VOL. XX.---NO. 15. el)e PUBLBSRED VSMLY TUMMY BY , i16.1:1.1%7.10/5 1 et, GIVIri, A- V. tiAittEEti. A. ILL 110.1 t e t el'ungs :--1,2,0 1 3 pot unnUila In advance. 41., ------------- RATES OF ADvEzerrszNa. I , --; 1 • ulna, liu 1 2 iu. 9 iu. 41n. geol 3i'col I col. --- -- --- x Week s l 00 $2 00 $3 00 $4 00 SO 00 SO 00 1,14'00 2 Weeks ,1 601 300 400 500 7 00 11 00 10 00 8 Weeks ' 2 00 3 00 800 0 00 8 00,13 00 18 00 1 1 Month 250 4 00, 6 001 7 00, 9 00'15 00 20 00 3 liouthe 400 0.001 900 10 00'12 00 20 00 28 00 3 Montle 500 8 t.clia Oq 13 a) 16 00 25 00 35 00 6 Aloatar. he 800 12 00,18 00 20 00 22 00 95 00 00 00 .1 Vl2 00 18 00t25 00 20 00'35 00 50 00 100 00 in ' Advertisements aro calculated theih in length nollunn, and any less space is , by rated as a ne Pall Inch. of foreign advertisements must be paid for before tre. ea r s tion, xcept on yearly contracts', when half-yearly apneuts in advance will be required. dna:fuss Nonage in the Editorial columns; on tho second page, lticents per line each iisertion. Noth ing inserted for lass than $l. Local licrries.a in Local column, 10 cents per line if ;acne than five lines ; and 60donts fora notice of five tinesol3rf2elCss= SX/ Of MARBIAORS Md DranelSerted 4N butallobit N !tee notices will be charged 10 Cents per U.llO. firsotra , NoTiose 50 percent above regular rates. ilimastss NW). 6 lines or less, $6,00 per year. Business Cards. .j., jt, 111TORKLDItS Batchelder & Johnson, binufactv-lors of Monuments, - Tombstones, Table Tops, Foundry, ff.o. Ce. 1.1 and IMO. aizt at., opposito Foundry, Wellsboro, Pa .— duty3.lB 72. A. Redfield; kTTORNE I AID CIOUSSELLOU AT LAW.—Qollect• tour prottiptlyattatidea to.-1310aabUrg, Tioga comi ty, Penn's., Apr. 1,1872.-4 m. • C. H. Seymour, a'fitllki AT LAW, 'Plop Pa. All businessen trut alto his care will receive prompt MU:intim:l. /m. 1.1812. Geo. V. 'Merrick, aTfOIIIIF.Y AT hall to Dowati at. tlotio'a tilpak, acrosshall from Agitator 0111ra, 2d door, iftlbitoro, Pa.—Jan. 1. 1i372. iiiitehell & Cameron, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Claim and Insurance Agents. Unice in Converse & Williams brick block, over goweras do Oagood's store, IYellaboro, Pa.—Jsu. I, IS7I. William A. Stone, ATTORNEY AT LAW, over C. B. Kelley's Dry Cloud Mere, Wright Sr. Bailey's Block on &fain street. Weßebore, Jan. 1, 1872. Josiah EnorY, ATTORNEY AT LAW.-oflico opposite Court 'House, No. 1 Purdy 'a Block, AVilltalusport, I. All business promptly attended to.—Jan. 1, IW/2. J. C. Strung, ATTORNEY has LAN( & inwriwn• ATTORNEY.— Offioi3 ittsJ . 11. Niles, Log., NY(Aloboro, Pa.-,Rtut. 1, •79 C. N. l_lartt, Degrisx.—Toot' wade with the sun , Intenovunicur. Whieh give better sattataetiou than nuy thing else in use. Oak.) In Wright & Dailey's Monk. Wolin bet o, Oct, 15, ltsl2. J. 33. 'Niles, ATTORNEY AT LAW.—Will attend plomptly to buti fut,vis butrubtad to his lu tbo counties of Tloga and Potter. (Dale° on the Aveuuo.—Wellsboro, Pa... dao.l Isl 2. Juo. W. Adams, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Mansfield, Tioo. county, Pa Collections prompty attended to.—Jan. 1, 1872. C. L. Peck, ATTORNEY AT LAW. All claims promptly °once totl Offioa with W. B. Smith, KnoxvOlo,Tioga Co., Pa. C. B. Kelly. Dealer in Crockery. China and (gnaws ware, Table Cut lery and Plated Ware. Also Table and House Fur. melting Goods.—Wettsboro, Pa., Sept. 17. 11372. JIIO. W. Guernsey, ATTORNEY AT LAW'.—All business entrusted to him atll be promptly intended to.-olnce Ist door south of WIMP= & Fair's store, 'Ski:m . l'lNa, county, Pa. Jan. 1, 1612. Armstrong & Linn, .sTTOBNATI3 AT LAW WWI ArAport, Pa. AminTwos. Wary. Low. - f Wm. B. Smith, PENSION ATTORNEY, Bounty . and Insurance Agent Oomraattiostfons sent to the above address will re celva prompt attention. Terms moderate.—Knox villa, Pa. Jan. 41872. B. C. Wheeler Will promptly attend to the isoUection of alt claims in hose county. OSicut with Fleury Sherwood & Son, east Bide of the publio Kuhr°. Welleboro, PA. Oct. 15, 1872. Barnes & Roy, JOB P.R.MII3IIB.—AII kinds of Job Printing done on eon settee, and in the best manner. Ornce in Bow en & Cons'a Block, 211 dom.—Jan. 1, 1111/. SabinsvMe H ouse. B arrordaß. Tiogi Co., Pa.—Bann Bro'e. Proprietors Ills house bee been tborongbly renovated and is Bow In good condition to acooroidate the traveling Debits in s superior menner.—Jan. 1. 1873. D. Bacon, M. D., P I IT9IOIIII AND BlintGEol4—May be found at hie (ace let doer East of Miss Todd's—Melo street. Will attend promptly to all calle.—Wollaboro, Pa., Jan. 1,1.872. A. M. Ingham, M. D., 110 11010PATEW3T, Ofßoa et hie reaklence on the AY tnue.—Welleboro, Po., Jan. 1, 1872. Scoley, Coats & Co., BANKED.% Knoxville, 'Pipes Co., Pa.—liecolve money en dopcall, discoriut notes, Bud Bell drafts on Now York (Sty, Colleollous promptly made. Mosto.D.D.catour, tlseoola. yiNe. Jae. 1, 1812. DAviD 004 TO, 'Knoxville . D. 'H. Belcher, lIANIWAOTIJIMR end'lleelor In Pin. EitoN4lB, Coppett and sheet Iron Ware. ' Job work promptly ettonded to Finn door below A. IS. l'Astroan.—Marcb 11, 11,73.-6 m. Petroleum !louse, WV...ariI:LLD, PA., tieo. Close, Propritdor.—Gued ac u.santglation for both than and beast. Charges yea t ,, aable, and good attention tdven to guests. hu, 1, 1812. M. L. Sticklin, bEALMI lu Gabinet Ware of all kinds a hick will be dd lowvr than the lowest. ILI invites till to take ti.wk at his goods Wen; purchasing elsewhere.— Etauteber the pluvo—ovpusito Wagon Shop, wtht Hain Siste,t, Welbslx)ro. Feb. 26, la:3-Iy. M. Yale &Co. ~,ar , o rioofautuihni sutural brands of clsoica.Ctgaro wen 11l Nell at prices that cannot but . IShisso o, r outuwers. Wotwa mme but Om Iwot Coltur‘ct- . kut. liarana and Vara Tobaccos, We make our own 'Yu ,, mut fur that reaaou can Warrant tllOlll. br0..% Keocral asaortuteut or good Chewing and Tubaccou, Suuftm, l'ipOs from clay to tba " 4 . 4 Marna:min, Tobacco Pouclual, &c , e4l ILA retail-llec. 21, 1372. John R. Anderson, Agt. WHOLE: ALE k. 'RETAIL DEALER IN HARDWARE, gkorcs, Dos, Steel, NIAIs, House Trluimiximi, Tuob, 3glielUtural Implements, Carriage kxlex, Springs, Rims. itc.. d Peekex and Table vucl, r7, \V al's, Hulls and .kria unit' on. Wbilm ,, turer e — wn.x4l and lrou—tbe beet in use. Manutsc• dealer in. Tin, Copper, and Sbeet.iron , heeling in Tin and Iron. All worlcAvarrant '''.--114. 2, 1873. WELLSBIIIIII HOTEL, con. aLuN ST. & '7.11E AVENUE, IVELLSB6IO; PA 8 .8. HOLLIDAY', Proprietor. ~iol well located, acid is in good condition vt li v 'OTa l odate the traveling public. The proprietor Lk . Jere no palm to make it a drat-class house. MI iZrgatt arrive and depart from this home. Free to and from all trains. Sober and industrious boot *l.Ya In attendnce. .Alcl/18„178.-er. Ad ministrator's Noqce• • LITTP.SB of idestnistration on the estate of lA tecttrzitte Cs% lite of Blosabtirg, 'Dogs county. PL, ILlZlgitll3ll)443‘llr4al ate to tlf li Or li Zt i t i ::"N t ro l l l lll Tmwyk indebted to said estate are requested to maim an those having claims or demands will hewn theasnismithont Ram ELLIS; Undtala.l6.4 1871543r.* RAILWAY TIME TABLES. Blossburg& Corning it Tloga B. it. Time Table No. 82. rakee Effect llonilay dune 3d, 1872. DAPAIIT 511031 CORIVING. AIIIIIA: /01" BLOSSIIIIRCi. No. 1 it 00 a. it. No. 1 10 45 a. Tu. 3 735 p.m. " 3 10 20p. tn. " 15...... 220 p. m, "15 .. '.. ... ...... 6 2.5 p. 10. DEPART VOIVADLOB.9I3 I / 1 1Q. AIIIIIVE Al' COWING. No . 245 p. m. No. 2............5 35P. tu. .705 p, in. " 4 10 001. In. . 720 a. m. No. 8... .... -. .1145 a. tn. A. R. HORTON, SopTB. & 0. R. R. L. H. SHATTUCK, Sup't Tiogall.H. So. 8 Nyder & ait Sewing Machine I The Great Ramat!' Sewing Machine of the 700,000 Wheeler& Wilson Family Sewing Machines now in Use. V. A. JOHNSON T, improvements lately added to this Celebrated J. , Machine have made It by far the moat desirable 'Vitally law:bine in the market and have given an im petus to the sale of it, never before equaled in the history of Bowing 'Machines. - Examine for yourself; consult your own interoats n buying a Bowing Ataeniud, and DO NOT ALLOW YOURSELF PO BE BLINDED by that too common • illusion, that all L ck•Stitoii ,s tt Sowing Machines are good enough, or tha nt, y Ma chine will answer your purpose if it ma a the Mitch alike on hoth'Sidea of the fabric. f • EXAMINE WELL THE CONSTRUCTION OF THE MAQIIINE YOU BUY, and not pay your money for a heavy.running, slow motioned, noisy, complicated Idachine, thrown to gether in such a manner as to. last Just long enough to wear oat bottcycur body and patience. There Is a great - diatinetive difference between the Wheeler & Wilson and all Other—Maehtnea that make the Loak.Stitch. And It is to this- difference. that we wiah to especially call your attention. It Makes the Lock, (or Shuttle Stitch,) but Thereby dispeuaing with the shuttle and all machinery required to run a shuttle; also doing away with the talte-up that IS to be found in all shuttle Machines; and owing to the peculiarity of Its construction, ONLY ONE TENSION IS REQUIEM while all other lock-stitoh Machines require two. GEO. ROBINSON, Agent, March :15, '73-Iy. WELLBI3O/ter, PA General Insurance Agency, ENOXVILLE, T/00A CO., PA. Life, Fire, and Accidental. A !ulna Ula, Of Cleveland, Oh io 436,033.44 New York Life and Fire Ins. Co ...... .... 24000,000 Royal Ilia. Co., of Liverpool 10,515,601 Lantashire, of Manebeater, Capital, . 10,000,000 Ins. Co., of North .Ameries, Pa— .13,050,636 60 Franklin Fire Ins. Co. of Praia. Fa ,2,087,452 26 Itooriblie Ins. CO. of 14. Y., Capital, $760.000 Niagara Fire Ins. Co. of N. .3( ..........1,000,000 Farmers Mut. Fire Ins. Co. York,Pa—• ..... —909,889 IA Phcenlx ?tut. Life Ins. Co. of Hartford Ct.. 6,081,070 60 Penu'a Cattle Ins. Co. of Pottsville 600,000 00 Total... Insuianee promptly effected by mail or otherwise, on an kinds of Proporty. all lows promptly adjusted and paid at my office. All cummrmications promptly attended to—Office on Mill Stibet 2d door from Main at., Knoxville Pa. WM. li. SMITH Jan. 1. 1873-tf. Agent. 'Mrs. A. J.. SOFIELD WOULD respectfully announce to the public that the has now a FRESH STOCK OF . • Millinery and Fancy Goods! of every description, for the ladies, consisting of Hats, Bonnets, Caps, Gloves, Hosiery, Nublas, Shawls, Snits, Merino and Muslin Underwear. Germantown Wools, Zepbyrs and Pure. Thankful for the goner. one patronage of the past, oho hOPos to merit a con. tinnance of the same. Jan. 1,1879. Jan. 1, 1872. General Insurance Agency, /334.110 . 14, T/OGA CO., PA. J. U. &J. D. CAMPBELL A RE batting policies in • the following Companies A litlninst Are and lightning D iu Tiogn and Potter counties , QUEEN, • ..... ~.Aasets, $10,000,00100 • CONTINENTAL of New -2,608,528.27 lIANOYEIt, of New York 983,881.00 418-1135tAN AMERICAN, New Y0rk.......1,272,000.00 WYOMING. of Wilkesbarre, Pa 219,698.42 WILLIAI4BPOIIT, of Wnrsport 119,066.00 All business promptly attended to by mall or other wise. Losses adjusted and paid at our alien. Nelson, Deo . 10, 1872-Iy. LOOK I -LOOK! HASTINGS & COLES DRUGS,NEDICINES, PATENT MEDICINES, Paints, Oils, Glass, Putty, Brushes, 'Pt-asses, Supporters, and Surgi HORSE & CA 1 1 TLE P 0 IrDE'RS, Arlist'a Goods hi Omit Varicity. liquorfi, libotch Albs, Cigars, Tobacco, lima, ke MWMMWM . rI I M I NWRMMnTEMTITMI Groceries S iii‘ a s Teas, ), 1 t , CANNED AND DRIED FRUIT, Lvati. I;ovAle4 , CuPs,• eltibmo ye, Vinapo, Latithm, &C. BLANK & MISCELLANEOUS 14401Zg 0 All School Hooka in nee. Envelopes, iitatiouery, Bill and Cap Paper, Initial paper, Memorandums, largo anti binall .Pietionariea. Legal paper, Halloo' Cards and primers, luk, Writin I Fluld, Chesa and BaCkgIIIIIMOU Boarda, picture Franies, Cords and Tommie', Ittlrrora, Albin:lla, Paper Conant, and buffo, CrOqlletta, Haan Balls, parlor games, at wholeaalo and retail. VS'alletts' poit ninnies, combs, 'pins and needles, scissors, shears, knives, violin strings, bird cages. A great variety of pipes, dells, inkstands, measure tapes, rules, Yishi»g Tackle; best trout flies, lines, hooks, Special attention paid to this line in the season TOILET AND FANCY ARTICLES AGENTS FOR AMERICAN STEAM SAFES VILLAGE LOTS for Rao in the central part of the Boro Harch2s. HASTINGS A: COLES. 'VISO= NM Z.i1439 Ramis LIMBER 'WAGONS, made at Utica. N. L. of the very beet material end warranted in every respect superior to 11 49 other /min' her Wagon made. I bare three sixes on hand con stantly. , L. C. BENNET. Wellsboro. April 8.-.3t. . • , .-‘ . , .-.• , 4,, .'i . . . .. . . . , ! . . ..„.....,„ . . .- - • - , . _ , '•- s - J A.. .. . •'ivs* stio . , 0 .. :.,,,,, , „ •, , LI . .. . ~,,, .- 1 ,=.: ~- • ‘ .. ~4 4 ), ' .. ' • .! . ' '.,,'': - ..:::, , , ''. , ' - _ ' ' . . k- ...-• ~ . i.,- .:. .....i :.? ~., ...... ... , •. 11 - :., ,- „., ~ ... 1 ... . (:.; '.:...;, ~.z l4 C2:: : ( V l: 7 i i ,: f r ;1.: r 4 4 .. vt:: :71C.: ' 'r s: ;:;:”' r'l ~:\.l..tk ' l ' , ,i t :,-.i , .., , 4 . ~„41., • ~..,.. 1 , v,.... " ~,,. ki , , , *„ .. 1,,y,.. ,;.„ - 1 , _ ... V ,.., .. 171:" ',.,..'' ''..-:".r' r '.: l i .. ;',,,...,..' i : . AA ",• '`,. ''‘,; Pe I'V. FT, Ilark, • • to''' 'a _-• )„...,, 7,„ 3 , 4 .2.,.. t t . ~ t ~.„.: . ,A, : ,: .. •_ . ...t ... .. • ~, .., t _. ._.._.-t-.•r. --, t , •-uin - - - -Q.i---4,!...-- 't - 1 . , - . THE NEW ROTARY 'MOTION Civilieed World. does it without a Shuttle ! ASSETS OVER f 55,000,00 Q ASAIRTS Or Coml.,Arnsa FOR Cal Instruments, NOTIONS. baskets and rods I still am sgsSrit for the justly celebrated WELLSBORO, TIOGA CO., PA., TUESDAY;:: APRIL 15, EMMA BUSINESS HOUSES. The Spring Trade Opening NOTES OF A PROSPEROUS, POPULAR DRY GOODS HOUSE. E.U.Dormatal &C0..N0.190 Water Street. An Eighty Thous a nd Dollar Stock. Those who do not take especial pains to investigate the subject, have but little idea of the MAGNITUDE Or TRE 'MERCANTILE DUSINR3S of the city. The general impression is, when visiting a store to do a bit of trading, "Theis must be nigh on to $lO,OOO worth of goods in this 'ere store; a heap of goods, flint it." Coming down Water street let's step into No. 120: Mr. Dormaul has been absent in the eastern cities three weeks selecting goods for his mammoth store. A long time to: `select $lO,OOO worth of goods. one might think, but as we enter, and begin, Yankee like, to ask questions, and look at goods $lO,OOO is used up before We pass thirty feet into the 100 before us, and there are two more floors above,• equally well filled.— The shelves and counters are literally packed and piles of goods for which there is no room on shelf or counter, are visible in convenient corners. .41 brief mention of some of the goods in this TIIMUNSE. noes:, one of the largest of any dry goods house in the city, may be of interest -to the many readers of the Gazette, and be to them a guide when they wish to purchase tine goods at a remarkable low paice, Iu DRESS 000 W there is no stock in Southern New York of equal magnitude and variety, from prints, to the richest silks, or at such prices.— Prints of all the latest styles, black silks plain and with flue satin finish at all prices; fancy Bilks, striped grisaille of various pat terns, at the remarkably low price of ninety-eight cents per yard ; Irish - poplins, Japanese silks, mourning dress goods of en tire new and elegant fabrics, and an im mense stock of black alpacas of all grades, 6 the largest ever brought into this market ; its() a large stock of black cashmeres for )ollman cloaks. in fact there is nothing •n the dress goods line. that cannot be found it E. H. DonnAut. eo'a. Leaving the Tress goods for a thne, when the eye delights to linger on the beautiful fabrics and attrac tive patterns. The attracts especial attention, nut only by the' great variety displayed, but in the quantity, quality, and the low figures at which they are sold. In this department may be found double damask table linen of beautiful de sighs ; towels of magnificent quality, a fair size retailing as low_as one dollar per dozen; linen napkins in great variety full size and only one dollar per dozen. The stock of Marseilles quilts aro especially noticeable for quality and b'eauty. No one need be without a table cloth,' when extra fine bleached loom dice table linen can; be bought at DORMAITI..B, for twenty-five cents per yard. The array of linen goods looks $55,431,451 94 like a wholesale stock, and those desiring this class of goods especially, will find the best bargains can here be made. The stock of mastitis bleached and unbleached, of all the leading brands, is equally large, and will be sold at retail at the New York wholesale prices: Now is the tinie to lay in a. stock. In' the 'UPHOLSTERY DEPARTMENT may be found an elegant stock of striped reps, plain terrys, damasks, etc., of a great variety of patterns.' The . HOSIERY DEPART NT contains a fall line of the best goods. Thee celebrated Balbriggan hose selling as low as fifty cents per pair. A new feature is the seamless woven French corset. Mr. Don 'sum. purchased a large stock of these goods and will be very popular and eagerly sought after by the ladies. They are the best yet introduced. On the first floor also is the RETAIL MILLINERY DEPARTMENT, where will be found a fine stock of millin ery goods, patterns, hats elegantly trinimed, straw goods of all kinds, and first class mil liners of large experience, in constant at tendance. This branch of the retail trade will receive special attention and ladies are invited to call and iexamine the large stock now being displayed. In addition to the goods already noted, everything usually_ found in a dry goods house will be found here in great variety . The second floor is especially 'devoted to carpets, and it is packed from ono end of the floor to the other, with one of the best and choicest selections ever brought to this market. Ingrain—one, two, and three ply body brussels, tapestry, brussels; and other varieties, too numerous, to mention, and at prices that are desperately cheep. White Air.Dottstikot. teas east selecting'his goods, in consequence of the great dullness in trade the 'Hartford Carpet Company nkade a great auction sale of carpets. Mr. Dorm:tut., taking advantage of this :opportunity, with his usual promptness, and desire to supply he public with the best and at a low price, ought largely, selecting only such patterns and quality, as would best please the large trade' in this vicinity. These goods 'were bought fully fifteen cents per yard below the factory prices,•and he proposes to give the public tbe'benefit of this fine. bargain, being satisfied to make but a small profit, and Will retail Vieth far below the present market value. There will be a rush for the new carpets. The more deeply interests the ladies, and per sons engaged in .the millinery business.— Mr. DoTtMAUL has opened upon his floor a very heavy stock of and will do a general jobbing trade. To this superiot stock the attention of dealers is especially invited. Pattern bats of the latest sprit4 styles, magnificently trimmed, and of the finest material in large numbers. A full line of straw goods of every quality and style, a rich assortment of all kinds of ribbons, and an endless variety of the finest French flowers, and all other goods requ4ed in a first-class millinery establishment can be found at DORIIAUL & Co's, wholesale millinery jobbing rooms. The prices at ,which these goods are afforded, and their superior finality, will induce those in the trade to call and examine before purchasing. The rooms are arranged to its smallest de tail as perfect as any jobbing house in New York city. Mr. DOnatauL, during the four. teen years be has been in business in this city, has established a reputation for lion orable dealing second to none, and All goods purchased at this house will be found as recommended. They now carry a stock amounting - tei $80,000 7 . Their trade is al ready.imM epee, and will increase - when the people understand what a stock they have to select from. They can suit everybody.-- 115'initra Gaeette. Favorably. E. 11. DORMAIIL AND CO.'S LINES DEPAIITNIEIIT Turno FLOOR bIILLINERT GOODS, My Wife and Child. The beautiful awl lt•uder lines on this alibiect were pubHeLea in the Mnetgreuery Adotrliaer, and credited to the hen of Oen tl. ineksee, Etavaiinah; Oa.— They wore writteu a hile lie was in ,contrdatid trf tlin First Georgia regiment, tMit in ramp on thillie tl ramie, below Matatm.r-as. and a hart ottlen. TaYkes twiny of Mexican titN,ston. 'rhe tienerat widte :them in pencil, on his lance, in his tent, and read them to the ivriter at the beneent. Our reccolleetion is that wu innnedtately, seut teem. home, and their aret air pearance was in the Columbus (Oa.) Tinter of that yew!: They will burr many repetitions, for they are of the poetry of nature, the outgoings of a soldier's hem - tin , a tertitra laud to the loved ones lett heldud.—Alotite Register. The tattoo beats, the lights are gone, The camp around in slumber Lea; The night iu sob•mn pare mores on, The shadows thicken o'er the skim) nut sleep my weary eyes Lath Howl), And sad, utweay thoughts arise. I think of thee, my dearest ono, W 11. 0 ,30 love toy early lite has bleat; Of thee and 131111—our baby eoll— slumbers 011 thy gentle hieaEtt. God of the tender, frxil 'And 101 m; Oh, gwud the tender sleeper's rest. And hover gently, hover near To her whose 14 atclant eye is Wet— To mother, wire—the doubly dear Iu whose young heart have freshly mat Two streams of love so deep and clear— And cheer her drooping spirits yet. Now, while she kneels before Thy throno,.. oh tem:), her, itoler of the skies, Tina while, at 'illy behest alone, Earth's mightiest kingdoms fall and No tear la wept. to Thee unknown; No hair is lout, no sparrow dies; That thou carat stay the ruthless hand Of dark disease, and soothe its pain; That only by Thy stern command' The battle's lost, the soldier's slain:. That from the distant sea or land Thou brina'st the wanderer home agate And when upon her pillow lone Her tear wet-cheek la Redly presaed, May happier visions beam upon The brightening current of her breast; No frowning look or angry tone Disturb the Sabbath of her rest. . Whatever fate those forms may know— Loved with a passion almost fld— fly day, by night, in joy or wo— By fears oppressed, or hopes beguiled; From every danger, every foe, 0 God, protect my wife and child t KILL OR CURE. "The major is a capital fellow, doctor;" I said as we sauntered out .fellow, smolw' ,our ci-. gars in garden after an early dinner, but he ought to be more merciful 'to us wretched bachelors. What with his charm ing wife and that exemplary baby, he makes it difficult to respect the tenth command ment," "Yon admire Mrs. Layton?" "Admire hut If she was not Charley's wife I should full head over eats in love with her. I have seen fairer faces—but for dear, pretty, delicate womanly ways I never met her equal." " You couldn' understand a man's thirst ing for her blood?" "(-food graciOus! a wretch who could touch one of her golden hairs roughly serves to be crucified." "And yet for many days she was in!dead ly pefil of her life." " For lies' fortune?" " She had none." " Don't tell me, doctor, that an iunoc nt creature like that could give any one cat se for revenge." " No; L won't tell you anything of the 'sort." " I think I ah•c. Some one eras madly in ore with her." " If you were to guess till this day out you would not find the cause," said my friend. "Let us sit down here, and I will explain. It's no secret. I wonder the ma. jor has not told you." " Down here" was on a rustic seat that the major's wife bad. made at the end of his garden, close to where a little rill, soon to be lost in the blue Hudson, tinkled its way through his grounds. " Miring the war," began the doctor, " I served in the army in the same regiment with an old schoolmate. He was as line a soldier as ever drew sword; hale, hearty, sound in mind and body, and eager to see service—and he saw plenty.. I thought he' bore a charmed life, till one day he was car ried into the hospital in a bad way. A ball had entered his shoulder, glanced on the clavicle—what you call the collar bone— and had gone—somewhere. That is all we could tell, for there was no other orifice; but whether it had passed up or down, or taken some erratic course around about, such as balls will take, we knew not, and no probing could find out. , Well, be recov ered, went North to regain strength, and for nearly three years I lost sight of him.— When the war was over, and I had begun to practice as a civilian in New York, Imet him again.* But how changed. He was a living skeleton, and I saw in a moment that he had become habituated to opium. Do you know what that means? No. Well, throw a bucket of water into a piano, and then light a fire under it, and its strings will not be more out of tune than au opium smoker's nerves are out of order. He asked me if he might call on me at my office, and of course 1 assented; but it was days before he came, and when he did arrive I knew that he had been preparing himself for a fight with himself. Some foolish patients come prepared to hide the truth, some to magnify their ills. It is a part of our busi ness, in serious cases, to examine a man's mind before we ask about his body; and hardened as a surgeon must be, I confess that the condition of my poor friend fright ened me. There was an expressipn in his eye that I had never seen in any being; and /Oat made this worse was the calm, busi ness-like manner m which he Spoke. Lie told me that soon after he had (apparently) recovered from his wound he began to stif fer from pains in his head, which increased in severity till they became so agonizing that he had recourse to opium to allevitkte them. ' But I have not time to consult you about this,' he said; this I can bear—must bear. Would to God they were always tearing me! The tvorst is when they are not.' " 'They leave you very weak?' I suggest ed. " They leave ho replied, quite with a burning, all bbt unconquerable desire to-tidie huinan life.' "I am not generally a nervous man, but I started and looked around tile for some weapon of defense. Don't be afraid,' he continued, with a sad smile. "rhe fit is not on ale HMV. I should not have come it it had been. I have been nearly starved once or twice, not dating to leave my room. I can conquer my madness now; the question is how long I can continue to do so. I feel that it is gaming upon me. 1 feel my pow er of resistance becoming weaker and weak er, the craving for blood getting stronger and stronger. I am like _ a man who has slipped over,a precipice, and feels the earth and shrubs to which he clings slowly, slow ly, but surely, surely giving way with him. 1 have [nought wretched curs out of the street and killed them in my frenzy, in the hope to exhaust it on them. It is no user— I must - have human life.' " 'Any human life?' I inquired, 'or some one in particular?' ' Why do you ask this, doctor?' lie cried, getting suddenly excited. " ' Aro 'never; go on.' " Sometimes, he resumed, it. seems that nay life would do; and sometitne.4-- - -Aloctor, four days before 1 saw you I met Upon New Jersey ferry boat a young girl; so re fined, so nice; so pretty. I followqd her to her borne—the devil that has taken _posses sion of me led me. She went in, and soon came out again into her little garden and tended her flowers, poor child! Doctor, if I had had a pistol with me I should have shot her. You may smile, but some day soon I shall take a pistol on purpose, and shoot her.' "It was clearly no use arguing with him. The best way with sucN people is to admit their facts, and try to work around them. " ' Then,' said 1, the only thing you can do is to submit to the restrictions of an asy lum till this feeling has passed.' " 'lt will not pass. If I was to go to a madhouse I should sham sane. Sooner or later their vigilance over me would be re laxed; then I should murder my keeper, and go straight for the innocent girl.' " • Then leave the country.' Well, that would save her; but, doctor, one life is as dear to its holder as another. If I don't kill her I shall kill some one else.' " 'My dear fellow,' I replied in as light a tone as I, could assume, 'these fancies are cniable. Put yourself under skillful Medi cal treatment. You are all to bite, pbyei cally. Get sound in body, 'and you'll, get all right in your mind.' • therary, t ,I a m all to bits, as con ,roksky,. Mentally, and my body sutlers titNUtirriy Mind.. Medical treatment! I nave-c`ousulted every . practitioner of note die*skil - )n Europe. Sonic think I'm fool tittitetifi sense look wise, - and talk, as you slitMikititr .- :' treatment' All have failed.— :DOetifirs,ardof no use to me.'. may I ask you why you are here :, `!I`o ask your advice as a fri'end,' Ise Ali fig*e(l,: drawing his chair nearer to use; 4 40(loWering his voice) to ask you one quelitton as a friend and a God-fearing man, arittio which I pray you to give me a plain yes;or . "``peeling as I feel, should I ibe justified , before. God in' taking my own bfe? - Would it be "a - deadly sin for me to do; for myself whati would do to a mad dog?') '.-s .trepeat his words almost as he spfOke theiri;-: - I cannot give you the ,faintest ilea of Itiraolemn deliberation with which put this awful question. For some motnenes'; I could not: say a word. Then I ` started up and,told bird that I would not answer him yes pr, no-,-that it was not fair to ask me to take"etich a responsibility. Then he arose, 'too; and said he milk resolve it for himself; andlOW-plainly which way it) would go. `CI3Fe me tomorrow to think It Out,' Isaid, detainiug.him. "To-Morrow may be too late,' ho re- Plidit-,.) 4 The tit may come upon me to nightlor all I :know. `„ O 7OMe home with hip; I'm hot afraid; yox.w:001 hurt nie, I know.' "'"would4 , try very bard mit to do so; but--I . knoW myself. I cannot trust i myself. Deet'Yon trust me.' ' '"/"Vill trust you; and I'll do more.-- You) are not armed, I suppose?' "o,' he replied with a shtidder, not hr' MI now.' " '1. 7 4 tab care that you shall hot be, and 1... y Derringer in my . pecket. On the Staff indication of homipidal mania—l give -yeti my ; word—l'll shopt, and I will shopt:strilight.' I said this to satisfy him, poor fellow I ' In his weak state llcould have laid MO down like a child. It 'did - satisfy hitii ; „and 7we went home together. I led hint talking of our old - soldiering days, 'arid'gridetilly'got him back to. his wound. I'Matli h imdespribe the first sensations of his head, and repeat 411 that his medical advisers had said. I happened to have 'tt "strong preparation of hasheesh by me; I gave hint a dose, and whilst lie was under its influence I carefully examined his head. 'Now the head, you must know, does not fattenor waste away in prOportion to other Parts of the body; 'still his had become mere skin and bone; and this state, perhaps, gave me an advantage over others who had made the same examination. At last I felt, or thought I felt, a faint twitching—a sort of abnormal pulsation—about two inches abovellie left ear. It might be Merely ner vows, hilt it'inight be caused by the ball. "I then set my mind to work,, and tho't the whole case over steadily. 14 the first place, was that impulse to take human life, of whielkey_poor friend bad spoken, really uncontrollable? For example, suppose that 'one day'he did iake a pistol ' on' purpose,' and go to that young lady's garden—would he shoot her? TO suppose that ,the insane mind hover changes its purpose, or - turns from the full completion of its IS.iirpose, is to say, in other words, that the insane mind is stronger than the 'sane. If adman with alreahly-broken leg was to tell you he was going to run a foot race you would not be 'Wye him; because your common sense re- I volts against the Idea of his running with a leg disabled„ But if one with. his brain disabled declares that lie is going to do something dependent upon thei action of his mind, common sense does not always argue so well. "In the second place, did mot my poor friend;= . with his impaired riIeRSIS of judg ment, believe that the impulse v,:as uncon trollable? Besides, if he did, the end wo'd be the same so far as he was concerned.— Ile would sacrifice his owir life Ito protect that-of others, thbugh they were in no ac tual danger. "In the third place, might not this story of the impulse be a mere pretense to excuse the commission of suicide? Now there are no forms of madness more obscure in their origin, more difficult to detect,l more per sistent, and more fatal than suicidal mania; and as there have been numerous cases in which persons who have destroyed them selves have carefully prepared evidence tending to show that their death was acci dental, why should there not ilhe one in which the fatal act was to be (so f r as pos sible) justified? "In the fourth place, granting ,th 4 there was either real homicidal.mania or f .ncied homicidal mania tending to suicidal, cr ply the latter—was there a poSsibi_lty of cure? "As the three first questions rested for their solution on one set of facts, and the deductions to be drawn therefiem, I con sidered them together. A victim of suici dal mania rarely, if ever, speaks of suicide. When a man says he is going to drown himself, you- may generally direct him to the cars which will take him to the 'river side with the fullest conviction that he will not breakf,ast with crabs, If, in an excep tional case, ;suicide is mentioned, it will either he treated lightly, as an act that is not a crime, or the patient will be very earnest in his assurances that ho would nev er commit it. Remembering the manner of my poor friend, I noticed that he' l spoke of taking his own life with much more emotion than he evinced when he told me 'of the im- pulse to shed the blood of others. ' His word; ' I must have human if I had had a pistol with . me I should have shot her; some day soon I shall take a pistol on pur pose and shoot her; I should Murder my keeper and go straight for that innocent girl,' were spoken as calmly as though he had said, I owe five dollars'—l must gonna pay them,' and at the same time With a tone of deep commiseration for the predestined victims. They were to die for no fault of their own, but. they were doomed jto death —if ho lived. When, on the other band, he spoke of saving their lives at the sacri fice of his own, his manner changed. No one afflicted With suicidal mania ever treated self-destruction with the horror, the' con sciousness of its wickedness, and: the reli gious doubts as to its being pardonable-un der any circumstances, with which he con sidered it. lie had never once spoken of murder as a crime: " After a long and careful consideration I came to the, following conclusions: " He is not laboring under suicidal mania; his impulse is real, and will have fatal re• suits; confinement in au asylum would have no curative effect. Then 1 took down my books bearing upon the anatomy of the hu man head. " The next morning I addressed him thus: ' Before 1 answer you as to whether you would be justified before God,' tinder the impulse you have told me of, in takingymir own life to save that of another, you must answer me several questions.' " Go on,' he said. " When you consulted those doctors did you tell them all that pin have told me?' " ' No, I did not dare. I said that I had horrible thoughts and cravings, but without -entering into details as to what they - were. thiee---1-went so far as to say I feared I wan becoming - dangerous, and the old fool smiled.'' " ' Good. Did they ever spea of search ing for that ball?' - - ' " Yes; they said it might be the cause of my sufferhigs ' supposing irhad lodged near the brain, but that no one - would take the responsibility of - searching for it—so to speak—in the dark.' "rimy were right—the operation might kill you, and the ball not be found after all.' " lie looked up, and the dull, dejected look that had become habitual passed from his face, " And even if it was found,' 1 went on, `its extraction might cause your death all the same.' "lie laid his hand on my arm and tried to speak, but he could not. " Still it would give you a chance—just a chance of more than life.' His., grasp tightened. I could feel his heart beating. • And submitting to such an operation—al most hopeless though it. would be—would not be quite suicide.' "He fell on his knees and sobbed like a child. ' You'll do it!' he cried. ' God 1.- mjghty bless you! You'll do it?' " Well," odd my friend, iishtius a fre 1873.---WffH SUPPLEMENT. cigar, "to make my story short, I did! it with the assistance of a 3foung surgeon whose nerve 1 could trust.' We found that , miserable piece of lead near - where I had suslketed it to be. It was- ust a MSC Of nifeli and go. Had my knife wavered twice the breadth of its own edge—had the assistant been unsteady With the forceps, it would have been fatal. I don't want to be vain of my success, so Pll say no more than this—he recovered." "Andhasn't killed anybody?" ' I NO,I,and doesn't want to.", "By Jove! T wouldn't be too sure of that. And so the girl he wanted to murder married the major?". " She "Then if I was her husband , I'd take precious good care that your interesting pa tient dido!_t come into the sane State with her." " My dear fellow, if you werdher husband you'd do exactly as her husband does." " And does he know?" il "None better," 'z• "And doesn't care?" "Not a bit." " Then he's a brute." " You'd better tell him so; for here he comes." "Does she know?" "She does." '"And she's not afraid?" it N 0.17 " One other question, Does your inter eating patient live in thiS country?" ' "He does." "In what State?" "This State?" "Near here?" " Very near." "Then, with all possible deference for our friend, the major, I think he is very foolish. Was lin his place I should say, 'llly good sir, I admit that the ball from which you suffered, so long cannot - get back into your brains, but I ; am by no means sure that the ideas it engendered may not return. At any rate, your presence near my wife is likely to make her nervous, and I appeal to you as a gentleman to locate fourself in some other part of the country. If you do so I shall have the highest re spect for you; you do not, and ever have the misfortune to pass within a mile of my house, the interior of your skull will be come more intimately acquainted than ever with lead in the usual form.'" " Very neatly put," said the doe*, " but our friend does .not think -of committing suicide now." "Mercy, doctor!" I cried, "you don't mean to say that the man who wanted to murder the major's wife is—is—" • "The major himself? Yes, sir." Sumptuary laws are directly at valiance with the spirit of free institutions, and the legislation.of this country has for the hist half century given them no countenance br - support_ But a member of the Ohio Legis-' lature has recently shown that the narrow spirit of the old laws forbidding the wear-- ing of gay clothing, and the display of wealth in other ways, still commands his approbation.. Mingled with his' unwilling ness that other people should enjoy what be regards as luxuries, is a selfish desire to monopolize for his own benefit a certain priceless boon with which his fond parents endowed him. The name of this conserva tive and selfish legislator i. 4 John` Smith, and he has introduced into the ,I)ody of which he is a member a bill to protect him in the uninterrupted enjoyment of that mel lifluous appellation. By the provisions of this bill he endeavors to prevent any citizen of Ohio from hereafter naming a son "John Smith," and ho thus stands forth as the ad vocate, for purely selfish reasons, of an il liberal and objectionable sumptuary law. That Hon. John Smith is proud of his name, is apparent from the fact that he has not attempted to disguise it by the weak subterfuge of spelling " Smith" with a " y" And an " e," and the open cowardice of abandoning "John" in favor of a solitary initial "J. This is on the whole rather creditable to him, but he should be content with the happy possession of his fortunate name, and not proceed to deprive his un born fellow citizens of all chance of a like blessing. If his motive be simply to pre serve future generations from the enerya ting influence of indulgence in luxuries,The has made a mistake in selecting the use of the name "John Smith" as a luxury dan gerous above all others. History teaches us that the luxury of the governing class among the Romans led to the downfall of, the Empire, but there is not an instance on record where the prevalence of the name "John Smith" resulted in the ruin of a na tion or a. community. There are names which might exercise a disastrous influence upon a people, were they to come into gen eral use. It may, for example, be question ed; whether a nation, the majority of whose citizens would wear such a name as " Gin erY Twitchell"—estimable as the present sole owner of that name may be—could long maintain the respect of the civilized world. Ninety-nine Americans out of eve ry hundred might, however, be named "John Smith" Without in the least depreci ating the price of American securities. It may, therefore, be unhesitatingly of that the Ohio legislator is as much in error -in selecting the object against which his sumptuary law is directed as he is' in revert ing in any shape to an illiberal and obsolete species of legislation. There is too much reason to believe that his real motive is a miserly desire to monop olize his name. Probably ho comes ,of family noted for longevity, and 'hopes that by cutting off the supply of -further John Smiths, and outliving his present rivals in the possession of that name, he may yet be known as the sole John, Smith, of the United States—the unique possessor of that noble name. Let him remember, however, that the people, who strongly reprobate selfish ness in a member of the Legislature, will not forget the name by which•such distinc tion was won. This very prominence as the unique John Smith of the period—the very renown that will have brought tourists from all parts of the globe to gaze upon him—will but intensify the popular horror at the selfishness which made him famous, and maite_hini the object whereat the finger of juvenile scorn will be pointed by boys _who, but for his grasping covetousness, might also have enjoyed the blessedness of owning the name which he is now striving to monopolize.-1V Y. Tonal. In a notice of "The Brook and Other Poems," by William 13. Wright, the .New York ?Imes thus discourses: There are agreat many nice words in Mr. Wright's volume. Indeed, except in an unabridged dictionary of the Nery largest size, it; would be impossible to find so exten sive a collection of swept things In polysyl lables; and beautiful words in one syllable. These pretty words Mr. Wrightlas lavish ed all over his pages, and at tries has so grouped them that they seem to express in telligible ideas. Tire latter, however, are not sufficiently numerous to merit much at tention, and are neither fresh nor brilliant. It is as a collection of nice words that Mr. Wright's volume must be judged. The author has arranged his words in the form of verse, a form which, since it ad mits of a wide margin of white paper, dis plays his work to better ^advantage than closely-printed prose could have done. In deed, had he carried this idea still further, and - made his pages wholly blank, the pub lic'would have - been his debtors.- To select one of his minor poais - as _an example of what can be accomplished by - a - skillful use of the dictionary, and an entire indiffereiCe to the meaning of the words employed, let us take the verses entitled. " Reminiscence." In' his poeht Mr. Wright remarks that he has "Forgot the beach I frolicked o'er, The ocean whose smaragdino floor Reposed tmawent by mortal oar." "Smaragdine" is , tfnquestionahly a Very pretty i, word, and Mr. Wright knows it.— liencelie writes id order to introduce it, and cares little for the connection in which it is used. lie is not, however, guilty of reckless &sertion, for every, one will - agree that the floor of the ocean haknever been swept, or, for that matter, scilibbed with soap and brushes—a state of things that reflects no credit upon Neptune's house maid. Further on, Mr. Wright speaks of Nature, appareled its s bride, Opening 111Dit her maiden gait."_ • I 4 et no ono fttoo7 that l o iutoodoti to " John Smith." A Spiny Critique. Itactiej - : I '' -- - 7. - - ijasilit,-" 1 1 4 N , , ..; :lip ~ write "gate." Is not " gait" a much nicer and less common word, and shall not Mr. Wright use 3t if he chooses? less justifia ble are his remarks conceruiug•the rause.— That ludy is well understood to have had au active interest in poetry lot' the last two or three thotlimd years. It is therefore hardly prover' For Mr. Wright to refer to her as I The mmui With whom I Li-a:Wt.". lle this deprives hell of all right to cliim seniority' of age over him, and represents himself as bding guilty of conduct ,quite umirecedented among masculine poets. lie is, however, clearly, au extraordinary per- son in point of physical endowments. As a - gymnast he is really remarkable. .He thus speaks of his athletic feats: "1 elfrar at one heroic bound The pale of Tillie, and proudly- etq l e From the Day's Inheamoulone rou d Yea,'oti the heart of that which is Melt like a flake of aofteat Bound," . A leaper•wlio can clear pales in this tri umphant manner and proudly rest on a heart " which is melt," ought to devote himself to the flying trapeze, instead of the duller and less exciting Pegasus. Precisely what, if anything, is Meant by the myste rious allusion to "Day's inharmonious round" is not quite certain, though it may. refer to the inharmonious rhymes in which the charms of Day 443fartin'd,:blacking were formerly celebrated. Can =it be that Mr. Wright was formerly the poet of that en terprising firm, and that he has proudly ceased this honorable employment? • Of his poetry the author has as high an opinion as that which he entertains con cerning his ability to leap over pales. . He even warns the reader against the danger ous intoxication of his verse: • '"Who drinks my fountain may repent it, finch flay ferments and so rare The long, eternal BUDS have lent it : And Temperance guar& with fa/chlon bare This stately wassail of the heart, . And sifts all men that enter there." In deference to this warning we decline to invite the reader's further attention to Mr. Wright's volume. If to read these po ems is to incur the danger of being - sifted with a bare falchion, the safest course'wo'd he to leave them unread, and to firmly 'de cline to meddle in any way with - the dan- glirouS, ,eyen if stately,. wttssail :of Mr. _ Wright's heart. ll , .• A Strauge i ttorsrH There are few reader of modern English history or Oriental adventure, of social lit erature and any, who have not learned something of the strange career of Lady : "11 1. 1 1 , e e t s ci t s e t i i r i l i l S l ti t v a a l a sl r i l i els i i ) t e li i t i o i a l t s i t e i . n u s ) , s t i n h . et il i i I , l y e e a r a n a r r c s i i e a s s g u o o e f travel in Palestine. and the memoir of its age. Anomalous as it was, a career strik ingly-similar, nod at one time commanding hardly leas notoriety, ha's just terminated in the death of the wife of a Syrian camel river. . -, The famous Lord Ellenhorough, who fig , Kenyon tr. 4 Chief ,JustiCe, left a son, i award, to inherit his honors. The son en- tered Parliament before his father's death, belonged to Wellington's .Ministry, was Governor General of India in 1842-4, made Earl on his return for having annexed Scinde, and as a member of the Derby Cab inet directed the 'lndian policy he - had pre viously executed. lie married accerding to his degree, but whilelin India his I.l.ife, who remained in England, astonished• society by eloping with Prinee Prederich` Schwtirtzen berg, of Austria, by whom Mu was quelled. - - , The Prince was a most notorious roue, 'and.palled of his victory soon, but no ear lier than my lady. Leaving Munich as un ceremoniously as she quit London, she went to Italy and contracted six marriages, 1' as she termed them., in half that number of years. --Five years after the first elopement she removed to Greece, and was speedily married once more to Count Theodoki.— But Theodoki, though god-given by name, was altogether too mortal for the much marrying heroine, and having divorced him by her usual method, she was next an Athe nian celebrity and hostess, as. the wife of a Pahear chief. The Athenian shared the fortunes of Italian, German, •and Briton, and The much-husbanded wife struck - Lady Hester's trail at Bevrout. She lived something of the opulent and iiperious life of her predecessor until, while journeying to Damascus, Sheik Ab dul,. captain of' the caravan, pleased her fancy, and was instantly—married. She e ) traveled with and waited on him more diligently than upon any ' his predeces sors; assumed the ArabVdr ss .more com pletely thaw Lady Heste 'won a lawsuit against Lord Ellenbarough, husband No. 1, and an enormous property with it; built a stately palace, after the oriontal pattern, near Damascus, and entertained husband No. 9 when Dia duties as captain of cara vans gave him leisure to call. • Here she long reigned supreme—the mar vel of natives and the wonder of tourists; dispensing a profuse hospitality; beautiful in spite of her years, and charming notwith standing the vicissitudes of, her eventful career. And now Sheik Abdul is a widower. After more than twenty years in the most famous of eastern cities, exiled from home •by her own strange conduct, this heroine of a career that would be pronounced improb able if described by Miss Braddon, is at rest. Hints on Shopping. It is poor economy—or, rather, no econo my at all—to purchase 'inferior fabrics be cause they are cheap. Persons in limited circumstances often commit this error. If a calico at ten cents a yard looks about as well as one at twelve or fifteen cents, the prudent purchaser will often think it econ omy to choose the low-priced goods. As it is low-priced, she may indulge in a yard or two more for ruffles or bias folds, flattering herself that cheap ornamentation is an equivalent for fine quality. '['his mistake may be seen permeating the entire wardrobe of many sensible people. The result is simply this: they never have anything of .really good quality, are always shabby, and always buying. None but rich people can to buy poor goods. This rule applies to all sorts of good—muslins, cloths,- car: pets, and table linen. We grudge the time we ace women speu'l in making up mulles of low grade for un er-clothing. There are so many stitches in a shirt! And.when it lasts one year instcld of two, as it should, there is just twice as much work done as need, to lie. Better make three shirts of fine quality muslin than six 'of a lower grade of muslin. Just so in flannels. A 114 y-cent all-Wool Shaker flannel will wear two or three times as lou as your flimsy cotton and-wool stuff a fey pennies cheaper. Es peCially in a. fami y of childreh, fabrics should he chosen fo. service that when made up they may deacon I from one child to an other, thus saving the mother tirn'e to stitch into her,,brain a little embroidery of thought and culture. A few rules with regard to shopping it self may be in place. First: Have a Dist of articles to be purchased made out in black and white. By this means Sou will be saved from sudden temptation to buy whAt is not really necessary, and forget notltlng, that you require. Bccond!, Deal only With mer chants in whose business integrity you can confide. Third: In the Fong run one aiwaya does better to buyAit one and the same place than to run abouClor the purpose of hunt ing up bar g ains!A regular 'customer can often get iavnis denied to an occasional pur chaser. Fourth: Never buy what ybu don't want simply because it is cheap. Cold Ablutions in Fever. In a,valuable article contributed to one of the-French medical jdurnals by Dr. L'Am _ben, he presents the following conclusions concerning the use of cold ablutions in fe ver, as practiced in France: They are es pecially useful in typhoid and the eruptive tevers, and strongly indicated in malignaht cases. They act upon the chief and most constant phenomena of these diseases, are especially antilehrile, and reduce the tent• perature materially. - They favor the re-es tablishment 'of a full, profound, I regular perspiration; render the secretions more active; make the skin supple, moist, and fresh; favor the anteoming of the eruption; allay cerebral and other nervous excitement; suppressing headache, coma, delirium, anti restlessness, and - induce sleep ; cause the pulse to fall eighto thirty heats. From twi, to eight hours is ;Jae duration of their ac tion, the ablutions to he repeated two to four times in the 24 hours. They have no laftuence upon the length of the sickness, bat na4or it milder. El IVUOLE NQ. , 1,00 I USBPUL AND ,S'OIIGEST/VE. . Censtruotion of Dwellings '• • ~.., A person residing in Cincinnati, 0., pro. poses. to eroa iiiitvelling after the following , / plan, and asks if any objection can be seea. 7 to it.: . t ' , ~ ol . " The, foundat -having been built. l, in / i any approved man r; these is to be N 1 DP- --- fr• - , t .43= 1 , ed uponila frame-okork composed of —,,, studdin etc., the smite as for any ordina ry dwelling -house. This being' done/the entire frame is to be filled in with ,brick work only four inches thick, care being taken)to have this filling flush with / the out er and inner surfaces of the studding. The structure is then to be weathetboarded in the usual manner, and the plastering Np• plied directly upon the inner side of the Oil ing, it-being understood that the studding is to be of the same thickness as the brick work. The sills will prevent' dampness passing up from the foundations into the filling, and the external sheeting will ex elude moisture from the jointsof the same; thereby insuring a perfectly dry and com— fortable house. The filling,which =he com posed of inferior material, will revent rats and other vermin running throuthe house; and the said filling will also ad greatly to i t t the safety of the structure, as it is ,well• known that the open spaces between the studding, weatherboards and lathing are siinply, flues which serve to conduct the front the -lower to the upper parts of the building with fearful. rapidity. In cage of an external tire, the weatherb' ttld • consume but •slowly, On accou their V° being backed up closeli_hy the hit kilning, which would prevent a• pia spreading of the flames., • , I `As far as economy i concerned, such a building would be about cheap as a hands house with double weatherboarding awl lathing, and in so e ' sections of the conk«, try, it would be m ch cheaper, The derti, bility of the struc re could not, it appask, to me, be questie ed, as the frame-wo ~ would preserve th integrity of the fMtgl and maintain it Ete rely in. positicin for an • indefinite period.,' i I Warsri Stab: , The health of a b erse,,like t'hot'o - f a man, depends very much upon a natural system of life.,) Artificial : 'sterns require double the card, and howeer sleek the borSe may look under a heavy voting of blankets an d an occasion medic I "dope," his capacity for endurance is m ch less than that of a horse, which, howe er rough he may look, has-nerves and end ranee' built upon rqu lar, natural food an exposed to the varied changes of the atm sphere. It may be all very well for the f ncy to clip the hair all off from the horse a d then cover him with clothing in order to ave his coat look fine t3 i and smooth, but it vill pot do for the home of all work. Natur has provided a cover ; - Mg, and where us is designed, the horse needs only that, good grooming and awarm stable; or ifAblant is ever used, let it be 00'1)0 whenevsif the horse is left standing s ut of doors in homes% Make the stable as warm as a dirt fioo or battened boarding will permitv give enty of bedding; and with abundance of , 00d the horse is better able to stand labor and exposure than if kept on a board floor where cold air circu lates underneath am covered' with blankets. Our experience is n favor of dirt floors without blankets. tin floors wellattered are no more trouble than board floors, al floor and decently k cold enough to cans , Engineering. - ' To Render Mot g ' , g Water-proof. It is very, desirabl: to understand how to make overcoats, hor-e blankets, hay caps, grain bags, and any hing else water-proof, by incurring a little -xpense. We herewith give a recipe which 4as often been sold for hundreds of dolla.s to unsophisticated clothiers: "To aho t ten quarts of rain 1 water add half a pond 'Of powdered alum; stir this at. intervals Mil it becomes clear; then pour it off Int another bucket and put the garment the ern; let it remain for twenty-four hours, t en hang it out to dry without wringing it.' A lady,who has test ed this recipe thorou_hly, - writes that when they were traveling they wore garmenti thus treated in the eldest storms of wind and rain without g tting wet. The rain would hang upon th cloth in globules; in e ‘ i short the garments . ere re Ily water-proof. The gentleman walk d nin miles in a storm, of wind and rain sunh-as-y rarely see. in' the South, and wh n he 1 pped off his overcoat his underc ethes re as dry 8s when be put them o 1 . This is, we thinir wseeret worth knowiag; for cloth can be made to keep out w -t, it ..is ..in every ay better than water-pr. sfs.—N. Y. lieralft - A Novelty in : utter-Making. The Providence Jo Tit& discourses appe tizingly of certain *tails of butter which have gladdened that ts arket, coming all the way from an lilac s dairy, sweet i freak and possessing a deli *ate aroma, uniform in quality and hardly distinguishable from each other though "ade in summer, aut umn and winter: "They contained little salt and no butter milk. This perfect lmtter is churned daily from fresh milk. Here lies the secret. Milk one hour—butter thel next. No setting If milk pans and skimming and storing of cream. No subjection of milk and cream to atmospheric, electric and thermal chang es. No expensive cellars with running wa-,' ter to secure fresh air, and equal temper* ture, or, in default, a perpetually fluqua ting product of s butter. In place of/the hand churn, the power churn. In p ice of 'N the inefficient hand working of the utter, \ jaws worked by power, squeezin out the buttermilk, just as the melted sln is squeee- , the utter, out of the softenedi iron pud in.' r ,___, --1- Garde Pe . I In pea culture it is'e • u iportant element of success to get then A the ground ear/y. They are tolerably Ifardy. A little frost will not hurt them; a'n4 they like to get well on before the warin'; weather comes. In deed, the pea dos not like warm weather. It is a native of cool climates, and-as soati as hot dry is eather conies it gets mildewed or otherisisc/diseased. The best peaground is theretora cool, strong soll,and if thepea stakes can be provided, so that the luxuriant growtivwill notzclosel'in and suffocate all ogether, good, well decomposed manure helps the crop wonderfully. The best wri teyS on garden vegetables claim that for peas it' is best to have the ground well manured /the year before the crop is sown, so as to have it well decayed, as,rank manure makes more foliage and less peas, while well de composed manure seems to help the seed more.—Germantown Telegraph,. --- Many a poet.• fellow as worn out his bones trying to work a piece of poor ground; but such bone application has seldom re sulted in large profits.. Our English friends have discovered that it is much better "to use other people's bones in theao cases than' their own, and the bOue-trado of England has assumed gigantic Proportions. All the old battle-Ileitis have been ransacked, and unless report do them an injustice, many au old fellow whose bones were supposed to rest in peace idsome grassy, - daisy-dowered churchyard, would have to hunt some mod ern turnip-field -to find all that remains of them. Foreign countries have not only to pay tribute to England of their wealth da ting life, but even their bones have to fol low, in order to enrich British soil, as while living they worked to till British pockets. Australia sends an enormous quantity of bones to England. It has become such a heavy trade that the article itself was found too light for profit. Science has been called in to enable the ship-owner to take these= weight in less bulk. The bones are first ground, then the dust mixed with some sub stance which will give it just enough idite siveness to niake-the particles, to stick to gether. Then the material is put, tinder heavy pressure in mpunds about sir iiiches square, so that it can be packed in the hold without any. loss of space. One ton of this . hone-cake measures twenty-six' cubic feel. Of course these tones are all of wild or domestic animals, but still "silence is golden." When has a man a ghost of a chance of appeasing his appetite ? When he's a gob. 411: b A,.• FM es vs. Blaakete. to keep neat and clean .d no stable with a dirt larded up will ever be •p. • horse to shiver.— Bone Dust. a