce gum. So, so, my sly boy, you were on that tack, too, were you? But you may as well emulate the example of your fore fathers, and throw that. chest of 'breakfast tea overboard, for father Woodson has gone where tea-drinking is neither a blessing nor a sin. No, no, Hal, Roy Elwell weAthered us all. By Jove, to think of it! Tile little toad that I nursed through vulgar fractious and the rule of three—who never had spunk enough to kiss a girl under four eyes-rto marry Amyl But the 'ways .of women• are wondrous, Hal. The Sunset is my choice. Is'nt she a beauty? lam wedded to her." Then he laughed, drew himself up, and I thought, " How could a woman resist you, my handsome captain?" " Pour puss, she bad a confounded rough way of it," he continued. " What do you mean?" "Why, haven't you heard of it?" " Vague rumors only. Her father cashier of the bank. Wasn't there trouble? Was it all true? Proud old man. His heart broke, I fancy. For Heaven's sake, Frank, tell nie what you know," I demanded. " Well, well, old quill-driver, don't rough np so. Ido know about It, and, though I say it, more than any but a very few in the old town. I never was any hand at a yarn, but if you will have it, may be 'twill barrow you some, seeing you were a little mkt on A." "Come, come, Captain—there, chummy, then—begin. But, by George, If you exag gerate one iota, I'll call the t:Sunset a clumsy old water." " Well, I peed'nt ask if you remember Amy," began my Dis-a-tea, tormentingly, " nor tell you of her step is the dance, of the color of her hair and eyes, nor what her laugh was like, nor what a woman she has grown. Let me see, you left home in forty " Eight." "And you 'remember General Woodson, then, as a cheerful,. elastic old gentleman, who at the bank counter told oft the motes with a celerity little less than magic to iur unaccustomed eyes. lie was a favorite tv erywliese, you know. t With a lad's help he performed all ttte labor in the bank, ex cept when Amy would come down once in —Democrat and Cr'drpnicla a while to give him a lift on the bobirs.— Amy washer father's housekeeper, too; her mother died just after you left home, I guess. You see the young girl had fish en ough to fry. For all, she always had a spare hour and solve nicknack of her nee dlework for us sailor boys when about leav lug home. And the old General would say, 'Luck to you, my lad,' in a mighty good mannenahat won us. " But I never could see that she favored one much above another. Once I had bid den. her good-bye, I remember, and after ward seeing Ben Boltrope call at her house, I stood out of sight and timed him—you laugh—watch in hand, and I had the better of him some odd minutes, or it may have been seconds: I always think fit when I meet Ben's widow in the street Ben mar ried the milliner's daughter, IV elissa Bliss, whose name we young sea dogs changed to lirlisay Blissy. He went off to Singapore a month after, second mate of th bark Rein deer, and was never heard from. Her wid owhood began, you see, as aeon as her hon eymoon ended. Melissa wars mourning -for him now, and always will. And Ben was worthy of all her tears—as good a fel low as ever learned a rope. Go and see her, Hal. But where am I running? Let's tack fillip. . - " You know the Woodson homestead on the corner of India street. Yes—but you don't know—as we young fellows never think of such thing—that the grand look ing place had been in the Woodson family for some generations, and that the General's father left it to hin encumbered. The mortgage was never lifted by the latter.* The General lived pretty well, thinking hie position required it. " Then in an evil, time all IBramblebea6 ran wild with a land fever—a speculation that proinised to make the poor rich, and the rich happy. All the old stockings in all the dark corners in town were emptied of their shillings to buy land in Roostock.- 7 Why, people, old people, took money out of their Bibles that they had laid away to bury them, to invest, expecting it to return theta a hundred fold before it would be needed. •'' Burial day always seems so distant to us, especially if there-is a chance to make any money to-morrow. ' " Amy's father Was bitten by the going madness. He gathered the little he could together. He drew his salary reß'ularly, and let his household bills run. He sold wrongfully'a few bank shares that he held in trust for Amy, which an uncle had willed Co-her, and invested the money in the golden land secretly in the name of a brother in Ohio. • I "The voyage turned out mighty poor.— The land was well timbered, but a hundred miles away from river or tidewater. The bubble burst. So the rich became poor, and the poor became happy thinking how their betters had come down. They were sure of a burial, for nobody waslever too poor for, that. "The old gentleman was aged. He grew fretful and absentminded. The grocer and the butcher called again and again for their dues—at the front door, too. The milk boy wiw even more malicious; he chalked on the- garden gate, ' Warning, pay up, old hoes, and chuckled to himself around the corner ea he peeped and saw Betty Floyd, the old domestic, spend many minutes spell ing out, ant many more in scorning off the words and zhaking her cloth at the empty street. Th ift bad abandoned the house hold. "Amy k .ew but little of the truth. He said he had only the amount of two or three quarters' salary in the lamented land slide.. She saw the failing step, and that he did not like to have - her note it.. Ho was glad, tho', of her help at the bank, which was needed oftener now than ever. The toil began to tell on little - Amy; she didn't lose her bea/ ty, .thaugh; I don't. believe she will 7kr Itisse 'that. My boy, am I tedious?" "Very. Go on." " Don't blow your smoke in y eyes, then, or you'll swear I'm crying." " Well, well; forward!" " Where was I? This wen on awhile, the old man keeping the s "p on the old tack, close hauled, flag 'the peak, and pumps agoing. But there came a day when the world could do Litt for Abram Wood son, and he count dc less for the world.— One morning when,Amy was helping him' on with his coat tO go to the bank he stag gered and fell upon the sofa. The doctor came and said, 'Paralysis!' He revived somewhat, but the old General was a wreck of the saddest kind. He couldn't, speak an intelligible word. Amy became his hands, eyes, and mind. Roy Elwell was appointed acting cashier, for the directors would not supersede him at once. He lingered for months with his faculties at sixes and sev ens. One day he said something that sound ed like ' May tenth,' and soon after he drop ped anchor for the last time, - "The bank officers, when examining his cash and accounts, discovered a deficiency of between one and two thousand dollars. And they who had held the old General as incorruptible said, `There is none true un der the sun.' His bondsmen ,were called upon, and the few, which finally means the many, thought they knew the cashier had used the fonds in his keeping. " Amy, living secluded with her old do mestic, Betty Floyd, was ignorant of the affair at the bank. She knitted worsted work, and fitted ball dresses for her school mates of old days. Young Skinnem offered her what he called his heart. By Jove, twenty youn g fellows would have come for ward for her hand, but there was something in her way that wouldn't let a man with a decent heart offer it. Skinnem thought his Magnanimity twenty per cent. above par.— .He had inherited from his father the mort gage on the Woodson homestead,. which he threatened to foreclose, - Troubles came in troops. "Looming over her father's 'papers one day, Amy discovered a note addressed to her. It was hi the neatliand of the Gene ral. It told her that he wrote this for her in case anything should happen to him— that the world, after he was gone, might judge him amiss; that he lied, It wee true, wronged her, his sweet, beloved daughter; that he had been false to his trusteeship; that their Means were all gone with the bro ken land bubble; that his heart and thought were long sick with the secret of it; that May the 10th of such a year he had found his cash unaccountably short, and no man yet knew it.. If he lived long enough he should make it up; yes, make it up, every cent; but Amy must wait for hers; perhaps he could never make that up, and if he did not, would his darling daughter forgive him? • "Amy bowed beneath this blow. Now appeared the reason of the unpaid bills and the ill-supplied hottsehold. And, the thought came to the stricken girl, how once she had proposed to sell a share of her bank stock and buy . a gold watch and chain, and on New 'ear's morning she found them under her breakfast cup, a present from her father. I get all this from sister Nell, of whom she made a confidant. "Yea, Hal, Amy bowed as.tbe lily bbws when blown upon. She was lily without and rock 'within. She sent for Roy Elwell. She pressed Roy until she drew from the reluctant fellow the affair as viewed by the directors. It was a plain case to them; a land enterprise-1n opportunity for making money—and the bashier yielding to tempta tion borrowed the funds of the bank, think ing to enrich himself and return the money. They were all the more ready to look on the dark side for him, as many of their dollars had gone the way of his. The fever had been among them, too. "This point of view was not plain to lny. Through Elwell, who had been made cashier after the death of the General; she .obtained permission from the officers to make a personal examination' of the books, to be aided by Roy. Her - knowledge of bank routine was now serviceable. "About this time I returned from an In dia voyage. I Ind served as boy in . the bank awhile, you remember,,and Roy, with her consent, Invited me to lend them a hand. I was glad for her sake, not to say my own. "Ral, are you yawning?" "Shin away, spin away, my old boy." " Well, we met and made our plans, agree ing to make researches afte klwelt had fin ished his day's work. By George, Ijal, you ought to have seen tbegiy l: lier percep tions were all (picketed by' pride and love for the honor of the old Mai/. The theory of the directors was not the theory of the daughter. She admitted nothing but the existence of en error that might yet be re. vealed. Roy and I followed her WWI a low • assent. We began. We turned to that May the 10th which. he mentioned in the note and named in the night of his speech lessness. We.took the first entry of the de posits; we analyzed it. If bills, It was not so noted; if 'checks, we followed them to their final entry; and so through each and all. Amy surprised us by her thoroughness. Items that Roy and I were willing to check as being correct beyond question, she look ed to again and again before dismissing The General had been too much harrowed by the trouble to make any systematic anal ysis of that day's transactions at the time. - Who knows but the error, if 'one,, would have been detected had he called hl4 . quick er-eyed daughter into his confidence? "We finally arrived at the end of that day's labor, and summing up the figures, we found the balance on hand was two thousand dollars less than the amount re quired. Here now was a chance for specu lation. What became of the sum? Amy was not /on& in deciding that its equivalent had been mislaid—some check misplaced; but this was merely guesswork. "Her proposition at the next meeting WAS to search thoroughly tlie papers in the safe. Not succeeding there books and pa pers in the vault were take, one by one, and turned, leaf by leaf. Thorough? I think so. It was a slow, laborious process. Her patience was astonishing. Her glance seemed as though it would _burn the papers it fell on. But they could not reveal a inse cret not in their k eping. " Where was tb waste paper put? In a basket. And em tied where? Roy couldn't say. The old wo all Who swept the rooms was called. She ptied it, when full, into the dark closet. Sometimes when out of shavings she used a little of it to kindle the fire. Amy turned• pale. The search among , the contents of the closet was assigned for the next day. Was it narrowed to this— the chance of finding a valuable paper in the rubbish? She would have had more heart butior the knowledge of those &ca. sional handfuls taken for kindling. Piece by piece we went through this accumulated heap of dusty, gone-by papers, and without success. ; "Roy and I had not foreseen the end— failure. We didn't anticipate having to see, that noble girl - sit down disconsolate, with the tears falling _upon her fallen hands.— By Jove, I wouldn't have begun the worli. It was Joy for me to labor with her all the way; but when that labor was brought to the bitter end—to see hope go out of her heart by her blessed blue eyes! Roy at tended her home. he next day he and I were seated in the bank talking over the affair. 'Roy,' said I, ' the Borneo, Charlie Lane, is due; unl i t we see from the skylight in the garret if the is in the bay?' "He proposed going up to see. Roy went ahead and opened -the skylight. The plitce was dusty as a grave; and just as jolly.— There was no Borneo, in a- 'it. Account books and bundles of papers a and there with dust upon then r inch deep. And over these things sd one day a meaning and a value, but neither now, the spiders had woven their homes, and were having in turn theii little - care& We loOked about us curiously. Roy remarking a book on top of a pjle less dusty than the' others, proposed to me to take itidownstairs as a curiosity.did. The skylight was ~i/ lowered, and tw sunbeams, that had van ished as wc / opened the light, came back again, and lify athwart each other like bars of dusty old. Downstairs we sat and ex-., aminedr prize. It was not a bank book, ip g but ay edger, evidently belonging to the Genefal, and filled with record of dealings. log years - before, when in the wood and al business. The -writing was neatness. itself. Rarely a blot or an erasure did we see, as Roy sat rather indifferently turning the loaves. Occesionoir there remained an unbalanced account. The fuel had become smoke and ashes long ago, .and the debtor' dust—Tnaybe. I Here ' was ono Job Jones Charged with a:cord of wood a generation , ago. Out of this scanty material we irnag-`, fined a histdry for this later Job. We in vented for him little pleas for his delin quency: that lie had married a wife; that he had left the town; that he never had it; that it was only half a-cord; that he paid for it at the time, etc. Nevertheless it is a shame, Job Jones, for you to owe forever for the fuel that boiled your kettle, blessed your hearthstone, ' nd perchance warmed to life one of the in utnerable little Joneses, we concluded. _ Di n't his ears burn? w " While we were au(Thing over this the door softly opened, and-Amy Woodson ap peared. I had almost expected 'twas the 1 . ghost of the said Jones. 1. "She wished again to see the book con taining those entries of the 10th of May.— Roy brought it. Amy sat at one side of the table, Elwell and Dat the other. She poured over the page, as her father had, doubtless, done before her, with dreamy, misty eyes. We mentioned the reason of our mirth. I took the book, carelessly, and opened it, Roy and Amy looking on as I turned now one leaf, then three ur four together, when, 'My heavens!' I exclaimed. They started. Amy leaned over the table.- her breath went and came quickly. By Jove, I can feel it now on ,my cheek. .i,'irever. , a wind can blow that aWay._ There, staring us all in the face, were two one thousand dollar bank bills. I swear I saw joy go into her eyes. "It was pretty clear to her. There was fresh writing on the credit side of an tier' count. The old General had had the book from the garret 'and upon his table that 10th of May. Exchanging the bills for some customer, he had laid them on the open book and absently closed it. I,t was then returned to its old-place in the garret. His mind being distracted by his pecuniary trou bles., the transaction of the bills had made no mark upon his memory This was our theory. "Amy had dreamed„ singularly, that she was greatly comforted by a book, and this was the reason 'of her;coming and calling for the one we had first examined.” - " And you say Amy married Roy?" "Ay, ay; and their 'boy they've named Frank Manly Elwell. 'Turn in, Hal, I must look after my girl, the Sunset." I obeyed; and In a moment more I tho't "landed on a wharf sin Bramblehead, and first sign that met my eyes was "Job Jones, Dealer in Coal, Wood and Bark, for Cash Only." A beak-nosed, fiery-eyed little old man leaned 'over an old-fashioned door that was divided in the middle, half shut and half open. "Job Jones," said I, "Frank Manly . and Roy Elwell have judged you unjustly.— That cord of wood they thought you owed for," I continued, as his glassy eyes seemed to demand an explanation. the little man was silent, lmt he gave me a look which said plainly enough, "What is human justice to me, or injustice?" And Job Jones, for I could not think of him as any other being, became instantly a statue of ice; a tear trickled from each eye, and another trembled splendidly from its nose, and in the sunshine they became=-- I awoke, andl instead of Job Jones my eyes fell upon Jim the steward, who was setting the ; brew fast ib the cabin of the Sunset on tile table over which this tale was told to me as II - tell it to you—only that drowsy gleam of_ the cabin light falls not upon the paper,land never will—A/dine for February. _ I Woman's Wit. A. story comes from Athens obeli!, Greek brigandage very refreshing to hon%st peo ple, and suggestive of the question whether women might not govern Greece bet ter than its men. One of the curses of modern Hel las, as everybody knows,, IS' the nnextirpa ted guild of brigands who infest the land, defying the Governinent, suppressing corn- Merce, ,demoralizing the peasantry, and rob bing and murdering strangers or rich na tives. One of these unhanged villains late ly captured the, youthful son .of a widow woman of property well known upon the border. The usual message was sent clown from the hills: the' chief must have one thousand drac mas by a certain day, or the life of the boy-41e wes only twelve years . old—would pay the forfeit. As usual,• too, the last hope which the mother could cherish in Bitch a. frighttul position wits the chance of government help. The wretch edly weak adutinistrations which 'play at "in. and out" in Athens still allow these scoundrels to !Mid the roads and passes of the country, and this poorwoman bad to tru •t to her own courage aiia wits. Neither w *wanting. .; There was some true old Od -ssean blood in her, and aka hit upon plan for-saving both'- her child and ' heir • drachmas. per{ :The had a brother, a young fellow of r feet pluck, thoughhis cheeks were qttite it smooth as the Delian Ap011o"s, and him sh dressed up crefully as a' Greek-girl.- Hay ing appointee to meet the-AO:4)er chief in a certain spot,, she took up Iwo hUndred drachmas and a present of cakes and fruit, the " Greek girl" going with her as a guide. On reaching the place they found the scoun drel waiting, with. the captive lad bound hand and foot beside him. The woman first ascertained by' cunning questions that the man was really alone, and then, °tiered, with many; supplications, her money and the.present many` cakes andlfruit. The villain took the latter and munched while he count ed(l) out' the drachmas; ti ea, with a fierce oath, he said it was Car t u -little; that she must go back and - f -end cu, ugh to make up a thousand, or the head of the lid wc,uld be sent dowie to her without delay. While the woman clung supplicatingly to,his knees, the " Greek girl" suddenly threw a gripl of iron around the robber's arras,, and, as the' fellow was thus pinioned, t'elte.' out-rase/ mother drew a pistol and shot him dead.— file lad, ? The pair lost no time in liberating Vile lad„ nor did they forget to cut off and p in a cloth the head of the chief; and reward of tiii,ce tbou , :snd drachmas had ben set upon nig precious:Allele, they m quite au excellent day's business of it on a ving at their own village.---Inn.dott ;Telegraph, Chief Justice Spogord, during the latter part of his 'official career, Was about as brusque and biting as man could be; and in his bitter moods he4was as apt to be, ungen erous as he was sarcastic. Who left to his own meditations, with nothing t. ruffle his temper, his decisions were clea , and com pact, amniis legal papers patter • s oftornate oiN eruditi and, moreover, his de isions were held as_ good and sufficient. fu v of prece dent. Once upon a time Spofford was at the' head of the bench holding a co rt of equi, ty, and in.the case Under tria ' it becama necessary for the attorney to pre, a the death of a certain man. ,This attorney was by name Wallington--a thin-visaged, nervous, buzzing fellow, whii had the r4putation of never letting golds hold upona case until he had wrung the last possibleidollar from it. Wallington produced what! he consid ered a sufficient proof of the death of the man in question, but the judg would not accept / it. " That is no proof t all," was Spofford's emphatic remark.. e attorney brotight forward other, evident ; and still old. Spofford shOok his head. ' It will not do, sir; we cannot accept hat ats - proof."— " Your honor," cried Wallington with much show of vexation, ` pardo me if I .deem your decision extremely 1 ard. Why will yqu not believe me?. I kn w the man well tot the day of his death; saw him dead with my own eyes, and I a tended his fune ral. Lie waS:my client, your honor." Your client!" exclaimed Spofford; "why, in the came of sense and rtson, didn't you state that fact in the first iilace? No won dei he died. We admit th • proof. Go on, sirl" The judge probably tho , gilt hut lightly of the sarcasm at the time, but it proved a crusher for poor Wallington—so much so that he was forced to seek anotifer field for the exercise of his profession. English Verbs and Prepositions " I begin to understand your' language better," said my. French friend, .IIT. Arcourt, to me; " but your verbs trouble me still, You mix them so with your prepositions." ' "I am sorry you bud them troublesome," was all I could say. "I saw your frieud, lire. James, just now," continued he. "*She intends to break down "housekeeping: = Am I right there " Break up housekeeping, she must have said." Oh, yes, I remember; break up house keeping.' " Why does she do that?" I asked. .. "Because her health 's so broken into." "Broken down, you s could say.y' ',Broken down—oh, yes. , And, indeed, "since the small-pox has broken up in your (" Broken out") she thinks she will leave it fora few week..." "Indeed! and will sh close her ; house?" " No, she is, afraid it, will be broken— broken—how do you say l aat?" "Broken into.'7 " Certainly, that is what I meant to say." " Is her son to be married soon?" " No; that engagement is broken—bro• ken—" " Broken. off: 411 I had not heard that." " She is very sorry about it. Her son only broke the news down to ber last week. Am I right? , lam so•knxio t s to speak the Eng lish well." Ile merely bras the news; no preposi tio this time." "It is hard to understand: That young man, her so; is a fine fellow; a breaker, I think." . " A l , rokfr, and a se c t' fine fellow. • Good day." :`So much," thought I, "for the verb 'to break.' " The complaint is often heard that teach ers become fussy, arbitrary and narrow in their views, and good for nothing else.— This statement is true, except the last clause, for if one has fallen into that condition he, is certainly unfit to teach. Such, doubtless, is he tendency in this profession; but it ca be retisted, - and that successfully.— Th re is, however, but one way in which to do t, and that is by a persistent and liberal cul ure of the mind. itave in My experi enc met with many teachers whose society was as rich and genial as any I have ever found; but this has always_ come' of con stant mental acti'vi'ty ,and . disciplino. Be lieve me, teacher; by this- mean; and by this only, can you resist the narrowing in fluence of your work. You milk learn to wield ,a free and intelligent judginent in va rious spheres. You may, for instance, even in the midst of your work, by 4 proper training of noiind and heart, poasess tastes that stall be So far consonant with' the true principle of art as to catch the inspirations of nature . . 'Bp:apathy with nature is one of , the most potent preventives of the evils to ' !which 1 have alluded. A teacher, further. more, should be in constant communication with the great masters of thought, espe cially in our _own language. To neglect this seems to be inexcusable. It argues a smallness of mind and perversion of taste that should find no place in the work of in. strutting living souls.—Conn. &ha Jour. The following will refresh the minds of our readers as to the dates pf the, most im portant inventions, discoveries and lin. provements, the advantages of which we now enjoy: Spinning wheel invented in 1880. Paper first made of rags iu 1417. Muskets invented and first ,used in Eng land in 1421. Pumps invented in 1425. Printing invented by Faust in 1441. i Engraving on wood l'ivented n 1450. • Post ofrtces established in England in 1464. Almanacs first publis`,led in 1441. Printing introduced.,lnto England by Ora tion in 1474. Violins invented in 1477. Roses first planted in England in 1505. Hatchets first made in 1504. • Never complain cit ' f your birth, your em ployment your training, and your hard ships. ever fancy that you could be some thing if you only had a different lot aPsigned you.. God understands what you want a great deal .better than you do: The very* things the you deprecate as fatal limita lion:a or obstructions are probably what you most want. What you call hindrances, ob- Otacles, discouragement s, are probably God's pportunities; and-it, Is nothing new that phe patient should dislike bla medicines or ny certain proof .that the . ); . acre .polsous.— • tY; 4 truce to' all such lrepoteoce. Check hat devilish envy that gnaws your heart because you are no in the saine lot with others; bring dowir'your soul, or rather il your lot in your sp ere, against your-temp tations, and you wil find, that 'your condi tion is never oppose to your good', but re ally conalatent With t. • 1 • 4 Spofford's Sarcasm. Harrow Teachers Important Date. 1111 WHOLE XO. 994. , trsErti, AND SUGGESTIVE. Dress Warm. Winter is far more fatal to the old and to invalids, the frail and feeble, than My this fatality is chiefly in the, direction ai diseases excited by colds, especially lung affections. Any one of fifty years will be surprise at the number of old friends w$ have gone before, from pneumonia. It' 4 simplyinflansination of the lungs ' or I fever; it is a cold settling on the lungs, ceded generally by a slight feeling of loess or shiver, running over tbeAmdy; - many times so slight as not t 9 have bean noticed. This is mainly the ttesult of Otis very changeable climate, many times twitt ing a difierence of twenty or thirty degrees in a few hours; and when there is a harat wind, as is often the case, doubling the dif ferace in reality, although not indicated bv the thermometer. 'The winds are the real source of danger, because they carry the heat froth the l body With great rapidity. The two most fatal causes arc, Having a draught of air °nigh= one part of the body, and sitting still= Da a raw, damp place. It is impossible to be always on the look out for draughts of air s and in riding, a still position is unavoidable. But • there; is an easy protection against these, found 3n warm clothin. The first s point is tolkeep the feet well protected, then the body, es pecially alon! the backbone, from(the nape of the neck lownwards, for a breadth of three inches un the line of the shoulders, wiliening to -ix inches or more at the Stall of the back; the want of proper protedtion there, at all Imes out of bed, is a fruitfu/i cause of Brl.ht's disease of the kidneys. Those impel' ant organs of the body wet intended to be kept abundantly warms hence in he th they are eveloped in a case of fat, 51 as scarcely tdl-be, seen, ,as may be note any day in a butcher's shop. Congests; chilled the blood ceases to -circulate; -it bongests, beomes so impacted in the little blood-vessels that the albumen'of the blood is forced t i ough, when only itstwaterj' parts were in ended to be passed. his al bumen is the ery life, the support' of the body, to giv: it strength and flesh; but when it is passed off through the bladder, it is lost, and the man dwindles away to a skeleton; the congestion continuing in some cases, the blood itself follows, and death is inevitable; hence it is specially important in the old, that small - of the back should be comfortably warm. Between the shoulder-blades behind, the lungs are attached to the body, and at no other point. All know how soon a wind on the back will give a cold. A very few min utes, sitting with the back to a closed win dow or door, will cause chilliness, even in summer time, bectuise there is a draught of air through the joinings; hence the space between the shoulder-blades should be es pecially protected in cold weather, either by a strip of buckskin or of stout woolen gannet, attached to the garment ordinarily worn next to the ski iii the daytime. But for all over fifty, for the frail i t feeble, a better plan is to wear next the s both drawers and shirt made of very thick knitted or netted material, and made to fit about as close as an ordinary stocking; the action of such a garment is to retain ethe heat of the body as well as to protect it against the external cold. It has two other advantages: it is open enough to allow the emanations of the body to escape from; it, while the actual dampness of perspiration is conveyed from the inner ti) the Outer sur face; neither of these advantages , can;be claimed for perforated buckskin. 414 a matter of mere experiment, any intelligent reader might try , such inner garments fol• single winter, and be governed by the suit for the future, putting them on ate= the first of December, not to be remodel until June.---HalPs JourAal of Health • Rais' ing Ponitiy. At a meeting of the Muncy Valley Far mers' Club, in _Hughesville, recently, the subject of raising poultry being under die cussion, Mr. A. it Sprout said: When this subject was first proposed lye had more particular reference to a single species of the-gallinaceous or rasorial birds, namely, the common barnyard or domestic fowl. : , A great many varieties of these fowls are kept by farmers and others, that are of no account whatever. My experience has been • principally with the Deminiques, Dorkings, Creoles, Leghorns, Polandkand some mix ed breeds called natives. , Have seen and heard many favorable reports on others, namely, the Brahma, Black Spanish, Shang hai, and Chittagong, besides other fancy and show birds. tine Leghorns, Polands and Creoles are good layers, but generally poor setters. The Dorkings are just the re verse, medium layers and indomitable set ters. But in the Dominique we have most of the desirable qualities combined, they are good layers and setters,exeellent nurses, very hardy, seldom a poor fowl of the kind. to be found; eggs above medium size, chicks healthy, feather young, and good for any amount of grasShoppers, and other insects. If 'well fed will commence laying at the age of four months. They may be distinguish ed by their uniform color, which indicates hardihood and' fecundity. By some they are called checkered or hawk-colored; but the true color of the Dominique fowl is a lightish ground, barred crosswise and soft ly shaded with a doik slaty blue, seldom, if ever, mixed with other colors, feet and legs yellow, or flesh color. All things consid ered we pronounce them one of the best varieties for profit. lam in the habit of keeping 'from fifteen to thirty fowls; have never bad any prevailing disease among them; occasionally lose one with the ronp. Have eggs in, abundance. for family use, besides realizing from twenty to fifty dol lars per annum ,from sales. Give plenty of warm feed in winter, Made of corn meal, wheat bran, and meat scraps and, other house refuse; the mass made into mush; provide warm quarters in Winter, and plen ty of yard room in summer. The best time to have the young; broods make their ap pearance is from tite first to the last of. Au gust, for several reasons: At this time there are plenty of insects to feed on, and new corn is plentiful, which being cored and / cut affords one of the best lira les of food tnr young fowls that I have e er Used.— Coming at this time with props care they attain their growth by the middle of last December, at which, time they commence laying, and with generous treatment, and. waihn, quarters the result is plenty of eggs all winter. Clean and Dry Stab A horse will endure severe Cold weather without much inconvenience, so long as he is furnished with a dry stable. But, require him to stand on a wet and foul floor, and his health will soon begin- ttrfail. Etorsee often sutler from cold feet and legs. A. great many stables have damp and wet floors. Few men who handle horses give proper attention to the feet and legs. Es pecially is this the case on farms. Much time is spent in the morning in' rubbing,' brushing and stimotiting the hair. on the sides and hips, but at no time are the feet examined and Koperly cared for. - Now, be it known, that the feet of a base require more care than the body. They need ten' times as much, for in one res Oct they are} almost the entire horse. All the grooming that can be done won't avail them anythlxig, if the horse will be forced 'to stand where his feet will be filthy.. lit this case the" feet will become disordered; and then the legs will get badly out of fix; and with bad feet and bad legs,:there Is not much else of the horse good for anything. Stable prisons are very severe on the feet and legs of horses; and unless these buildings can afford a dry room, where horses can walk around, lie down, or roll over, they are not half so healthy or comfortable to the horse as the pasture, and should be avoided by all good hostlerB in the country, The S. JosefiA, Herald alludes to the ex. periments made with seeming good effect, in using boiling water and ashes for yellows in the peach, and remarks: ..We are safeln 'saying that the right direction has at last 'been reached in the investigation of this disease and its remedy. As yet the subject has not been exhausted, nor has certainty been reached in the eradication or cure of the evil. This, however, is certain, that the application of hot water and *ties has • • saved many trees. II 11 II II II N I II 11 U