r•., ' , • "•• .. • ... , . ',:i 'a .. . „ . . a• ; *-:,.. * . - ',l; ~} •,-'' , . 1 - - ''.. , 7 .; j": I . .. • _._ . , ... , . . V (.}l. X Xo .'.- NO: ...Si' .'-, ~_ , --- . .. . rustastran swami' WnitinSiV at ~- rs.a , x.rt.iwziEs - tAei''xltcliir,. ..: . . , .1. rmiliiiiiii, .--- -.-• • s .a,,, W. 1t0N.,, - ' _... .' ........ ' • ..I• Eit .. i..... 52.00 per annum in adVitneei. - waa • 4,7 • ._ _ „ _ ._,..- -------g- .- It .4 T A'S OP .4.1)V le itr IS LNG .. ,- , • , ... ....---__ films. Ii a 2 lu. • 31u. 4 In. Wol ,ticol 1 cpt,.. _l__ .._-_ ........:- .___'_.• 1. -, , _ - - i C.. - eli .• Ii 0. 1 i'l• 0 0 15• 1 0 0 $ .l 00 1$ 60 0 $9 00 f 140 . ,. , sii',•e/i it Iso 300 4 tai '5 nu i 00111 00 10'00 •• 110 J ati 5 On 000 800 18 00 18 00 i aeekri - A ~ it thi 7 II 00 15,00 20 00 I , 4 , f (" ,, t 1 4 1,;: 1 .1 5( ot ) - 6 i g - 9 - 00 10 °° oo 12'00 20'00 -28 00 ; c i . :;, - i i, s 5 (.81 8 1.81 t 2 00 DI 00 15 0(1 25 00 35 00 •-• 1 1,,,,ti”, 880 12 00 18 00 20 00 22 00 3 , 5 00 80 00 ° -• pi 0.; 18 04 25 OH 28 . 00 35_00 00 00 wo 00 ( loaf. . iduertisementsarooslenhated by then:tot' 111.1engtli ~,(Jo. lama and any leerfspace A rated ail a full Inch. ~. eorelgu advertisements must be paid for before in. yearlyltelr,yearly "rnori,except on ll it 3 Ei C =l; l l;4l7 heli pgaielitil in advance w ca. ts q PoidyleAL No mess, 20 .. ti. r lituieaelt insertion. N,ithrOg Inserted for less than , 0 ltina3 NOTICKSiu the Eancerial columns. on the asi i:l io I page, 15oouts per line each Inaertlon. 'Noth- II Noth ing i sorted for less then $l. „, •. : 10 'r t li n er Local. NOTICES In L ocal Column, Den a per I in ire than livelines; and 50 Geisha for a notice of five , Miss or less. A nnOtlller.alarm; of If suataasa andiluanirristniterted tree : but all ( Magary notices Trill be charged 10'oents, p r line. irgelAlt. NoIiCEF 61) percent aboveregular rates. 0 0 . 4 ,4F,apataDs l 6 lines °class, $5,00 per year. Business Cards. I a a4rOUEL.DEB. P. A. JOH/1130N. Batchelder & Johnson,. lhadaztarers of Monuments,' TopabstOnes, Table o i ,s, counters. ko. Call and sew Shop, Wain at.,. oppo.istir Foote:try, Wellsboro, pa-4411y g, 1872. A. Redfield. 1 • , . r . c . oßs • E x AND COUNSELLOIt AT hAW.--Collect- lou' promptly attended to.-Eilvesburg, 3loga,coun ty, l'enn'a., Apr. 1,1872-91 M. . . . , . C. H. Seymour, . atoors .1E LAW, Tiuga Pa. , All business en; us•ted to his .are willreceiveprompt attention.- 1,0. 1, 1)72. ~ . • _____- Geo. W. Merrick, . „ gioliNlS Al LAW.- Willslioro, P.i, Unice in !,,,,•A 4 iiii:s Block, Alow street; 'second 'fluor, 0.11 i ii, .0 itia IA rota Ulitue. „ 3,litchell & Cameron, ' ... .11:-)1.oa:1s AT LAW, Claim turd'lnsurauce Agents: u tau tu Cou:erae & Willialan.l.9:ioli -;lolook. over 1 , 3 ,, rs , Az 08g, , ,fil'a store, Wtillatioisi, , , re,-.lan. 1, William A. Stone, .., iSIORNEI AT LAW, over '. B. S.elley's Dry Good, z ore, Wright & bailey's 111 .k on Alain street. &Inhofe, Jan. 1, 1872. - ----- - . Josiah Emery, • • -; . .. I t a i •') .., IiTORNEY AT 'I,A.W.-001ce opposite Court Souse, No.ll'unty s Block, Wilitamaport, Pa. All brostnesa (adeptly attended td.--Jan. 1, 1872. J. C. Strang, diORNEI AT LAW Jr DISTRICT ATTORNEY.- edeeal3l.l It 1411 M, Esq., 'Wellsboro, Pa.-Jam 1, '72 --- - - • C. N. Dart(, , , . .- - 41NDST -'lBulb made with the tiliw 111PROVELIENT. Aluch WO butter satisfaction than any thing else a ude, 0111:8 to Wright Ai Bailey's block. Walle t, s e , not. 11, 1872. J. B. Niles; - ' • ' • noiNty AT LAW.-Will attend ptomptly to boo itasa warlord 1., Lls care tu the couhties of 'Doge tel 1',,1t,,r. tilifice u . 811.10 Aveuus:-Wellaboto, Pa., Jan. I, 1312. Jno. W. .A.daniS; •' 1 •' ' 1 17014E1' AT LAW, Ifanitleld, Tinge county, Pa. Collroh,,,s uroulpty alb - Aided to.-Jan. 1, 1872. - . C. L. Peek,. . 7fORNEY AT LAW. All Metros promptly collected wire with W. B. Smith, Knoxirille,Tleigia yo...Pab -. ~ .r . , C. B. Kelly. , r ill er.....acry, China and Oluasa ware, Table, Cut '..•r mad Plated ware. Also Table and; Holum Fur- Lour; owes -Wellsboro, Pa., Sept. 17. 1872. ' • JHO. W. Guernsey, . .1 . . OINEY AT LAW.-All busluess'eutriisted to hlui ..t i.e po.noptly alt. it.liAl 10.-Otlice let door south 1 sedum & Parr's store, Tioga, Tinge county, Pa. iii 1.1•312 • Armstrong Zit Linn, ~ tofiNEYS AT I-IW, Willianomort, Pa. ia ll illlblhON,l. i ' -' ' icrt.LissJan. 1, 1872. i . .' Win. 18. Smith, , SON ATTORNEY ( , Bounty and Insurance Agent. analeatfuns wilt to the above address will re• int prompt attention. Terms moderate.-linos. ~ oa. lan. 1, 1872. Barnes & Roy, plasms -All kinds of Job Printing done on -itsotice, and in the best manner. °dice in Bow. t eaee's Black, 2.4 door.-4,lart. 1, 1872. Sabinsville House. •, . • • , a.cr, Cikig.l. 00., Pa.-Bean ilro'c'Propriettins :. • t.,11,4.: has been thoroughly renovated and is In good condition to accomidato the traveling Ji.iii a superior manner.-Jan. 1. 1873. I). Bacon, M. D., . - :1 RN AND SURGEON-May bo found at lils i lit dour East of bliss Todd's-Atain street. istisl promptly to all calls.-Wcllsboro, It's., .1,147 f. - eeley, Coats ES.. Co., - • , i it. 1. . ,,, 1,. I. o .rz... Tl.-ox Co., ea..-lit cove money •• , t..•-• ~ ,. •,1 notes, :mkt sell drillts oU Now "IPi. C.,11e tiotia prOulptly made. 1 1.,:, Bv.tt.E.Y, Osceola. VII4E. ettANDALL, • 1.1772 DAVID 00.1.1.13, Kilo XY/ Ile -- --- -- .. Petroleum House, aill.n• l'A.. tie°. Close, rrnprietor.---0.000 cc '' '.lathou ke Loth man and beast; Charges res. 'A. and 100 d attention given to guests. I ICI W. W. Burley, '•7+1:11. - . It Ell OF all styles of light and heavy -,iti• carriages kept en istatitly on hand. All vimaihol. Corner Cass mid IMMO° Streets.' ''Nwllle, N. Y. Urilere left with. C. - B. Kelley, - , `/ - 0, or E. it. Ditrley, Chatham, wilt receive 0 1 I1elition.-Jude 3, 1873.-0 mos. M. L. Stieklin l 'a Cabinet Ware of all Linda which will bo . vit than the lowest. Ile luVitOe• till to take' too, goods before parchasing elsewhere.- , aohr tho place-opposite laartt's Wagon Shop, line Street, Wellaborm . Feb. 23, 1878-Iy. ' "., Mrs. Mary E. Lamb. , i TV; -Wl.lB a to inform her friends' and the t ~ ,i ,e.rallr 11611 oho has a large stock of Ahllin- Fin, j doods suitable for illo godson. which 'ii.ii at reseonableprie es. Ifni E. E. Kim -I.llMirge at the making and trimming do -tt, 110 V, 111 give her attention exclusively to .11 door u, the Conyers,' At Williams Block.- -at ' - ---- -- ---- * - Yale & fall Horn. t clufs.inirlii,3 several brands or choice Cigars' v« aon sell 'at prices that cannot but please , I '''''' , P ,4 % ',ti t an.) none but the hest Connect • "Iva mil 'A a Tobaccos. We mike our own . ` , 4 iorMill reason can warrant them. WO :1 I g",r,11, as4.l.l4neut of good (Mowing and' .1 T.. haccuacailitltTS, Pipes from cloy to the 4 e•os..h.iiiiii. 'robacco Pouches, arc . whole , 'titan lh•e. ii, 1872. -.. • - -t JO llll R. Antlerson, Agt. , . ' . 'sp , : t , RETAiI, DRAI.Ett IN lIARDIVARE. '. l .''' , . Steel, Nails, [loose Trimmings, Ma ,,, :Li. Agrieintand Implements, Carriage .„‘.".. Springs, Mum. Sz.c., Pocket and Table '' .. r 4 , 1 t81 Wort , , tines and Ammunition, Whips. ~:', . .1 and iron-the best in use. Mann fac '',l dater la Tin Copper, cud Sheet-iron 1 1 1"'''' . ,1 . ,-11 .its Vitt and . Iron. lb work warrant ' IV . 1111/SllOllO HOTEL, v4l ' l Alli 81`. Af. 111 K ATE:NUE. WELL ' ,BIIOIIO, PA. ' B. HOLIDAY, Proprietor. J. . 4 : - ,,,',,bszli ti l . th a 'yted, and Is In good con tlou ,• di ..,,,,,, a %sling public. Thu pioprietor to. 4 „T__mate at a first-class house. All 1!,,,7:,'?u , , dePart \ from this house. Free t . tt, i: ‘ Lt , i , i , ,s. Kober and industriouslost , 'l,, 1973.-t(t. ' ' ------------- • j : U ST- RECEIVED . . log 9 ce A ruCE OP REA PER. DROAD , thl i 1, - .`gERR. VESTINO, AND TRAIL k__ wilt all very cheap FOIL CASII. In , . ''m With -cent 01 Goods a . 7. ,,, i ,,, , ever brought to a styles. _Plaits° tall and - look &all n I I - ~,, t erc , ,,, 11414 cheap a 4 t tli tl ' e ll e n b l ea lte pere ring L , ,_ ll . °n° with OEOBGEGNEII, - , '4ll. - CUM% Ihreei, - WeibltagO t i'B. 4 • r, . , _ . '"--- MEE . • ~-`•`--• :• • • • -• .• :-• ,: r" ,'' •`, ''• ; • 1 - s : • - - ,•••• - . fTI - >k,tl7 .. , - , _ . ;._ • • - - . . , „. A -- _ , • _ A •• - ”. (-1 rt• - • • r it • , • 1( " ,c r , - - • . s, • .1_ ?.• • .1 - • 1 MI EEO lEEE 1 ; EN 1 iGeterai Insurance gency,- i -1160A130.; iLifes " ( Vi d eo awe!" Aceitrental.i AESSErg DYER $455.000.000. ARBR-m ow COMPANIX4.- ' Atonal)la, pf Cleveland. Ohio 420;033.44 New York Life and Piro Ina. Co.. 4 ...: .21;000,009. *yet Ina. Col; of Liverpool 10,515.901 Latiothhird, of Manchester, Capital,.: 10,009,009 Itufx. Co., of North America, Pa $2.050,635 60 Franklin Fire Co. of Phila. Pa ' ;01,087,452 25 1- INepublio fua. Co. - of N. Y. go,tta' • • $750,000. Niagara Fire lug. Co. of N. - Y - '1,000,009 Farmers Slut. Fire Ina. Co. York . Pifeentx Mut. Llfolna. Co. of Harff0rdidt...6,081,970,50 l'Oritl'a Cattle Ina. Co. of POttavilla .....eoo,oon 00 ...$55.431.451 94 Inimranco promptly effected by mall or otherwise. mauling% of property. - All losses promptly adjusted and paid at, my ottic6. AU commimications proMptly attendlid tO-4:101ce on Street 2d door from Main at.. Knoxville Fa. - • • WM. B. Burro . An. 1. I - 73 - tf.• Agent. Grime• rat Insanoce Airolicv - I Twos Co., PA. ,14 H. &J. D. CANIPBELL ARE btatting policies in the following Companies lagaiust fire and lightning :in Tiog and Potter counties , • (AMEN, • • ABeete, $10,000,000.00 CONTINENTAL of New ••-2,900,520.27 .11/..NOTEP„ of New York • • 989,381.00 °DELMAN AMF.IitICAN, New York... _1,272,000.00 WYOMING, of Wilkesbarre, Pa 210,898.42 WIDLIXIWORT, of Wm'eport. All buatneas promptly attended' to by mail or other witle.i Dolma adjusted and paid at our oflivo. Nelson, Deo. 10, 1872-Iy, LO OK ! AT. • " HASTINGS ',drk 'COLE'S DRUGS, MEDICINES, • • PATENT .411DICINES, - • . Paints, Oils, Glass, Ditty,' Trusses, Supporters, and • • • cal Instruments; s. . II6RSE & 'CATTI;E'PO Artist's Gou r ds in divot Variety Liquors, Scotch Moe, Cigars, Tobacco, Snuff, &c., &c., PHYSICIANS . PRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY COUITUNDED Groceries Sugars , Tea - , , CA .N.W.E.t) AND- D RIED FRU.I2I' Shot, Lead. Powder and Caps, Lamps, Chimneys, Whips, Lashes, drd. BLANK 81 MISCELLANioIIS /i3OO/LIP ' All School Books in use, Envolopee. Blatiotiery, 11111 and Cap Paper, Initial paper, - Memorandums. large and small Dictionaries, Legal paper, School Cards and PriinerS, Ink, ,Writin Fluid, (Maas and Baokgammon Boards, Picture Frames, Cords aildA'apaelei Mirrors, Albums, Paper. Collars and Cliffs, Croquette, Base Dane, parlor games, at wholesale and retail. NOTIONS. poit monies; combs, pins and needles. scissors, shears, kiiives, violin strings, bird cages. A great variety of pipes, dells. inkstands, measure tapes, rules, Fishing Tcrchle hist trout flies, lines hooks' baskets and rode.: -•-• Special attention paid to Me Itno In the season. TOILET AND. FANCY ARTICLES AGENTS FOR AMERICAN STEAM SAFES. , VILLAGE LOTS for sale In the central part of the ft oro Ittatcl . l:2s. '7a-tf For Sale or Rent. HOUSE AND LOT corner of Pearl street and Av ene. Also for sale, oven village lots near the Acadomtr. Apply to ELLIOTT k DOSARD, Welleboro, Pa. Oct 29 1872-tf. MRS. C. P. Sitlirritl, DrAS just return from New Yolk wit h the largest assortment of MILLINERY AND FANCY GOODS ever brought into WeHeber°, and will give her custom ers reduced prices. She has a sPlondirl assortment of ladies suits, Parasols, Gloves, Fans, real and. imt tatiou hair g de, and a full line of, ready nuttle white goods. Prices suit all. .' GO AND SEA - CITINA :HALL _ Surveyor's Notice. EDWARD Ilßyl/LN offers his fiervico to the public as a SurVeyor. He will he ready to attend prompt ly t tall eslly. lle.rnay be found ur the law office of Shemond k Son, in Wellsbord, or it his resit dear.e on Enst Alicone. NictiAbolo, Pat, IStiv 13, 1873,-l -f• CHINA HALL,Wellsboro. LIVERY STABLE. S GOLIN proprietors. First-class rigs 11 furnished at reasonable rates. Pearl -etroot, op , posit° 'Wheeler's wagon shop. A PUBLIC HACK will be on the street at all reasonable hours. Pass• angers to and from the di:pot to Ally part of the town will be charged twituty.flve cents. For families or email parties for pleasure. ono diglar per hour.' Wellsboro; July IS, 1873.• KETCH AM & COLES- THE NEW (Mlycier ROTA It Y M OTI ON Sewing Machine I The Great Fannilh2,•Seeoing Machine of the Civilized 117inId. 700,000 Wheeler& Wilson Fondly Serving Machines now in Use. • , TIME Improve/1140N lately added to thte Celebrated 1. Melilla° have [nolo it by far tho moot cleanable Validly Machine In tho'nutrket and have given. au nu. patois to the tale of It. foyer before equaled in the blistery of ℧ tdaeUlnee. Eiamino for yourself; consult your ou u interests n buying a Sewing Mannino, cunt DO NOT ALLOW YOURSELF PO BE BLINDED by that too common, illusion, thet all Lock-Stitch Sowing Machtues aro gookl enough, or that any Ma chine ' will answer your purpose If makeirtho stitch alike on both sides of the fabric. EXXIIINE WELL THE CONSTRUCTION OF THE MACHINE YOU BUY, and not pay your money f l or a heavirunning, slow motioned, noisy, complicated Miichinei r thrown to gether in such a manner as to last Pall long enough to wear out both yenr body and patience. There is a great distleytive difference between the Wheeler hi Wilson and all other Machines that make the Lock-Stitch. And it is to this difference that.we wish to especially call ydur atteutiuu. • It Makes Ike Lock, (or Shuttle Stitch,) but clock it wallow" a Shuttle ! Thereby pipe using with iho shuttle and ail machinery required to ran a shuttle; aisq doing jiwity pith the. tsle-up that is to be found in allsbutUe Machines: and owing to the peculiarity of-its construCtion, ' ONLY rthrtublt Is um:M=l). • while all other lock-stitch Machines require two. _ GEO.IIOBINSON, Agent, Much a3,154,T. MILLSBORO. nt, =NEE LOOK t ronl HASTINGS k COLES WELLSBORO, PA ME I : Ljr.; • - J.- . 4.'yor , -iAcurta*i, 7,RUMAI4I-:4':00 'I Fiim: N STO SOT `4)11 PR le'rk A large stuck of ePRRIG*SUMigII C40,01):11 F,ORENN (fl Cons:sting of Naliid' Pros'olo:ig. All styles, 'colors and . pitterns; ALA PA CAS, POPLINS, CAM-: „ FRENCH JA CO Ar . ETS ORGANDIES, PEQUAS, V.E.R *AMES, • • . BLACK 6 - COLORED SILKS, ---ALiO--- Beautiful &Ulmer Shawls, YAIVICEE NOTIONS, IMIEIIIIII BOOTS &SKI ES, HATS'& CAPS, Ready-Nlade Clothing, and plenty of cloth to mike more. Frg i sh Groceri,esp •. )3e . M.. White :A. Sugar, 14 cents, A kirda and cliolco stock of TrfrITTTTTTTTTTTTT at vary low prices : { l lekeefi ttio l?est r 60 cent Tea ID W NI LSBOBO A large stock of Crockery- Call , and, see Opera House Block. May 8, 1873 Wel have Shed the Shanty 1 L.BALDIR &GO TIU(3A.' P& And row bay° Wit tine. to nil) , o our Men& and cnotaruera that Wl' liaVe end BARGAINS eOlt THEM I ' Oati Elegasai Slore is MIT of lirtSlitAgLE, 6'oollB lIM MI at the loweat glees to he toistikt COI tatitirott wilt khuw how It ho yuttruchauti 1 " , 90 11, lath - - VY‘LISBORO: TIOGA • • , . • ,aorminsei . , - TuEgvAy , . AVOIJSI -1873' Neiv Goods, I= TRUMAN kco Mill OEM I.L. BALDWIN:keg,: • - She Loved 7dOch." 4 :qtheitoisitintieh:" , litich was ttili legend sweat bat circled herialttagtiala 'yor4s;' ' Who, dearest, nano oxprof4stve Win bore;And (1; to shadow forth thyself howitteet. • ' ••• • ahe Pits.berdde the tal. , !ng Ithister'o, fee, • laveli Mew With her tears end goldinn, resaVe • And every act of , attar-rife , eathrenleit , ' - - • mho u'Llian filth she came to grekt. Tradition names her sinner. Wens saint • KnOw her sloop; In page o£-holy writ, AB one who joyed with Win, her love, to sit:- •tie - one - whom oVerj. artist 10111118 to paint. Filled with a hlve-itlitswervtng and tied Witt.' :Ready to Bogor every earthly losa, .First at-the-tomb, all last liestdp the smut., • Thrice blest a love like hers that !mows, earthly talutl-.. • 11, t Lullaby.' , , ..." • !3aby, what do the blcasome nay Down in the garden walk? ' " They nod and they bow In the twilight grey;' Pray, eau you hear thew talk? - They nay; .43 darling baby bright; 'We are going to sleep; good night! good-night I For, the lid tiow tiod takes rare of everything." lah.Y.breenetrhave come to slug r Bleep I aleop,i BabY,,what does the robin say? . ' • Do you hear his evening song? He Rite and shags his sunset lay .Witk a heart ail blithe and strong. Good-night, my baby dear;' ' Bleep soft, sleep Well, and do not fear; For eoniehow,l know, as I ett and sing, • Iliat G 44 takee,Vare of everything.". • , Keep! • sleep! Baby, what does the cricket say? 100 you hear his measured voice ? He says:".."Che sun has gone away; And I've come one to rejoice;' For the cold dew falls upon , the grass, And the fireflies whisper as they page, Cricket, cricket., cope out and sing, Bow God takes care of nverything.' " t Sleep, sleep! • ' Baby, what are your mother's words, ' As you nestle uporrher breast Y - phe says:. Come libber. my sweetest of birds, Per you must seek your nest. . . Tho flowers and the robins have gone to sleep, The Crickets and glow-worms their Watches keep; And your mother will sitby.yonr cradle and Sing. That Clod takescare of everything." ' • Bleep I ;elven! TOM'S WIFE. BY KATE ..TYTNAM.OBOOOI) We had just finished breakft,lSC TOM.. laid down an eggsponn he had been• play ing with and looked across at mother. ' "Aunt Anne, I•think Pit 'tak c „_ti' `; , ;qfe,"! _he said; exactly as; he might have. said "I thinkflll take another eup.of coffee. ) ) , ‹ 1- , `ATake tiwifel" repeated mother,' bY Means receivingilhe"information guilty, as it had been ," What for?" - " Well, '.I don't know," answered Toni, thoughtfully,. "it's a notion -I've , got -into my head somehow." ' "All nonsense," said mother sharply " Do you think so?" said Toni;'apparent ly doubtful, but not in the least put out. " Think so? I -know it. What in the world can you want of a wife? After all these years we have' lived so comfortably together, to bring 'somebody to turn the house upside down! And then, - what's to become of that poor child?"' The poor child"—that Was T—rdden lug at being brought into - the argument in .this•way, was about lo speak for herself, when Tom interposed, Ivarmly: " " sure May litiowS I would never have any wife who Wouldmake- it. less. a Lome fur her—don't:you May?" • . , • " Of course, 'lsaid. "And I'm sure she.knows nothing of , the sort," persisted mother, " nor' you,. either, Tom Dean. How cati Yeti answer`for what a wild may take into her bead, 20. do, - once you get her,'fixed here? • You 'can't, expect' her to forget,. as you illo; that May,lifts no real claim on'you." . "`That I have 11(fTbal claim - 61111er, stq ; pose you mean, niii'am,? - .Tonijnit In jot' the, Second littiejust-tua.,.wrui--,-gottirtm ":But-for'all that I; ilitonti Affp , bor, utio‘la with one of his short-sighted Wise arine, " its long asslhe'll stay-witiine, eh, Arid whoever has anything to. say against that arrangement will !lA.& to, go out of my house to say it; not thatTni afraid Of - any such, result in this case;-and, ,on the whole, Aunt Anne, I should like to try the experiment." Mother smiled 'griinly„.. but .Tom was so evidently bent on his " experiment,," ,as he called it, that she gave up,the argument. "You can dance, if you're ready' to the piper," she 'said shortly. "Add - pray,' how soon do you intend to be.irwried?" . ,,, Tom's face fell it little at this question. " Well," said he, " I can't say 'exactly; I supposo we shall have to -be edgageit'first." " What!" said mother, opening, her. ..eyea; ," why, you never Mean to say, Tam, that you haven't spoken to her yet?" "Not yet," answered Toni cheerfully:— " Tinie enough for that, you know, after I had Spoken to you." Mother, as a .minister's widow; was not much given to the idle mirth that' is as the crackling of thorns oxide a pot, but now she leaned back and laughed till the, tears stood in her eyes. "Well," she said, "if it • WaS anybody else I should say be was cracked; 'lint you were never like other people, and yuuineder will be, Tom Dean. But at least you, have livid on the lady?" - • " Oh, yes," answered Tom; " but,if "you will excuselne, Aunt -Anne, I woul 'rather not say anything about her just yet, for, if —if anything should happen, it wouldn't be pleasant for either party, you know." With which veiled allusion to his possible'rejec ,tion Tom took his hat and left the room.-. Our household was rather queerly putlo• get her. There, was 'no particular reason why I should have been of it at all, for I was not really related' to Tom, nor even to " mother," as I called her, though! am sure we were as'dear to each other as. any moth er and daughter could be. • She was the sec ond Wife of my father, who, like most min isters, bad been richer in • grace than in goods, and he left us at his death with very little to live on. Then it was that Tom Dean had come forward and insisted on giv ing a home to his aunt, and to me, whom he had Scarcely seen a dozen times in his life before. That was exactly. like Tom— " queer Tom, Dean," as his friends Were fond of saying, "Who never did anything like anybody else." All I bad to do was to go where, mother went, and while she' gave her. energies to the housekeeping I .gave mine to growineup, which by this time I had pretty well accomplished. I knew that mother had spoken honestly, believing that such a step would not be for his happiness; bat was not he the hest judge of that?„l knew' him, if 'reflection should bring hint around to her opinion, to be perfectly capa ble of quietly sacrificing his own wishes for, 'tiny sake, who had not the_ shadow of a chum on him; who, it must be my part to pre vent his own kindness being turned against 'him now. What could I do? Draw and sing and play tolerably, but not in a manner to compete with the hosts that would be in the field against tne; Literature? I had read so many stories - whose heroines, with. a turn of the pen, dashed into wealth and fame! That would be very nice, only—l was not the least little bit 'literary. The flue arts then being out of the question for me; what remained ? There was some clerk ship, o'r it place in some family, and—and there Was Will Broomly! • That may seem like going away from the point, but it was,not. was matter-of-fact, but.l could see well enough what was going on right under my eyes, and had tt pretty' clear idea of what was bringing Will to the bouse so often as he had taken to coming lately.' There wits a "situation," then, that would give me - the home-life I liked best and felt myself best suited for, but—Would it answer in other respects? I overcast the long seam I was Retying twice over, I ,was so busy trying to make up my mind whether I liked Will enough to. Fels my whOle life with.him; and even then I had not come to any decision, when„l -was called down to Lefty Walters. ' - Letty was the prettiest, I think, 'of all my friends, '..and, certainly the liveliest. Tom clilled" her the ' tonid,'":'and used to laugh heartily at her bright speeches. I, suppose, it W . llB this that mute 'mother fix on Letty as his 'Choke. When I came into the sitting room I found a kind of 'cross-examination - going on. ; _lt was amusing to anybody, in the secret as-I was ~to watch, mother's, artful of continually bringing the conversa tion around, as if by chance, to beacon what tihe wanted to know. 'But - it ajlammulte4 to nothingreither beeitiiii`LettY was too good a fencer or because she really had Pq l // 13 8 to betray But who Tam came , • • , •hornie dintlier took to me - nthm that Let-, *NW; lite 'tenter, naid Tom , . Too bailiflinissed her." • • „ .„ -"`slut for your eheice being alreudy made,”. said mother;. with' . a &wen faTti,.iny or his face, `` dare'say you tulabt hav'e, Much of the toniepts you liked,"". • ." But 1-go opt the hoineoi)allpie_prinriple, you knoW; i ' said'Tom with a tWiltkle" in • his After tlist: Mother's belief - In Let ty!s guilt iness wavered, Her - suspicions were trans ferred from 'one- to . another of-;our Acquaint-, but always with the Same tinstitisfae-. tory result.: - - .`' It paises•mir coinpi . ehension," she said to me tlespatriuglie one day. ' "I am ,posi tive I could tell the right one by Tom's face in a minute, and yet I have mentioned 'eve-. rybody we lino*:" ' • „ . • " Perhaps it , is somebody we den% know," I suggested,- " some friend of 1.11.4' we . _ have never seen." . _ mother "` Whatl w perfect' st ranger?" said tr sharply. ."Never talk to me, child; Tom's not capable of that."' • - - I was silent, for I did not want to, worry her; but that was my opinion all the same. The same evening—it was - rather more than At week since Tom .had' hurled that thunderbolt of. his - at' us-litother, began about it openly. ' V ' - ' ~ • ".When are you going to introduce your : wife to us; Torn? I suppose ,you have come to an'onderstanding_by this time?" " Oh, there's no hurry," Tom said, as . he had said before; bug tido time. he, did' not speak quite so checifully. "The 'fact is," be emignaecd with a little hesitation, "there is—there ii.rival in:the case." - - ' "A rival " repeated mother , with• unfeel lng,hriskites . ._, . , . $ , , • ' Ye 4, aS! ring fellow —younger by a good deal than I am;" and Tom s face assumed an abiurdly doleful look. "He is always therenosy. • I confess I don't "see my way' clear;. rm waiting for her to make •up her, mind.".. , - 7 -I'ins/ey's ,cVagazine. AMI she's waiting, most likely, for you to make tip yours," said mother,' forgetting in her,propensity'to right. matters• that' she was playing the enemy's game. ' ' ‘! There's sernething in that that never et curred 'to me," said Tom, his face brighten= lag. Islother saw her mistake, and made a .'counter Move at once., , ".Bnt'the ways of my time are old-fash ioned *lv; young ladies, now-o,days take• matters,' n their own bands. If she cared for yett,You maybe pretty, sure she.youldn't have !Waited till thistime to let'you know it •-thittris,, I judge by the girls ; I am in the 'habit'Of. • seeink; but if .thls one is'a.stranger to tne--- : :,"'(nere mother riveted her eyes on Tom's - face- oh, dear, my unfortunate words!)' if she is an eni stranur, I can not pretend to form an opinion of her, of course."' ' " Of 'eourse," repeated Tom absently. " Not that I have any such idea," resumed mother,. growing Warmer; "I have said, and say again, that 4-to bring a perfect etranger under this roof is not my opinion of you, Tom." 1 felt my mother's words like so many pins rind needles, for T'oin was looking med itatively across at me, and, though that was just away of his, it seemed now -as if he was reading in my face that the opinion was mine;aud that I had been meddling in what did not concern me. I felt myself, for very vexation, getting redder every moment, till it arew:;intolerable. -" it so warm here;" said for an .ex case; turning toWardi the French window; ant going to get a breath of fresh air." I went out into our little trip of garden greundi Tom followed. thought I should neVer.have a betteropportanity to say what 4 hati , itin - my mind to say, so I waited for liiiirby,the bench under the old pear tree. '!Sit.deotrn here, Tom," I said, " sonic "ibing to.say,to you." • .- • '-''-" -, 7 11 " - titiVp`iyhti?"'said Tom;, ".that's odd, for thot_id.wd_ _ tr, - Tutty "Tom," ,I said, still saver now 'be bad misjudged me, and more resolved to set him right, - "J want a place." - A , plate!" repeated Tom, puzzled, as well he might be, 1)y this sudden and laded 'pile announcement; "what kind of a place" .." I don't know," I said, for indeed my ideas were of the vaguest. "1 thought - you might, being in the way of thosethings, get ;Me one. Now, pray, Tom," I went on - quickly, "don't fancy I am discontented, or.or anything of that sort; the truth is, ever since I kit off same] I have wanted something to do, and had it in my mind to speak,to you about it." • With this I looked at Tom, fearting he Might. be vexed; but he did not look vexed, ;only preoccupied.. ' „ "I do know of a place as it happ6s ; ".he said, after a while, "only I'm not sure how It wduld,suitryou." :"That's.soott seen," said I. "What is it like Y" , , " Well, it'aa sort of—general usefulness." ' •."Why,, itonst be to run errands," said I, laughing. "'And where is it, Toni ?" ' "Well,' said Tom, hesitatingly again, "it's with me." ."11nw very nice 1"' I exclaimed. "How Boon can I have it ?"- "The sooner the better, so far as I am concerned," , said Tom, and with, that he turned around and looked at me, and direct ly I met his eyes I knew somehow, all in a moment, what' it was he meant; and I knew, too, both that I could not have passed all my life with Will Broomly, and why I could not. I,am sure Letty Walters, who interrupted Us just then, must have thought, wits were wandefing that evening, and 'indeed they were: for I was completely dazed with the sudden turn things had taken. But Toni, who had, the advantage of me there, took it quite c,oolly, and laughed and talked with Letty just the same as ever till she went, away. - • It was pretty 'late when we went in.— Mother sat where we had left her, knitting in the twilight. " Wasn't,that Letty Walters with you a while age?" she said as we came np "Nes," said I, With a confused feeling of something beinginecessary.; ," she just came to bring the,new :crochet pattern she, prom ised me." " said motherotsfnuch. as to say She had hero w n ideas as to NOM. Lefty came for. , Tom had been wandering. about the room in an absent Sort of 'fashion, taking ,tip and putting down. in thigarong places all .the small objects thatfell in his way., b _ flosupliie up and took 'a seat by mother., I ecame,of ti /Ridden very busy With' the ; pinuts , iii the window, for I knew he yt* geing,,to tell her. " Wish the joy, Aunt Anne;" it's all settled." Settled, is it?" said mother in,anything but a joyful tone. "So - it's as' I suspected all along. Well; you bliVe inYbOt - weibed,. Tom; perhaps you may be happy 'together:, after all-:-I'm'surel hope so." • ' This wasn't a very encouraging sort of congratulation, and Tom seemed rather tak en aback by it. ' " I'm sorry you're not pleased," he said after a pause; "1 had an idea, somehow, you would be." • "I don't knOw from what you judged.— But then its no use crying over spilt milk. You'll be married directly, I presume. I must be looking out fora bonsai" and moth er stroked her nose reflectively with a knit ting needle. • • What fort" said Tom. thought of keeping on here all the same." , I never suppoSed otherwise," said moth-. er. "Of course I did not, expect to turn you ant of your own,honse." " But what is the need of looking out for another, then?" - "Why, for myself," "For yourself!" repeated Toro iii a tone of utter amazement. "Going to,leave:us— just now? Why, Aunt Anne, I never heard of such a thing!" " Now, Tom," said mother, 'speaking very fast ,and making her needleS fly in concert, " we Might as well come to an 'understand ingat once on this Subject. lam fully sensi ble of your past kindness—noW juSt let me finish—Lsay I appreciate it, and have tried to do my duty I V you in return, fg liopt should•always vready - to do.. I Wish all good to you your wife, and shalkbe glad .to help her if "er I Can; but to Jive 'lrr the same house Wit i her;ip what woultl•fitrii out .pleasantly-for either- of us, and; &fa! fOr all, I can't do it." "Aunt Anne," said Tom, pusjiing back ]i44 chair aild elating in =Went excited Er '• I - fir4, , etther,you or I must 1)e out - of. wtta, ; , -4 ' It's not me, then, att - r ny.itte,"retinted tneftßer, getting , Atuttgement and a eertaitt :Mnbarraslianent :h#TV ~silent • listener -so, fur, but there was no standing this. _ . I tried to speak,: latt'eettld not forlaughing. ; • ",- 1-111 i4 11 '..Y 0 P are On out. -of Your wits to. gehier,"? - 441(1. mOt her, turning sharply.— !' Witur'itits' the ettild? - It'S no Inuirbing matter." ' r „ "You don't 'Understand, enla., other," 111 gasped ; oh,-dear I Ant ; le4y—oh-71 oh, dear!" rind 'relattsed. agdn. "Not Lettief" repeated mother, turnipg': " Then why 'did Yon 'so? never told you so," said Tow _ . "-Why, yes you Aftl," persisted Mother:2_ ". You etuue:in and told you - werellgolitp, to he mulled," "Yes, So I. atn," said Tom,' still at" cress purposes. : .„ • • - ".Nov,o Tom Dean,"! said • Mother, rising and' confronting him. 't What dOyou mean?. Who is going to he your , wife?'.' Why, IdayrOf epurse;'' answered TOni.- "May I" And, then,• after - a. pause of in-- expreslahle astonishment ~ it was 'mother's turn to laugh.' Do you mean to.,say,' Toni, It was that child you were thinking. of the : Why, who ehln - onitiit be?", said Tom, sShtply ' 4* Well," said mother, " I ought to hare rethembered you never did do anything like anybody else. But; still, why did you gq tp work in suebn roundabout way?" . . I wanted to see bow you t00k...t0 my idea," said Tom. '‘f And how do - you suppose A've mere ,to guesa your idea meant May?" motheitighed., " Who else could it be?" repeated - Tom, famug iiirek on" it/114,11e evidently found an unanswerable argument. It was "n 6 Use talking to him. - Mother gave it up :with a shake of the head. •-' "A'nd' you won't Want another flied, 'Aunt Anne'?" said Tom suddenly.— That sat mother pll again. t i Tom joined With her, and altogether I don't think- we ever passed a merrier evening than the one that made'us acquainted'with'Tom's Appleton [l:Journal. The Liquor Interest Till nip, tramp; tramp; the boys are march ing. How many of therti?, Sixty thousend! 'Sixty full - regiments, '`everyman of 'Which Will, before twelve months shall have ,com-, pleted their course„ lie down in the graved a drunkard! Every year , during the *past decade has =witnessed the same sacrifice; and sixty - re rcets stand- -behind this 'at my readyto ake its place. ,Itisto be recruited from our children . and our children's chil dren. " Tramp, tramp, tranip"—thesounits . ' come to us in the echoes of the footsteps of the army just expired; tramp, 'tramp, tramp —the earth shakes with the tread of the host now passing; tramp, ,tramp; tramp, comes to us from the camp of the recruits. A great tide of life flow's resistlessly to its death. What in God's name are they fight ing for? The privilege of pleasing an ap petite, of conforming to a social ustet,e, of tilling sixty thousand homes with shau - e and sorrow, of loading the public with the bur den of pauperism, of crowding our priSon houses with felons, of detracting from the- - productive industries of the -country, of ru• ining fortunes and breaking hopes, of breed ing disease and wretchedness, of destroying both body and soul in hell before their 1 ime.• The prosperity of the liquor interest, cov ering . every, department of it, depends en tirely on the maintenance of this army.' It. cannot live without it. It never did live without it. - So long as the liquor interest maintains its present prosperous condition it will cost America the sacrifice of sixty -thousand men every year. The effect is in separable from the cause. The cost to the eountry;of the liquor traffic is a sum'so stu 'pen'dous that, any figures which we should jbwe_tri.irive -- - - :,! .--....L., ~,, ~I" tr; f 1;, I 110 - amount of ide absolutely destroyed, the amount of industry sacrificed, the quan tity of tiread transformed_ into , poison, , the shame, the unavailing sotrow, the crime ; the poverty, the pauperism ' the -bretality,• the wild waste' of vital and financial resour ces, make an aggregate so vast—so ineeleu- lably vast—that the only - wonder is that the American people do not risena one man and declare that this great curse shall exist no longer. Dilettante ronventions,are held on the subject of peace by men and Women who . find it necessary to fiddle to keep themselves awake. A hue-and-cry is raised about wo man suffrage, - as if any wrong which may be involved in woman's lack of the Suffrage could be compared to the wrongs attached to theiiquor interest! ' - • Does, any sane woman doubt that women are suffering a thousand,. times more from rum than front any political disability?' The truth is that there is no question be fore the American people to-day thntbegins to Match in .importance the temperance question. The question of American - sla very was never anything but a baby by the side of this; and we prophesy that ',within ten years,' if not , within five, the whole country will be awake to it and divided up omit. The organizations Of theliquor in terest, the Vast funds at its ;command, the nniversal feeling among those whose busi ness is pitted against the national prosperity and the public morals—these are enongli to show that, bpon one side of this matter,' at least, the presen.condition ,of things and the social and pod political questions that lie :in l i the immediate fut. re are apprehended. The liquor interest dinws there is to he a great struggle, and -is preparing'to meet it. Peo ple both in- this country and in 'Great Brit ain are beginning to see the enormity of this business—are begin ningito realize that Chris tian civilization is actually poisoned at its fountain, and that there can be no purifica tion of it until the source of the poison is dried up. The country is to be sincerely congratu lated on the fact that the wine interest of the United States does not promise much.— Little native wine, after all eur painstaking, fin& its way - to a gentleman's table. The California wines are a disappointment and re failure, and the - Western wines are the. -saint-. ,Neither the dry ne,r the sparkling CataWba-Aakes 'the place lof anything. im ported. The:rare-AO - popular wines, and we congratulate the country that they never can'he. The lager beer interest is endiiv oring, in convention, to' separate itself frOm , the whisky 'interest, claiming 'to' be holier and more respectable than that. They are all to beJuipped.together. They are all op posed to sobriety, and in the end we shall find them all fighting aide by side for' exist ence against the determined indignation of a long-ma:deg people: ' ' - A respectable English magazine reports, as a, fact of encouraging ,i r mment, that of the fifty thousand elergyme IA the Church li of England as many as four thousand actu ally abstaiu from the use Of spirits! So, eleven-twelfths of . the elergyMen of the En• glish Church consent to lie dumb dogs 011 the ,temperance question! How large the proportion of wine-drinking clergymen may be by this country:we do not. knoW, but we do know that a wine glass stops the mouth on the subject of tempentnce, -whoever may hold- it. A wine-drinking clergyman is a. soldier distil:Med. •He ix not only-not worth a straw in the fight—he is a part of:the int..' pedimenta of the temperance army. We have a good many such to carry who ought to be ashamed of themselves, and who very soon will be. Tlnperance laws are being passed by' the v rious Legislatures which they lutist sustainor go over,. soul and body, to the liquor interest and influence., Steps are being - Jaken 'on behalf of the' public health, morals, and prosperity - which they must approve by voice and act, or they must consent to be left behind and left There can be no concession and no compro mise on the part of tenwerance men, and no quarter to the foe. The great curse of t our country and our race must be destroyed. Meantime the tramp, trump, tramp sounds g on-- , -the tramp of sixty thousand yearly vic tims. Some are besotted and stupid, some are.wild witkhilarity,and dance along the dusty, way, some reel along in pitiful weak atess,,Some wreak their mad, and., miirderous impulses on one another, or.-on the helpless women, and, Children whose destinies are •united ,to' theirs, some stop iu wayside de baucheries and infamies fora moment, some g 9 bound in chains from -w hien= they - seek:in' vain to wrench-their l bleetling wrists, and ell, are poisoned in-bodY and soul, And all .are . doomed- to delit.b. , l, Wherever they thove, crime, poverty, shame, wretchedness, and despair hover in awful shadows. There is no bright side to the picture., We forget— there is just one, The men who make this , 1 i Briny get't ice.. Their i phildren - are i 9130,11) ptitplelincl fine linen, anti, upon dal it-, r 3,1,110 . of them are regarded'its respei•t, 'able niettitiecs of society, aturthey-liiikt-eoni 'ventioittr to protect their interests!, Still the, tramp gees' an • and' before this article can see the liglih =Sve thotisita more .(4 , one poiSoned army will:have hid- - ilen their shame and disgrace in_ the, grave.. ilfatittzfne. , The too large'st planets of the solar sys tier are now Visible in the eveningsky: - aii: biter, the largest, is jtist setting in the north :west, !IS Saturn,..lhe next largest { -is just ris ing on the opposite side of the horizon, in the aoutheitst. Loth ; planets 'slide out in the daikening twilight,. and are visible be fore tiny 1411 or stars can be seen; -and both are about the same altitude., low "dOwn..in the horipn, soon after mine o'clock. Jupi ter is Mtwing to the eastward„-and during, the spring months has passed Regulus, aMI now sets after instead' of beforelthat star. Saturn is isolated and alone-In his glory; and both nary be readily distinguishedby• their steady white light. All 'the stars.riear them twinkle when at that altitude, which is not the Me with these planets,. and' this fact-alone enables them to be' easily recog-. nixed; in. - addition to which, they are mush ' the brightest and largest of any of the sur rounding stars, and by a little attentive ob servation look to be nearer to us than the fixed stars, as they really are. But while these two planets are exceedingly interest-. ing by reason of their immense Size and both being visible at one lime, there is an other member of our solar family- that is now a conspicuous object in the summer sky, and that is oar next-door neighbor, Mars. He shines as -a red star, and when Jupiter anti-Saturn areas above stated, Mars is in the mid sky, about half-way between the point overhead and the southern hori zon. He 'may be readtly found between Spies, a first-magnitude star on the right or westward side, and Alpha Libra, , a third ixiagnitude blue star on the' left or'eastern side, Mars is in a nearly straight' line a lit tle below the two, and about one-third of the distance nearer Alpha Libra. The. mo tion of Mars is rapidly to the eastward, and; this motion may be clearly noted among thti, fixed slats doting the next few months. H' will soon overtake the star above, noted, Al pha Libra, and on the Ist of August will pass only tv:‘, - ) degrees sontli Of that gat [Note eh passes t.—Look at,this 'star, Alpha' Libra,with your opera glass. The-most joie-. rior'glass will be able to see that it is a dou ble star, and can note the different colors cif the two.] Afars will continue his rapid eastward motion, anti on the 2tl of Septem ber will pass three degrees to the Southward of Beta Scorpio, (Graf tas,) a pale white stfu of the tirst magnitude. - On the 11th of Sep tember Mars will Nisi two and one-half de- (grees to the northward of Al am Scorpio,- 1 Antares, a red star of tbotirst magnitude, ' sometimes called Icing of the Red Stars.— As Mars is also red, the two will -:form a bright pair of red eyes shining down upon us, and only two degrees and a half apart. On the 20th of November Mars will orker take Saturn, and the two -will set togeth r soon oftcrward in the stern sky, and on y one degree apart. Dartrignil this suinm r time Marit.will present the appearance of a waning Mon in the telescope, 1.. c., round on .otie si le and flattened on the other. And by -the tit re Mars overtakes Saturn and sets in the west, he will not shine so brightly as he does in this month of July. His, appa rent size will decree*: about one-hal what it now is by the time, he sets with Saturn in the west. { ,_. A Young Heroine. The AV isconst liftti. - /WirkiVes die fol lowing thrilling account •of the 'la - tanner in which a brave little aid in that State saved 133 rivcs - er - ritt le *sisters and brothers: ‘"l'homas Ycife and wife and a family of sinallchildren settled in II& county some thinginore than a year ago, and being poor they, after many hardships, erected a small thvellia4 and cleared a few acres of land, but they were in the wilderness ten miles from neighbors. A. few 'weeks ago the fath er and mo'lhcr left their family, consisting of a girl aged twelve years, one aged nine years, and two other children aged respect-. ively three years and thirteen months, to go on a trip to the settlement to get a cow and bring in some potatoes to plant. After. the parents had been gone a few hours the house took fire, and the oldest girl immediately rushed to the roof with water, but not• be ing able to remove the shingles,. she could do nothing to stay the flames, which gained rapidly, spreading on the inside of the roof until, bursting through, they drove her frotn her work. The heroic girl now turned her attention to saving her brothers and sisters.• Going to Ihe door of the building, she found that the child next to her own age hatl.ot out of the house, bringing the baby with her, but the little three-year old had'crciugh cd under a shaving horse in the farther cor ner of the room. There being no chamber floor, the tire was dropping from the {roof between the child and the door, and when asked to come out it refused to . do so, say ing, 'I am safe ihere, the Aire don't drop " Our little heroine hesitated only a mo ment, but rushing through the falling em bers brought the little one to a safe place, both haring their. clothes - somewhat burnt.. But now comes the hardest part of the task before her. Scantily clothed and with uff food, she tookthe babe in her arms, and with the other children started on the trail for the settlethent, After going a fen/ miles she encountoted It rapid stream, swollen' by the spring, rains, so that in fording it the ' water came up her at mpits. She carried the babe across, and then the litle three year old, and lastly half-led and half-carried her ohlt r sister through the water to the:oth er bank.' ''Three times during the.remainder of the day she all uggled across the swollen streams in her way, until night set in with the deep forest surrounding her. " Cold, wet, hungry,• she thought of place to camp, and by good fortune found an old camp left, fty• the - Indians upon which abont one-half of the roof still remained.— Under this she placed her little Bock, and then ehllected liinehOugis'and • Made a rude bed. I",jaeing the little one in the middle, tbe,girl stripped oft' her dreSs and spread it over the children, then covered them with' boughs to keep them from the chilly. night air, anti sat down beside them, to watch through that long; cold night., comforting, the little mitt When it cried, and ‘speating, words . of cheer to.the older ones'. The long, dreary hours of night Ityagged slowly , by, - and at the first peep of day she resuibed her doilsome march, and had nearly reached the 'first settler when site met her parents rc turning. "An older and a• Wiser head Might 'have found an easier way out of the • dilemma, but we feel certain that ini" one ',could , have acted braver or 1011.14 endured more than the little daughter of Moulin.' Nrelfe.'.!, • 'Caleb Cushing vs. nrintindo qg. Whether peacetibie citir t eps, Itav,e any rights which' dogs ardlioOnd to revea l is tt, question somi•to be teked in ti Washington The case is important in itsclCbut Whi'giVen additional importance frotn the fact that Holt: Valet) Cushing is the .com plainant, and the subject, of the stilti is, dog belonging to Hon. ItVrnatitio 'Woocl.—= These gentlettictl, it"appears', afeliext-dOor neighbors in - Washington, but'while Mr. 'Wood is absent for the summer Mr. cash.: ing remains at home to. Pnrstle hiSetUdies in quiet. Mr. Wood's dog also remains ) ot, home-Mlle care of the houseliecorer, and, with the proverbial disposition' of his "raise, he is not disposed to study, his opin%dn per-" laps being—and we ore,not disposed to con- , trovert it—that ‘Vagltington is not an appro,' pride place for scholaro and statesmen to pass the smuttier months. Mr. Cushing, -however, do 6. not. Agree with thii canine' philosophy, and while the dog makes' night and day alike hideous with his. howls,. the venerable statesman „has vainly struggled •to read.or write until, in despair, be has re solved that heinust have a remedy: - He ap plies to the court for damages in the'snth $4,000, and. is mfitittit that Nab- the Stet ute• and the eounnon -low will stistaln'hih' ''ir .-1111:,,Pttsiting.shouldsocceed in,_his',4t l.kinpt to indicate the right of men against the encroachments of dogs, the importance of the precedent will depend upon the ex tent to which it can be applied,:, For exam ple, what shall.be thQ limit O. dog's howl - • _ • . '• • " ---Thakiiiw,4-4-44yiwas, The Summer Planets. JL~Pt7'PR AND t\TIJI(N. ®EE =II MIME =EI Iy,4olJEa_Noomp; ing, Offal ,notSlinfillowa to.b.oittl ally - Shall his' vocateicicises,.likelbe: bsl 'lot in some - States, . be acne hattra betireen'AllilliEB and sunset? lihallllloo be d ist I net ion between barking for: ttraud barking in - the way - of blismeasi as in the pase of a watclidog;' 2 - Then it .tpay,b.e uea tinned, tilSO, Wileiller fippijettlOXl,ol„taltS rule,should be limited to - dogs. Why; 120 t inelnde'cats, which are always tnne jtiato t it the wrot!g,ltatir of the.dity?-..;Lett this_- by lest Case in the great'cincalion, :Whetter, under . the constitutional amensiments and the civil rights act, the right of Way through..-; life can be monopolized by dogs-and • USEFUL AND SUGGESTIVE. _ . 1• , - '1 Seclusion 'froin sunshinels one of the Misfortunes Of our civilized! life. - The Same' cause which makes potato 'vine! White and sickly *hen grown in dark )cellar operates,. to produce the pale, sickly girni- - that - are refired in our parlors. •Expose either to-the direct rays -of the sun, and they - begin to show color,.health and strength. , _ When in London solue.years. - ag0,.1 vi It ed - an establishment which had acquired a wile reputation for the cure of those maht-' di sin which prostration and nervous de i 1 ra ;getup:as were, pi-eminent features. I found' in the use made of sunshine the se cret of, success. The slate roof had been rempred anda glass ono substituted. The upper story had been divided into sixteen__ small rOoms, each - One provided with a loOnge, Washing apparatus,' etc. The Val• - tient, 9n entering each his little apartment, , - renioved all clothing,-and exposed •bitngelf:,- tothe direct rays of the sun. Lying on the lounge; and turning ovcr'from time to Mae, ' each and every _part of thebody was thug expOsed to the life-giving rays of the sun. Several London vphysicians candidly con fessed to me that many cases which seemed waiting only for the shroud were galvanized into life and health by this baptism_ in the... blessed sunshine. • . 1 Many years ago a'elergyman who had for years been a victim of dyspepsia,.and 'Who', had prayed for death as thennly door or es.;, . cape, caine at length, through itheadviee of . a mutual .friend, to consult with me. ad: vised the disuse of ell medicines, the gen- ,_. erous use of cracked wheat and good 'beef: and much exposure to the sun. TO secure the hist-mentioacd Apfluencepli ti . directed him' to build if close fence, cover ing a_sPace twenty feet' square, in 'his gar den, and plant the earth within with some thingio occupy his mind. - Then, when the weather was warm, shutting , himself in, he was to busy himself, quite nude, With the, cultivation of his vegetables; fibre tan to sixty minutes each day, always idduiging in a thorough bath and vigorous friction be- - fore leaving. -He was radically cured. •' , ..1" waspracticing my professiqn in Buffalo, .. New Yo k, during 1849 and 18451, those me morable holera seasons. I saw at five of cholera on - the - 60Y side of the street en bones to one on the sunny side. One!end ent physician in New Orleans re ports,fr in his own practice, eight cases of yellow fever on the shady side of ithe street to one on the sunny side. Who has not read Florence.Nightingele's observations in the Crizepe, concerning the• shady and sunny Side of the hoSpitalsl , .1.1i.' St. Petersburg, the shady side of the hos pitals was nu notoriously unfavorable to the sick soldier that the_ Czar decreed it into-dis use. The shade•trees about our, dwellings have done much to make our wives and, dangh tes pale, feeble, and neuralgic. TreeS ought,' • never. to' stand near enough to our dwellings" Co east a shade upon them!, and if the blinds were removed, andnotbtrig, - but a-caqtain' wrtmur *pi-width' null on the lthttest days the intensity of the heat, it. would add greatly to the tope !of our nerves and our general vigor. Th •piazza which projects over the lower st( I, always makes that le t 'ss healthy than t e upper story, especially for sleeping purpos 1- am sure, I have , cured a great many ases:of rheumatism by - advising patients to ave bedrooms shaded , by trees or piazza, a' d sleep iu a room and bed which were constantly dried and purl fieW by the direct rays of the sun.-,-Dio _Leto- - is, in Tv-Day. , A farther sees a gate, a devil", or some other useful contrivanee illustrated in the Agriculturist or other papers, and, it meet ing his wants he makes one and uses' it,— ° His neighbor living several- miles - off sees the affair and makes one like'it, and so the thing gets into use throughout a large sect tion of the country. At length there comes ' along a chap who claims that he holds a patent upon the gate or other device; that the farmer has . infringed 'upon his rights, and threatens immediate prosecution if roy altyi is ebt paid. ,In nine eases out of ten the farmer is intimidated by the assurance of' the fell, w, and to avoid trouble pays the sum dem (led, and thef welloW, - ho'm nine eases out f ten is a swindler, goes on to fleece. the, xt farmer. This, in brief is the story that omes taus so often that we are sure that a large amount of "swindling is carried on in this-mafiner. Being ire Wash ington a while ago, kve had an 'lnterview 1 1 with the Hon. Commissioner of Patent with a view to see what could be done t • stop this now grevious nuisance. The Co - missioner is entirely in _sympathy' with lh farmers, and is ready to do all in his power to save them from ' imposition. He told us several things -in relation , to the, matter which it is not advisable to publish,ai it wo'd ) put the rogues n their guard. We give our friends the following advice:' In She first place do no be frightened. Most far mers are willing to make almost any sacra= lice in order to hvoid anything that looks like a lawsuit, and these;awindlers know it.' -. Acting upon this knowledge, they bluster and threaten. Let them blow. They can not under any circumstances bring you in to court under several months, and !` bluff" is their chief reliance. If a man claims that you have infringed his patent, demand to see his.patent. If; he cannot show it or give its date of issue, or the name in which it was issued do not bother with him. De mend the date and if you got it tell him to ' call again. Pay no money until you have written to the Pateuticket„...We_shingtron, to ascertain if such a patent was issued ou - such a date. ' Be particular about the date.— Do not fear that, being an unknown indi vidual, the application will be unnotieed. ,It is a part of the business of the office to answer Just Such letters. If the pretended owner of the patent is a fraud, he, - finding j that You are not friglitene and know What you ere' about, will not 'rouble you ,any • more. Still there are c sin which_ fart mers may have infringe(' upon the patent right of an inventor.' Publishers tire l some-, , times imposed upon by, persons whci send , theM drawings of things that have already been patented. An honest owner,of, , a pat ent is likely to be a fair an, and when you l Jiro fully convinced tha you have unwit tingly trespassed Upon his rights," there Will generally be no difficulty -in effecting a set- - tietbent. It is only the pretenders who bluff and bluster. Do not be afraid of any who , -try to-intimidate, but adopt the course we have here counseled.—Ameria a ituricattu ri4. NEM To preserve eggs perfectly f Mr for six or eight months, beat up the. vhite •of an egg with a• little salt—,say a cruple=and ittrec teaspoonfuls of- cold war • Boon af ter the eggs are laid, and While still warm, "if L,poisihte, paint' them over with the above with n'farge - camel's-hair brush, tatting care .that •the whole surface is pliuted, then place upon blotting paper till dry-and hard. Pack' . away„in dozens amongst tforn atilt' or bran. ,Before using she, nlllOlOl, ftiter.it through mmiliii' till clear and free of babbles: If,,' after being' albumenized, the eggs emplaced. ' upon a plate, it is alniost: sure to take 4,043, out,of the.shell. , . ___ ' Conan JELLY. •fresbly gathered' currants, and till . np a gallon with tlitiii, raid set it in boiling water for an hour; - llien,furn out the juice carefully, 'not letting Abc.lierries f all nt t. each`pint' 'Or juice' take t htee•quariefs• of , 3 Pound'of best lu s t ,p migari.lboit all toge.therlor tweit ty.ibtautes;,istraia. through, a ;telly, strainer Inedcups%r klasses WhiCh'laaf), beendiPptd into colti'Wtifeß When perfectly (stiff, dip a thin papd the size of the glass into the white of an egg, and lay over the Jelin then paste over the glass a piece `of stiff brown paper, and write the kind of jelly and the date upon it, BM =I ME . t Sunshine., Farmers and Patents. UM ES