VOL. 'XX.---NO. 34. ci ) c Aettator. PUBLIbITED 'EVERT TIULTDAY 4iY /1% A. M. 11017. dirD:ltYs :—52.00 per atm= lu advance. -E4 4T ES OP ;A DVERTISING G. 2 in. 310. 410. ',14C01.34C61 1 Cal. --- - --L- - -- --, $2OO $3Oll $4OO $OOO $9OO $l4 00 - ' 300 4 00 5 00 700 11 00 1600 300 500 000 0 00 13 00 13 00 4 00 GOO 700 9 00 15 00 20 00. 0 110 9 00 10 00'12 00 20 00 20 00 3 - 00 12 00 13 00 15 00 35 00 [ 1 12 00 10 00 20 00 22 00 35 00 60 00 14 00 25 00 23 00 45 00 e. 0 .00 100 00 $1 Oil' 1 50 2 00 2 5J 1k) 1 ;Seek ett Wtel's Mui.th 2 goiali 3 Moittlo Ol t rtlr. b 110 Ativertiseutentsarnnalettlated bye the inch In length of column, and any less space us a roll Inch. _ Foreign advertisements must. Unpaid for befOroin organ, except on yearly contracts, when half-yearly plyinelltB 111 allrallte Will be regOirett. 7 of,cro at. N. , i 20 poelluo each insertion. N hr.n.•rh,.l for than $O, BUsinesS :colic' 41 the Editarnl columns, on thB suoutl rage, 15,1111, Per 11110:4c11 insertion._ Noth. rag inserted for test than Loo.tt, NOTICES ill Lo, al enhiehn, 10 cents per Hue if more than Btelines,and Z,O cents for notice of five lines or less. ANSOUNCEUENTS Of 3I AOES anti brwrsainserthd (re, ; Litt all otntual) tinhces will bit charged 10 cents par SPEct ‘r• NoTrcr , :r l p , r eataboveregularrated. 5 iint,4 or toys, $5 - ,00 per year.! - • - - ---____ it. evreakl.4ol.lll. r. A. .tvtiNG4l. Batchelder Johnsbn, t, , r ,dalar:rn of MontunclatA, Tombstones,' Tabu : ry.,, C011'113 . 0, Su. Cull and see. 8110 p, Wain N c l , ci yout, Foundry, Wellaboro, I'n,—Jipy 3, 1372, Bicsines. Cards. A. Itedlichl 1 - ;.: 1 itiktlLNEl ANDt.:OOI4.IELLOrt . T .- t1W.....-Cullect t):,i rrontut ly at tended to.—Blus . burg, '1 toga clout/. t), ertin • 1.. A yr. I, I ti;tl-01.n. , C. 11. Seymolinr, 11iLli.N LA Al' LAW, 'flog:lPu. All business en• t.a,t—l his .at ks u prou,pt attention.— t: 1,1,72 Geo. W. Illerviek, AI. LAW. - laboi p j , ° L ik e it , sLa met; ae..ania 11th - Jr, t rA tun Mitchell & Catiterutl, Iui.NLYS Al' LAW. Cianu uutl lusuialmu Agelats. ilinuuu brick block, over Wellsbuto, P4.—Jan. 1, =II VVilliton A. Stone, WoIISKY AI LAW, coN. r 41,v:«: & Bath. 111,.ch 014 MUM street. ,Ixt. 1, 181.% J. C. Strang, DIsTRICT ATTOENLY.— ,0, 01 I. IS Wullsboi u , N I . _j au . 1 . •72 I C. N. Dartt, -1.01 InAde.- .Allll the NEW Lai ruovEm LitAl goo, twttur 444st:tam' than auy LILILg OlSe 0t112.‘ iu ISrlgld S. it Illt•r4 Block. Wel bs• 1,) ,i,t I 1;1;2. J. B. Niles, LI .1r LA W.—Will attend pt omptly to bus. t 121.3 are to the counties of Tioga .L.. 1 tb2r. u i nOw etwo.—Wellahoro, Pa., 'hit 1 t Jun. \IV. Adams, AtioRNLY xf I.IW, Tioga county, Pa atto,(lv,l to.--Jan. 1, 11'172. C, L, Peek, Al ~}..At ChlilllB prOuiptly 4:011eCtell I ttilh a I; snalh, 1.11 , )v 1 . 1 . :pd C..., C. It. J 1101 111 L. .11.11.1 :ilia :wet 11.A.1,1 , ti - IVeli :1..14. 1 r, J 110. W. Guernsey, 1-1 A I LAW. - buswees to two At o,kil lluur soutL .1 II t. I.,at s shut% Tiogct, I . IIIIIItY, 1.01 I, 1571. • Armstrong S Linu, kirvio, LI'S AT LAW, 'iVilliatiipport, ra 1!1! II All 'AMU'. LINN. %Vin. B. Smith, ft!iSluN tORNIN, Bounty and Insurance Agent to the above address will ri t , pp,laiot Sttctdiuu. T1..11113 K110"1 11i1P, l'a a.m. I, 1872 Barnes 6►; Roy, ALI landx of Jul) l'riuting 11011 E rtr,n Inn! in tLe beat uniuner. Of iu Lum rti ,t Cone's Moel:, 2d floor.--Jan. I, 1872. . .114111se. Tioga Qo., Pi:-13enti pyo'o. Proprietors i;a.4 butew hag been thorongtily reAovated and 14 I:1 :100,1 condition to aceontaito tho traveling public in a nnyertor manner.—Jan. 1; ]873. D. Bacon, M. D., ri'rqUlNN AND SURGEON—May ha found nt hi 9 S..t; 1,,t door Last of Miss ToSd'9—Maitt street. , a,cet,tt , l promptly to alt calls.—Wellsboro, ra., /II 18N. Seeley, Coats At . Co., riKELLA,Kno.cine,TiNIPO:, PA.—Receive Copley d Pratt, disennnt notes, and sell drafts on Now Irk City. Culle..tions promptly made. tsi SKEIXT, 03C0011A, VINE CDAIMALL, hn. 1, 072. DAyin Coxn3;littoxvill.. Petroleum House, PA., Gen. Closn, Proprietor.—good ac -neswintem ter hoth man and beast. Charges rea c , aahle, and good attention given to gueat.9. Jm d 1572. W. W. Burley, i I'in'ICTURER OF all styles of light and hest cart !WI,. varringes kept co.,stantlyon„liancl. Al I‘arrAnted. Cornor Ca and Buffalo tit,reets, 11,t Me, N. 'Y. Orders lett with C. 13. Keller, +IVO. or E. IL Burley, Chatham, Hill rdeeive ~ .l, t •lllm,tion.—Jutie 3, 11313 1 -6 mos. . - M. L. Stielain, il /11.1. U. w Cap uet Ware of all kizula will he k 4.11,ra er than the lowest. lie invites all to take 1../ / at his gootla before •pareha•iing elaewbere.- 1:-ale tither the plaee—opposi Dartt'a Wagon Shop, 4t Main 1 1..keet, Wellsboro. Feb. 15, 1813-Iy. Mrs. Mary E. Lamb. ILLlNEltl".—Waslks LI inform her friends and the ;dsne generally that she i 1,14 a large stork of attain ". rafies (ho)d3 suitable for the season. whieh tw Auld at reasonable priers. Mrs. E. E. Klin '..lllll,l chat go of tlw matiog and trimming de -1 ur,. Ht. nutl tvdt giva her atteution exelintivoly to N. 0 door 10 the Conveys , & Williams rdueh.— I.C; 3.- tr. Yale 86 Van Horn. 6 noir it:taring sz.veral brands of choice Cigars •m. l, tall erll ut prices that. cannot-but pleabe We use 11011 V but the best Connect- ILO dna and Vara Tobaccos. We make our own and for that reason can warrant them. Wo Lllt t gcueral assortment tf good Chewing and ‘'• , A , 11.! Tobaccos, Snuffs, I ipcs from clay to the "`t Meccichainn, Tobacc Pouches. 47c , Ina retail. Dee. 21, 1 John R. An RETAIL DEALER IN IIArDWARE Sled, NM's, Trinin ings, Me Tools, Agricultural Implements, Carriage Springs, Mils, Packet and Table ' ale ry, Plated Warr, lulls and A IIIII)11 , 1100/). "I" --svoA suit iron—the heat in use. Mannikin aail dealer iu Tin, tledmier, and Sheet-iron 4 •••!. Roofing in Tin and Iron. All work/warrant -I.—Jan. 1, Isla, 11 7 E111,8110R0 110 T 141, MAIN ST. & AVENUE. WELL:U.3OIW, PA. 8.8. • HOLIDAY, Proprietor. hnti.l ij Well located, and Is lit good. condition the traveling public!. The prOprietor Lo,',"""" puns 1. - ) wake it a Ills t...cla::a house.. All arrile and depart trout this house. Free Irmo tr.iins. Sober and indwitrions host- In attendance. 1,73 -tr, JUST ItECEIYIf,II, • Or 13IVROAD. '4 1 ,,, 5 , - . 1 ,'" 1.11 . VErcI'INGS, AN!) TRIM. tk ; Ahab I will soli v,ry chnap FOR OABII. t st alsortm ent namitt ever brought. to varions styles. - 'Please. Call :Ind 100 k ` - 'll OTr,r 04111,4 Suits. Uve recats, and Itypairing done with and as cheap as the cheapest. WAGNER, Crafton Street, WOlsboro, li n• I 1871-1 0 ....._ LainPa, Chandeliers & Brackets AT C. B. KELLEY'S' ME • General Insurance Agency, , 131TOXVILLV, TIOOA CO., PA., _ Life, tre : anti Accidenfal.l Alemllale, of Cleveland, Ohio - 495 033.44 New York Life and riro Ins. Cq 21,000,000 Royal Ins. Co., of Liverpool 10,515,501 Lancashire, of Manchester, Capital,., 10,000 , 00 0 • Ins. Co., of North America, Pa .$3,050,535'50 Pranklin Fir° Ms. Co. of Phila. Pa ' 2,087,452 25 Republic Ins. Co. of N.Y., Capital, $750,000 Niagara Firo Ins. CO. of N. Y 1 000,000 Farmers Mut. Piro Ins. Co. York Pa—, . .. —909,889 it Eggert's Atut. Life Ins. Co. of tfailfora CL.5,081,970 50. Pean'a Cattle his. Co. of Pottsville..... • 500,009 Otl, . Total • .. —55.5,431,451 94 Inottrance momptly effected by matt or °Morals°, on all kinds of Property. AU losses promptly adjusted arid' paid at my (ace. All communicationa promptly attended to-0111es or. Mill Street 2ci door from Blain 'at., Knoxville pa. WM. 11. shnut Agent. Jan. 1. 1573-tf. General Insurance Agency, . A-J. D. CAINIPBELE. ARR issuing policies in the following Companies against lire and lightning •in Tiog and Potter counties_ : QuEE,N ~ assets, $ t 0,000,000.00 00NPINENTAI, of New York , -2,009,026.27 HANOVER, of Now York '083,381.00 GERMAN AMERIDAN, New York .. -1,272,000.00 WYOMING, of Wilken'barre, Pa 219,008.49. WILLIAMRPORT,of Win'sport 7 113,066.60 All brininess promptly attended to by mail or other wise; Lonsen adjusted and paid at, our Mile o. Nelson, Dee. 10, 1872-ly LOOK I DRUGS I MEDICINES, Paints, Oils, Glass, Putty, Bru3lles, Trusses, Supporters, anq Stiryi- • , cccl heqtrultents, 0 T7'l, 11 f' 011' _DE 7? 5 Arti.4t's litrs in Great Variety. 'l Dor., Scotch Aloe, 1g l'oLueex., Snuff. &c., S.!e•, meramicrammJnommwmmffing Groceries, Sugars, Teas, CAN.P.TED AHD DRIED PRIM; Shot, Lead, Powder and Capa, Lamp's, Chimneys, Whip?, Lashes, BLANK '&. MISCELLANEOUS All School Books In lase, Envelopes, Stationery, Dill and Cap Paper, Initial paper, llemorandums, large and small Dictionaries, Legal paper, School Cards and Primers, Inh, \Whin ; Fluid. Chess and Bachknimmon Boards, Picture Frames, Cords and Tassels, Mirrors, Albums, ,Paper collars and Cuffs. Crognetts, Base Balls, parlor games, nt wholesale and retail. NOTIONS. ll'allets, port ninnies, combs, pins and needles, scissors, shears, knives, violin strings, bird cages. .1 great variety 01 • (Jclls, inkstands, MCIISIIIO tapes, rules, Fishing Me liesUrowiflics, lines. boob:, t4r,grit uttt-tition paid to ititt Into to the sparol). COI TAP: ANI) FANCY ARTICLE'S ENTH FOR AMERICAN STEAM SAFES prwav Levnienrffirovi triTNIZT.TITI!=r March2s. '734f. MRS. C. .P.'SMITH. • TA - As 'Just return from New A t 'utt with the largest 11 assortment of la MILLINERY AND FANCY GOODS ever bro ll iiht into WeUsher°, and will give her custom ers reduced mites. She has a splendid assortment of ladies suits. Parasols, Gloves, Fans, real and imi tation hair goods, and a full line of ready made white goods. Pricca to suit all. - U 0 AND' SEE vit u LILI etka- • • WELLSBORO, PA. Jan. 1 , 0 1872 Surveyor's - Notice. „,AWARD BRYDEN offers his service to,the public ..U.i as a Surveyor. Ile will be ready to attend prompt -1- I) all e4lle. 110 may be found at the, law ofke of IL Sherwood. & Son, in Wellaboro, or at his resi dence on East Avenue. Wollslioro,ra., May 13, 1573—U. CHINA HALL,Wellsboro. LIVERY STABLE. illactipcm iv. DOLES proprietors. First-class rigs furnished at reasonalee rates. Pearl sliest, op poAto Wheeler's wagon 131101,, A PUBLIC HACK . will be on the street al all rAouable hours. Miff engers to and from the depot t ) any part . ot the town will be charged twenty - five c e nts. For families ' - or small parties for pleasure, one dollar per hour. Welinboro, July 15, 11173. KET4 7 inn & COLES- andlyekt atitson ROTA RI MOTION Sewing achine 1 '/7w (heal Family 'elm(' Maclane of t 1 700,000 Wheeler& Machines ruin: improvements lat _I Machine have made I Family Machine in the m. Petits to the sale of it, I history ofiiiewing Machin }:%anillio for yourself; In buying a Sowing Mimi DO NOT ALL by tlint too common 111 Sowing Machines Aro go chino will answer your stitch alike on both sides EXAMINE WELL THE MACHIN and not pay your - money for a lieavy•runuing, slow motioned, noisy, complicated plachine, thrown to gclbr•r in such a manner as to last just long enough to wear out both year body and patience. There is a great distinctive differeiu•e between the Wheoler X: Wilson and all other Machines that make the I. , :wk-Stiteh. And it is to this difference that we n•ish to especially caOlyour attention, ft Makes the Lock, (or Shuttle Stitch,) bits does it without a Shuttle Thereby dispensing with t he shuttle and all machinery lei - pitted to ritu a shuttle; also doing away with the laite-up that is to ho found in all shuttle Machines; and uwint; to the peculiarity of Its cottetructiou, ONLY ONE TENSION IS REQUIRED, • . while all other loeitAttitch Machines require two. GEO. ROBINSON / Agent, garch 25. '73-t;u). ° WELLSDORO. PA. .- . • • , . „ , „ . ~ . .. - - • - ' , , , .. . - . „._ .. . „ . • . . . . ... „. . . . . _ -.. , ~. '' " - --' ' ''' tt ", ~• , . •, --- - ; ..i• - , . -• •,-. .•••:.••:,'-'•• ' . • - ...' - ."' "' -: . „ ' " ' " , . , „• ~ - , , • , . ; •,. • - ' ~. - ' ~..-. -.' - ' :-. '-' , . '-, . - ~ _l'.. - -.• , l'' , . •.---, , - t•. 2 ,--:••-• i •.-- . • _.' * :1 i --- - - • ' ~..„ • t . . . , la tjk . tip i vi . , , , ....„, ... .. • . --,-,•. .'.. ..cN. , ,, . , - 2 .-- -/,.. •:t.',!.. --- -• -' - . -. - •••=.- ..: ' • „..: • ge 6 - -- --- . - .. - , c• ' .4. .• .-- 1. 4 • ~•', .'..,.... ; - •• , , •:—., -'; 1 ;, ''•.--- ,-...-.•:. - ,-.-,, , ' _:,.- • ',-- ' - • 4, - ^7- : .. ~ ... '‘4,...: -,•,4 4 '... - ..? 4, , ~ 4 * 4. 1 - ' '.: . -. . , • ‘''..' '• ' 1 ' ' ' -;r• -': • -:. V . 'l', c • I,' . 3 14 , 6;,. .":•;::, • '' ' • - ' 1".. p.. It -•••i-- 01, - _., t;,-.. .tr. , 4 . ` ..., '•'. ; al • , 4 = ..„ _- ----, - :iiir.: .7 4?: '•-„•• • • „,.,...,,•-:, • ' ..7:: A", ' ' , -tc,, r ,- .... . •-•,., .... .-.. „._,..- ,_ tr -r _ t .....rie, - ,t, i :i . ;t:::, t, .r.- rt._ -,,,::•,-...: , ..:r•t._., ...- tt,t 7.:- , ‘. t ., . , -, . - ....,•!;- .f,_ is- . •.. • , • , -',' .., _ .. .. i. : ; r: -...-- . : , -' ,, .= ' , ' . 4,4 , t , ' . 'i - t• : - . 4.1 ‘ .. •k v • 4l 'l, : -,... --4 • . •,-.;....., ~- ..- ••, - ,:ii,.-_,. ,-•-•' . •/-: ' ; 7 4,f , .::!,„,.•', - - , ~,,.,.- 7 -- 7j- . ,.'" id ..•I'..fitti , , .., .• • . ,<-' 7:i.. '''-- -- * •- • •* % "*. , --' , •"' s- ::' ' ":'`; '' "- ' ''''''.",- ' 1 . , . ‘.. .. ,_ , .„. -;-. -- 4-..F •-.. ;•I`. - ,...?-.. ..---••-: ---6- -.-1:4 4 it" ' • ~.... l . . ‘ - - LI noi r( i1,, pt. 7.:.-• 4 4 •,...-.... , , . , , . . , . , . . , • • ~. • • • . , , . . / , - ---. , ~,•. . . . . . . ._ • .c,. Assms'oyEn $56,10,030. ASSETS Or COMPANIES NELSON, TIOOA CO., PA HASTINGS & COLES EEO Pit TENT MEDICINES, 13001Eg© Gaskets cold rods ITASTINGS S.: COLES THE NEW 1 1 Vorl 1, Will lIIIon VARAIy Sew ine Ow In Use. 131rulded to this Celebrated b • t far the most desirable ili A and have given an int ev f before equaled in the .s. 1 con ' Ult your own interests e, and . 11t , YOURSELF TO BE .iILINDED talon, that all ,Lock-Stitch d 'enough, or that any Ma purpose .it it makes tho I the f.thrle. 1101iSTIMOTION OF ME YOU BUY. FRUIT JARS, A speciality at 13Evt11. =1 New Firm, New Goods, BOTTOM Plt ICES. QPRING&SUMSED 0-001)8 I, ) libitS t rtss j.Sl)obs, ALAPA CAS, POPLIN.-', CAM- B 1 FRENCH - JA CO N ETS, ORG A NDIES, • • PEQUAS, VER- -" t. f.'COLORED S.ILKS;., LOOK! Beitutiful SummerSliawls, Ready-Made olothing, Freshroceries, I • TUTMTVITITrfra at tidy luw prices. \We keep thu bcf,t A large stock or Cro?kery. Opera. 1110111 SC Block. May 6. 1873 We have Shed the Shanty I I 11 BARGAINS ,TR,g_l l 4A'N A.-00.'',-. NEW STOR E. A large stock of FOREIGN e DOMESTIC; Couslatlng of All atyllett: Lulora . autl patterns. --ALSO Y4N IC P.R. NOTIONS; BOOTS 8.2101'5, HATS & CAPS, and plenty. of cloth to mat. more .~~ ...~ 1 Best White A Sugar, 1t cents. A large and choke stock of WELLSBODO Cain aiikil Nee us. LBAUWINK TIOGA, PA And now have but time to say 6 our friends and inntoinerts tied we have geed FOR Our, Clegant Alcw ,Store le fllloti full of 11111,1fti8LE GOODS at the loweat prices, to be i unud Call and you will know how it is yourselves Oot 15,187?: IWELLSBORO, TIOGAI CO., PA., TUESDAY, , AUGUST 26, _ 1873. 3, W. vAm vaixattiuna A sad and gloomy winter was before the simple peasants . of the little Alpine village of Hildenbehri,' fin low* rains and several too early frosts had blighted the crops, and the scarlet fever, that for months had deso lated the surrounding valleys, seemed to' be approaching their own door:3. The pastor, Wolbert, was the son of a noble hotise, anti had been brtiught up amidst all the luxury and indulgences of wealth; but he had sac rificed all to go forth as the messenger of salvation, and a sad task he found it to look upon the troubles of the peOple to whom be bad become so strongly attached and feel that he bad no earthly help to give.— But patiently he went from door to door drid told of A Heavenly Helper who had conic: (.O seek and to save, and who is "so powerful to help in time of need." • His gentle tones, his winning smiles, and above alibis - words of peace and comfort, made his presence welcome everywhere, and nowhere was' his coining more like a ray of Heaven's own light than in the home of Franz Ililzmann, the shoemaker. The kindly pastor indeed never himself knew all he had done there, but the broken spir ited wife and the timid, trembling " child of the house," Barbara, knew, and in re turn would gladly have devoted their whole lives to his service. The winter more than redeemed its prom ises of privation and suffering.. There was want in : homes that had never known want before, and the scarlet pestilen9e had left sear& a household without n the bitter traces of its passage; nor was the hoMe of the pastor exempted from trial. His' scanty in eotne, scarcely equal at any time to meet his simple wants, was now stretched, only by the most painful parsimony and self-denial, to supply the nece4Sities of the poor and famishing who thriinged his door and to send comforts to the sick who watched for his daily coming as for a daily blessing. The fever, too, came under his roof; one after another his children were prostrated by it, and when finally a merciful Provi dence again restored them to health), the privations, the anNietics, the watchings of all those wearying days and nights began to do their work upon his own sliaht frame,. and weeks of helpless illness Alai) pen alty. But 'Aroma) Wt Barbara 1111.2. - mason was the. faithful, devoted attendant of his children, and though but little older than they, proved herself the efficient, un, tiring nurse to whom all felt that, under (lod, they owed their lives. But thei winter was over, and a bright and glorious spring had covered the earth with beauty. The pastor and his wife sat togeth er in a sweet, retired spot of their garden which they called their ", council chamber" and talked of the past' and the future. Pa tient and uncomplaining amid snffering, it was almost in a tone . 0 bitterness that she now recounted their trials,. while he, with eyes and heart raised lb Heaven, reminded her how.much heavier had been the burdens of others around them, and how much less wei•e,their means to meet them. . TRIMIAN at CO T. L. IiALLIWIN & CO , The -Mill-Stream.- sit hest& thfie, mill-stream; • • • The wheel goes whirring round;_ The bairnies play among the bay, 'Thar . yellow ringlets float away • On light Mee air that seems to say, Ho merry, skip and bound And dance beside the mill-stream; , There's motile in the Round." I sit hesido thee. inill.streani; • A-knitting stockings brown. So spic-and-span for my old man {liars iu tho mill among the bran); And show a leg and foot be emu For one that's growing down, • As shapely to thee, nall-strediu, As any Jo in town. 4 love thy brawling, mill stream, • As dearly-as thy splash, - When its foatu-kiss, on days like this, ' lights'irp the wheel with sunny bliss; • Orif I hear thy wrathful hiss Below the tempest's crash, I know the wheel turns, to faster for the clash. I've lived beside thee, mill-stream, -Full forty years ibis lima; - My slip-coat. cheese, and Itoney•tees, My cherries, and my apple-trees,— I thank kind Providence for these, His gifts around me strewn; I well may think our mill-Stream Is never out of limo. • This homestead nigh thee, mill strewn, Held once two homy boys; My little Joe is lying low. lint Willie has a farm to show, Fine crops of wheat and barley mow, And wife, and household joys: Ills bairns stand - And listen to thy MAIM . `I WOW(' IftUt leave thee, mill-stream, • Before those limbs are drest For my last bed, that shall be spread I Close by my darling's buried head; There, turf lies softly on the dead; There I shall be at rest, NO bear thy clatter, mill-stream, • • Above the old wife's breast. —Cassell's IMO:1;e • A Good Deed is Never Lost. Ag ye measure unto others it shall be measured t you again." , " True, dear Carl !" replied the good Elise,- " but after so, much you do need recre-t ation. Our income has diminished while our children have become more expensive, and now there is such a host of beggars at the door that scarce a gulden can be saved. I do wish you would accept the, invitation of your noble friend and go with hint for a time to his home, then you would have a change pithout expense.' "1 cannot 'be spared just now, Elise," was the reply.. " And I have my master's unfailing promise that `as my day so shall my strength be.' When change is needed lie will call." "I think He calls now, only _you , Will no istenr replied the wife with a smile. "Ali! EliSe, you are a true Nartha. Too much cumbered!" said thepastor. "And you too little!" answered Elise.— And much pleasant talk followed, as well ,as some that was painful, for they were un der some concern about little Barbara. For some days she had not come for the daily supply of food, and that morning the good Elise had been to look after her. She had found her in bed, prostrated, as her mother said, by too much watching and care,- tho' getting better now that she was quiet. It was some weeks before the girl-was able to resume her place as the daily guest .of the "piistor's children, and then she wore the air of one oppressed by care and anxi , ely, though no one knew the reason. , One morning the pastor stood by his win: dow and saw -the shoemaker approaching. the house with a sad and troubled face.--.' Greatly was the good man perplexed to im agine a cause, for the shoemaker seemed to be a prosperous tnan, but as he knocked he himself opened the door and demanded the, object of so, early a visit, while be extended a hand in welcome, for he was Barbara's fat her. "I have come to seek help," said 1111 z mann; ",and where so likely a plaee,to it,as here?" " Help for what?" asked the pastor. " If 1 cannot within four days," replied the shoemaker, "raise the sum of two bun- dyed gulden I am a ruined m isan. My land lord dead, arid his heir demands immedi ate paymett of a note he holds, or threatens imprisonment. You see I can but scantily provide my family with food as it is. What will become of them then? I have on my books more than twice that sum due me, but in these times I cannot collect it, and. to re sort to other means would ruin my credit. 'lf you will not help me we must all suffer. Have you any. pity, Herr Pastoil If you have, show it to me now, and your ,thoney shall be promptly and honorably repaid." "How can I help you, mY friend? The sum you ask is more than the fourth of my whole income, while thy children are grow ing, and therefore cost more every day, and my door is thronged from morning to night with beggars. It grieves me to say so, but indeed I cannot!" The shoemaker stood like a man stunned, -and the big tears rolled down his cheeks, while the pastor in an agony of distress walked up and down, thinking, and praying for help to do right. Again and again Ililz mann renewed his entreaties, and again and again the pastor said he-had it not. But at last a new idea struck him: in the savings bank his children had two hundred gulden, the painful savings of 'himself - and wife for them ever since their birth. This money' he could lend for a time, and ivith delight he communicated the thought to the shoe maker, saying: " Come in tour weeks from to-day atut you shall have it Then it will be useless," replied the man sadly; "I have but four days in which to avoid ruin." Again the pastor_walked , the room in per plexity, and then another thought came— the merchant Frohmaiiniwould advance the money; so telling Inm to return in an hour, he took up his hat and went out. The busi ness was soon settled; Frohniann took the bank book and gave bilk the money, and -the pastor returned to find the shoemaker there, too anxious to wait. With broken words of gratitude he assured the good pas , tor that in tWi) years from that day ,he 'A/mild have it all again,' Principal and lute -rest—gave' his note to that effect, and went, away. The next morning family worship at UM parsonage was interrupted by the ancere• monious entrance of one of the village 'nag , istrates. The man stood by the stove with, uncovered ; head, mid'then demanded: "Have j.ou heard the news?" "No," replied till pastor, " what is it?— , No good, I should judge by your face." "No gold, sure enough! ' 'Who would be lieve that people could, be such rascals?—. Shoemaker Ullmann has gone off, bag and baggage, toA.Merica! Isis family - Are left to/shin for themselves." The pastor dared not trust bis'ears. The blood rushed to his face. "Shoemaker Idilzinann! Are you sure?" he asked " Sure enough!" replied the officer; " the wife'sent this morning to the police ,station to see if he was there; but atlust they found a note lie had left on the table to say that he had sailed for America, and for his cred itors to await his return would be loss of time." " Carl!" said the pastor's wife, `.` how oft en have I told you that you were too good and unsuspecting! Now who is right?"— The pastor made no answer, and she, her feelings finis vented, went up to him like an affectionate wife, and said. what she.could to ,console him. After some little talk, she proposed that, he . and the officer should go at once to the delinquent's house and see how fa' s were, and whether there was any thing tiey could take compensation for :his money. They found the poor wife in bed, ill from trouble, weeping and wringing her hands, while little Barbara knelt beside her with. her tearful face buried in the clothes. At sight of the pasfor the poor woman's grief broke out afresh, but Barbara sprang up and caught hiS hand: " What is this, Frau Ifilzmann?" said he kindly. " Who would have believed ads?" " Ah, dear Herr Pastor!", sobbed tha poor wife, "I have long seen that he was plan ning somethinm b in secret, but I never imag ined he thought of 'such wickedness!" " You absolutely: knew nothing of his in tention?" asked the pastor. "Nothing!" said,she solemnly. "Poor woman! !I And 'nothing.of the two hundred gulden that he.borrowed from me to pay off; he said, his landlord?" • A loud city of despair answered his clues. Bon, and again she,wrung her hands; and Barbara, her face burning with shame, slunk into , a corner, " Has he taken all?" asked te pastor. " All! all!" sobbed the wife. "I am a beggar!" The pastor tried to cOnsole her, and tid yised her to arouse herself and• try to get work.' But that would be a bard thing, he knew, for the people of German villages show but little kindness to those ( who come from elsewhere to live/ among them. He promised, however, 'that he would see to that; and taking little Barbara's hand, he claimed her as his own, from henceforth to be always with him. The poor mother was more than half comforted, for the child had been her greatest anxiety; and witlylmore words of kindness, the 'pastor took the lit tle girl 'Kane with him. • As Elise saw her husband return leading the child, she started up with delight, ex " Then it was not true, after all!" Barbara's eyes fell, and her pale cheek fluSlied as the pastor replied, •" Even worse than we thought!" " And Barbara?" asked the wife, per plexed. "Barbarh belong to us now,- dear Elise. She goes nowhere else," said the pastor.. Elise' laughed. " Well, that is a good thing!" said she. "You go to !get some thing in return for your two huhdred gol d-en, and bring a fifth child into the' house, whetiore rau.scarcely feed. unit Pow WO' ittlYtl) , lint in nnoilmr 111011=E 11(1' better feelings returned, and folding the timid, troubled child to her heart, she wel comed her as another daughter, and affec tionately caressed her husband, while she playfully pretended to scold him for his want of prudence. , Years passed on, and never had th l e pas tor lir his wife cause to regret their adop tion of the little outcast. Prudent and in telligent far beyond her years, she was help, companion, and friend, and grow up a hap py and useful girl. Again the scarlet plague swept through the Alpine valleys, and raged to such a degree that it was deemed neces sary to form an association of experienced and capable persons to go as nurses wher ever nurses were needed. It is hardly 'lee , ess.ary to. say that among the first selected for this purpose was &tribal, now a grown up woman; and she soon took the foremost place in the society. She had been some three years or more in this employment when the pastor Wolbert breathed his last, leaving his family only his unspotted fame and the blessing he, had implored for them from his Master. Bar bara's duties had carried her to - a secluded valley at the extremity of Switzerland, where she heard little from the outer world and nothing from her friends; so she knew nothing of his death. The widow with her four - children re moved to the little town of B—, where she struggled earnestly; aided a little by the elder ones, to.support.them in decency and comfort, though it was only by the greatest economy and self-denial that she succeeded. She had been there little more than a year, when one cold, rainy afternoon she sat be side her window: looking through blinding tears at the gathering darkness and think ing of her children. She had supported herself by such feminine work as she could get; but , without friends or relatives that was sometimes but little.., . Her children now sat id.ound her. Wil helmine, the youngest ,biTtWelveirears Old, was at school, but helped her mother greatly by knitting, which she did admirably. Ad-• (=nick' was fourteen, and had left school, but she still read and studied with her moth er in the evenings, while during the dayshe was her most active and efficient assistant: Gustave was the baby; he was but ten, and was in the Latin school—for one of, these days, if it pleased God, • he was to be a cler gyman, as his father had .been. But Hugo was the mainstay i - tf the family, yet at this moment the cause of [heir trouble. Ile had been taken as eterk by one of the leading merchants of the town, who praised his in dustry and capacity and promised him a high place in his establishment when his time was out; but for the instructions of that time he was to pay two hundred gul den, the quarter of it every six months, and to-morrow was the day for the first pay ment.' The most pinching economy and rigid self-denial had enabled her to save 'only twenty; where, then, could she get the whole? She had hoped and prayed that the 'merchant would be generous and—knowing her poverty—wait a little for the money; but the - ion" of a wealthy man was waiting for a I'dacV, and lingo had come home with the messail that if payment was not punc tually made he must give up the'place. Tendert* attached to their mother and to each other, her children all sat around her, sweeping silently—even Hugo, eighteen years old though he was—and prayed earn estly to thb•God of the widow and orphan for help in this their tune of need. At last the widow took her resolution, humiliating as it was—she would hire the money and trust to God for means of repaying it. She arose silently, put on - her shawl, and was going out of the door when she discovered a mum about to knock. " Are you," he asked, "the widow of the Herr Pastor of Hildenbehn?" l 'Yos," was the reply; "what is yosn'linsiness?" trembling lest some new Mashie was coming. " I am a letter-ciirrier, „Madame," said be, " and have one here for you with money in it; so I must have a receipt." "Money! money for me!" exclaimed' Elise, scarcely able to speak. " Quick! Hugo, quick! a light! a light !" The man entered, the candle was lighted, and the paper and ink produced to give him Ilk receipt and let him 00 before the letter was opened. As the door closed upon him she tore open the envelope, and, two hun dred bright goldeti gulden rolled into her lap. A few brief lines explained all Bar bara had never beard front her father, but the generow; pay she now received had ena bled her to accomPli- If tile ohjedt for which she had toiled and striven ever since that day when the generous pastor took her to his home, and to pay the money of which be had been go wrongfully robbed. , Now.it waft done. With folded bands, the widow and her children gaVe,thanks to •the 'merci ful God for the timely •and when they arose from their knees-the mother saidy . " The silver and the,gold are 'Mine; 1. will repay, Baith the Lord."---16,Modist. _ • A. Remarkable. Courtship. A correspondent of the Indianapolis lkr, l 'l roster, the eltellschairs who li cf ti fol lo w i ng th e I 4 ? i :i e wi t h u i : y i ( IT 1: I •41 1 it the ( abi lity 'f e fj c. f i t' g n e e ss c c i i ) i l i li nON VIII l', TOM eBSCP : Professor Foster was educated in the sci ences usually taught in collep s , but hi s kg 110r:thee of the common affairs - of life reii &red hint a reinarkable man, fnridahhpr a rare Subject for the 'study of human riattire ill one of its multiform 'phases. Being ad- ViSed by some of his, friends to get married, he, with childlike faith and simplicity, ac cepted their adVices, and promised to do so if lie could find a - young lady willing to have MM. 'They referred him to a number of the best young ladies'in the city, anyone of whom they had no doubt would be will ing to accept his hand and make him hap py. Ile %%as one of the most kind hearted of men, as void of guile as of offense, _and an entire stranger to the forms and ceremo, nies of modern courtship. ~ lie couldn't see the necessity of consuming a year or two in popping the question—" Sally, will you have me?" So he went that very day to the residence of the nearest young lady who had been commended, and being welcomed and seated in the family circle, as he always was wherever known, he at once made known the object of his visit by saying in a clear and distinct voice:. ' " Well, Miss 'arali, my friends have ad• 'vised me to get married,, recommended you and a number of other young ladies to me us suitable persons, and I have now called to see if you are willing to marry Inc." Had an earthquake violently shaken - the' premises, the household could not have been mom astonished, Like a frightened roe, Sarah started to run, when her mother caught bar, anil said: " Why, child, don't he frightened, the Professor won't hurt you." Being seated again, a deep blush succeed ed the paleness whiehliad been caused by the startling announcement, and she rallied enough to_be able to say to the Professor that as his proposition was entirely unex pected, she 'must have sonic time to consider the matter. This he granted, but said: " As I am anxious in case of your refusal to' see the other young ladies to-day, I can wait only one hour for your answer." Knowing the worthiness, sincerity, and simplicity of the Professor, the matron took her blushing daughter upstairs for consulta tion, while the father was left to entertain his proposed son-in-low as best he could un der the novel circumstanes. Of course the discussion of the sudden proposition be tween Sarah and her mother was private ' and cannot be given in full. The most es sential points of it, however, were told af- 1 terward. It was readily admitted thak he was .entirely worthy of Sarah's band 'and heart. , t" But, mamma," said Sarah, " how would it look to other people for me to have to give an answer in one shorehour—only sixty minutes—jump at a hasty chance! And to think how my young friends would jeer and laugh at me! Wouldn't they teaseme to death? No, inn, I can never face that mu sic." " But stop, my child, and listen to me.— There is pot a young lady in the city that would not jump at the oir6r l made you. Let them laugh; girls must halt something to laugh at, but it won't hurt you. Tell him yes, emphatically. If he was a Stranger, whose antecedents were'"unknown to us, however prepossessing in person and man ners, or profuse hi his professions of love, I would withhold my consent. But we have long known him, his moral character is without repremli, he is amiable, Must-heart ed, and sificerat . .A. fine scholar, 'with itfibon oratne position in the eollege,.and he makes no fake pretenses. Yon know just what he is. What more do yon want?" - " But, mamma, I don't know that he loves me; he hasn't even said so." " Oh, well, daughter, never mind that.— Generally, those who are loudest in 'their professions pf love _have least of the pure article. ) You can teach him by example to love you i ; it is - far better than precept,' Leaning her head upon her mother's bo som, Satiali said, in a submissive tone " Will, ma, just as you say—l'll to him yes; but, although the hour isn't half out, we'll nOt, go down until the last minute of the hour:" At the expirati?n of tlii fifty-ninth min ute they ran meal to the Professor and papa, Sarah still blushi g, but more calm than be fore. Then, wit i a firmness that astonished herself as well a. her parents, she extended her hand to the Professor, and said: , " Yes, sir,,if papa Consents." He gave his consent without hesitancy, and it was readily agreed by all that the wedding should take place a week from tine. Then Professor roster, with his seal calmness, . conscious of having done is duty, withdrew to report progress to his fiends. Well, in due time the• Professoi went to the clerk for his license. The clerk inform ed, him that the law required a bond and se curity in the sum of $1,250, to be void on. condition that there was no legal objection. to the proposed union of the twc) persons named. The Professor very pr mptly re plied: "Oh, .never mind the Mond, Mr. Clerk; I• will pay $l,lOO dowt and will hand you the balance in a day o two." Af tel.' further explanation by tb - clerk, the Professor soon complied with the law and obtained his license. At the appointed time the wedding came off in the best style of the city, and the company enjoyed the occasion with great zest. The hours flew like bumming birds. As the clock struck twelve the Professor picked up his hat and started for his board ing house. His principal attendant surmis ing: bis intention, followed to the - front door and informed him that matrimonial etiquette required him to stay and board and lodge at the house of his Wher-in-law until he and his wife wished to live - by themselves. F . !inally the happy couple went to house, keeiling, and never were man and wife more heartily 'congratulated or more highly es teemed than they were. They were the fa -141-ites in theicity. Never was wife more 'lively, or husband snore kind or devoted, but he didn't know anything about provid ing for the larder, only •as - Sarah taught him. One little incident may suffice to il lustrate. She told him one day to get some rice. ' He went immediately to the store and told the clerk he wanted to get some rice.— " How much?" inquired the clerk. "Oh, not much," said the Professor, " I reckon three or four bushels will do for the pres ent." The clerk was very sorry to say they had not so much on hand, hut that they would soon have more. The clerk persuad ed him to try to make out for a few days with some fifteen or twenty pounds. Sarah and the clerk were nut the only ones who laughed over the incident. Ile never called for three orlfour bushels afterward. A Remarkable Blinding. On an eminence overlooking the lake in Central Park, and a couple of hundred feet from the Seventy-second street entrance, the Commissioneis have - recently erected a wooden structure known-from its shape as the Octagon. It would stand in a square 61 about fourteen feet. Nun`erous funnels jut out from the sides, straight or L shaped, with the orifice downward These are for ventilation. There are two doors, but no windows., The Octagon stands on a plat foisn, and is approached by steps. As you_ enter the room you see before you a round white table alaint the size of an ordinary card fable. In the center overhead is a cyl inder that resembles a piece of stove pipe. A metal rod like an elongate car hook hangs from this within reach of a man's hand.— This Octagon is the home of the camera obscure, the only one of its kind in this country. It has been operation some time, although the fact is known to com paratively few. A reporter recently visited the Octagon. The courteousgentleman in charge - invited him to enter. He did so, and. the door was shut. Upon the lathe was teen a most beauti ful Loidsvapc, with m en and women walk -mug abont, children and dogs frisking, and horses trotting along at a brisk gait. The scenes were at once recognized. A perfect plant eof the Park to the south of the lake was spread out upon the table. A moVetmint of the rod brought another sectiou r inte vim*, and by and by New York city as far down- as Dr. Bellows's•church was distinctly.fhing in Miniature upon the another movement, anti Mho lten and•thc Palisades were presented. The Eighth.: aVtlllie ears roll along on one (side and. the steam pars rattle past on the other. .The spoke of every wheel and the face of evely Dastzenger were clearly marked. 'Each color anti tint of the foliage was there, and the slightest waving of a leaf was faithfully represented. / Every portion of the Park not shut olr by some physical obstruction was in 'Om reflected, and the motion and attitude of each person walking or seated was distinctly seen. The camera produced upon the table a series of pictures most beautiful and startling, the moving figures— approaching, receding, crossing—making it fieeni like a glimpse of fairy land: Spanish Horrors.--liassacre at Ahoy. Alcoy is a town in the Province of Ali cante, devoted chimiy to manufacturing iiri dust ries, and in variouss trades tile workmerki demanded a large rise in their wages—rsomet say as much as litty per cent.--and when it was refused left their work. Their number is estimated at 8,000, and there being, no force in the town sufficient to overawe them, they, assumed a very threatening attitude, intei fering everywhere with the work and spreading alarm among the peaceful inhab itants, espeeiadty 'those belonging to well to-do elas , es. At. last they ventured to in sist upon the resignation of the Town Coun cil and the suhStitution of a council of their own nomination. This demand the Mayor I of Aleoy, Senor Augustin Albors, had the courage to refuse. Ile seems to lire be- hayed with great gallantry, and, 'idle so ninny victims of popular, excesses, Nvifs not one of those enemies of freedom ipid re levet whom the people have some reitsdn to. dislike and dial rust, but a stanch au eliberal ltepu'ilielin. For nearly thirty years he had fought the ardnites, well nigh hopeless, bat tle of the Spanish Ik-public, and now, in the hour of its bard-won tritimph,-`his re ward is to be butchered, with revolting cru elty, in its name. When he refused the de mand of the insurgents, they gave him three hours to change his mind. Ile took posses sion of the town hail, and witha few Civil and National Guards and some friends who offered their help tried to hold it against the mob. The little garrison was soon over powered, the assailants burst in, and then followed a scene impossible to describe, but which'has been reported, with little varia tion, in most of the Madrid journals, so that I see no sufficient prison fur withhold ing-my account of it; eatuestly as one may hope that it may : prove exaggerated. It is said that the (defenders of the town hall, after being stlbjeeted to other horrible insults and injuries, ~w ere stripped naked and held up from th4taleony in full view of the howling ,mob below. Their names were called out., one ;by one, and the mob was asked whether it would "have them dead or alive." According to the answer, either their heads were cut oil' and the muti lated undies thrown . down from the balco ny, or' i lhey were thrown down still alive, the mob below trying to catch hem as they fekl ou bayonet§ and pikes, and everybody then rushing to assist in dispatching'what remnants of life: were left; or, if too late for this, to further mangle and disfigure the breathless bodies. The women are said to have played a Conspicuous part in the mas sacre, as they did in .Paris during the Com tnune. ' Nothing, ,however, which occurred in Paris at all approaches this brutal massa cre, almost in cold blued, find with so slight a Pretext, at Aleoy, and one can only believe in its possibility ou account of its being at tributed to a Spanish mob. It is said that one of the principal and most respectable inhabitants was seized by the insurgents, and after his: clothes had been sprinkled with petroleunt, he was set on tire anatomic to.rsin. Vol lila ai is weme taken nt him:—.lra i-drid-Correßpondenee of London Timis. The Irish Car King. Mr. Chalks Ilianconi is one Of the most useful men that ever brenthea the 1111. of Ireland. A native of Italy, he emigrated to Ireland in consequence of• the troubled political condition of his own country. The step in his case laid the foundation', of his fortunes. - commenced to earn hying as an itinerant . picture frame mender .wit Traveling froin one country house to another, he became aware by personal in- convenience of the' absence of cross-conn try coilvelkanees. Having, therefore, saved a few bounds, ho resolved to start a ear to run from 'Thuile:: to a neighboring town, at a very low rate. At tii•st he met with but little support, but by *degrees the thing took so well that he started another, and horses' and fodder and labor being. all cheap, he was able. rapidly to extend his operations, and with increasing custom still- maintains low rates. Before long he got contracts for carrying cross road mails, and at length be came the .greatest public•conveyance pro• prietor in the world, probably, running his cars through the length and breadth of the land. Mr. Bianconi is a man of rare tact, meth od and ludgMent. He treats all his work men with great consideration, but rigidly exacts from then the performance of their duty.. A regular system WI promotion has long prevailed in his establishment. Driv ers begin on ;lonely, out-of-the-way roads, and are then iransferred to more cheerf a and agreeable routes. Ultimately, those who have passed many years satisfactorily in his service receive pensfons. All Mr. Bi anconi's cars are made at his own factory. Beiiig a prudent man, he has accumulated a large fortune. Beside the regular passenger cars, he es tablished for the market people near large towns a rougher conveyance, . which allbrd ed ample room for their baskets, and ran such ears at even lower rates. Thousands in remote villages who up... to the time be commenced his operations bad scarcely had a glimpse civilized life thus becamccom paratively familiar with its manners and customs, and consequently ashamed of liv ing like pigs, and to Mr. Biaxiconi, as much as to any man, may be attributed that im provement in the appearance, and mode of life of tbe lower class of Ireland which has been so •eniarkable in the past quarter of a century.—N. Ereniny Tinging to the Old jea-Pot. 311 r. Groesbeck , Groesbeck, though he thinks tilt Demo ratio organization is " spoiled," and that a new one must take its place, still says: "After all, I like them and I like the old mlitical homestead. I confess it is some what dilapidated. There are no banners on, its oilier wrdls, and victorious shoutings arc no longer heard within; but it is a home still, and 1 shall not leave it until it is pulled down." The Argun, as is usually the case when weakling undertakes to - copy and expand the utterance of a strong man, dilutes this into feebleness, and Writes what reads very much like an appeal to apply disinfectants to a dirty hole in apprehension of a visita tion of the cholera: " Let us, then, clear out the rubbish, re burnish the furniture, scour the walls, re gild the banners, throw wide open the doors, and invite onr friends yti to a primitive po-, litical feast." All of which reminds us of the story of the old lady who had a tea-pot which had come down to her from her grandmother and mother, and she wouldn't drink out of any other tea pot. One daishe left, it on 'the stove and the 'handle melted off. The old lady took it tip' and exclaimed,' " Well, al though the handle is melted oil', t,'s ',hemline old tea-pot; my grandmother L . %ink nut of Chip tea-pot, toy mother :drank 'tit of it, and I Won't drink out of any other." By and by what site called the " snozv.lc" was melt ed off, and still site went through the same reflections about lier grandmother and moth er, and detgrtnined to cling tc} the old tea pot. After awhile the . boys got to playing lt , ith it and hoof:I:ell a hole in the bottom, but the faithful old lady took it up tenderly and sighing said, "The handle Is genie, and the snozzle is melted oli, and here's a We in the bottom, hut it's the same old tea-p , A, still; my grandmother drank out of it,,lnv fitother drank mit of it, and I. won't think. out of any o(lier teapot." When ) Mr. Mroebheek sayslic likes the old politicAl homestead though it is dilapidated, and whenithe Argus wants to "scour the walls"—What, a dirty place it must bef—,and have - a "feast"—race place for a' feast!— ' they reason very much like the old lady with 1 her ten-pot,—Albanyjournal. . Milk Poisons. The importance of providing good, clean Water for tack cows to drink, has thews very clearly shown from repeated =Minn tions of specimens of bad milk under the' microscope. - :Some two years ago we gave in these columns an account of a somewhat noted cheese which had come under the observittion of Professor Sawes. The milk, from a certain milkman, soon-after received was foUnd to be defective. Under the mi- • croscope vegetable' organisms were found growing in it. A drop of this bad milk when added to milk perfectly sound i ,intro-; dueed , the same class of organiains, which/ increased and multiplied with great rapidi- , ty in the sound milk, causing it soon to be bad. On examining the blood of the cows under the microscope, the same class of or- . ganisms were found and their course was traced to the water from which the cows obtained their supply for quenching thirst. For a lon g time it has been observed that the milk of cows, drinking from stagnant; pools and mud holes, soon becomes bad, and! is the fruitful source of floating curds du.; ring hot weather. In St. Lawrence county a noted dairyman stated to us that during a certain dry ; season 4e was unable to make good butter from the milk of his cows, yet his neighbors had no difficulty. His pas tures were not well 'provided with water, and the cows were forced to drink from sloughs and, frog ponds. He .tried for a . long time, o discover the cause of the trouble in his butter, and at last suspected , it came from the water the cows were drink ing. Then he sunk a well and obtained an abundant supply of good, clean water for his herd, and he had no difficulty in, mak ing sweet butter and as good as could be produced by his neighbors. There is abundant evidence to show that certain living organisms found in unwhole some water; when taken into the system, re tain their vitality, enter into the 'blood and are carried into the milk. Doubtless; in many instances, disease and blood-poison ing results , from the use of bad ,milk; the cause of which, if properly traced, would be found in the unwholesome water which MI ',31!),41-i -- ' W.HOTA NO. Low. • USEFUL AND STKIONSITVE. the cows drink. Nearly a year ago the Canada Lancet gave an account of a serious case of poisoning produced from using freshly-churned • buttermilk, the substance of which is thus given in the Mz Journal: A medical Man was summoned to a house where hefound four men apparently suffering from the eflects of a narcotic-irritant poi son. The symptoms were vomiting, purg ing, burning pains in the bowels, cramps and contractions of the lower extremities, stupor, constant thirst, small pulse and clammy surface. On inquiry, it was found that each patient had some time previously (front an hour to an hour and a half) drank a tutohlerful or more of freshly-churned buttermilk, and was shortly after Ward seized with giddiness. SeVen other persons, relatives of the family,,had drank of the some buttermilk, and were seized with sim ilar symptoms, athough not quite so severe. 'The milk was palatable to the taste, and all asserted that it was impossible that any poi son could have been put into it. Carbolic acid in ten-drop doses was administered, subsequently followed by opium, under which treatment all recovered. The milk was then tested. No trace of vegetable or miner. i l r ; mison was - found; but on examin ing it Microscopically, numerous animalcu he were )erceived, of- about 1-5000th to 1-7000th (f an inch in diameter. A sample of the injurious milk' and ,a like quantity of. good milk ,freshly-churned (in which, how ever, it. ii stated 'a few animalcule; were visible on examination) were then set aside for a week, when the latter divided into curds and whey, but the former retained its Consistency, and looked as fresh as when churned and was literally swarming with aniinalculte, while the latter was nearly free Trein'tliem:! The -theory advarOed by the _medical attendant who contributes thcvar t - - .elc, regarding, the animalcuite, was dthat the germs which produced them had existed _ in, the water supplied to the cow from which the milk was obtained. This theory 'was, without doubt, correct, and It is not improbable that the cases of poison front eating cheese, which not un frequently occur, may be laid to the same source. Dairymtn are not generally aware of the serious consequences that are liable • to result front neglect in supplying 'their herds with good, clean water. The impres sion scents to prevail that the cow has won derful powers of separating all the poisons in. her food and water in some mysteripus way, so that they shall not be secrete& in her milk. Filthy water, alive with plan; isms, which no one would think it sae e to drink, is not unfrequently considered good enough for the dumb beast that supplies the famil - y with milk. The milk is Used with- - out question us to its wholesomeness, and if t,6ltoitl fever, or some malignant disease attacks and carries oil some of the inmates of a hnsehohl, tke cause is laid to an in scrutable source, t.titut epidemic, or conta gion which' is wafted by the winds from afar. There ate poisons other than those found in the minerals' and drugs of .the apothecary., They are in, the cesspool, the! drain, and in the heaps of accumulated filth often permitted to diffuse their noxious in- - fluence about our living apartments; and, then there are• those other poisons comity ,front the milk and the flesh of maim which have been iMproperly fed and care for.—RuatilVi;:o York.er. Large and Small Farms. The census shows that the average size of fiu•tihs in the United States was reduced 23 per cent. froth 18G0 to 1870, yet in Illinois and Indiana they increased in size from 191$ to 302 in 1870-or 108 per cent. The prop el,' management of these great estates re quires lust they shotild do nearly all the work by inachinery, employing as few, men and horses as possible. The small farmer, sear by, prositiccis his crol,at greater pro portionssi east, fails to compete, and Oooner or later sells' out to his rich neighbor. This gives rii,e to-what is there very properly de nominated "land monopoly," and in the fame's' granges this has already created two patties or factions —pm composed of those owning a thousand acres and over, the_ other of average sized farmersi. They are divided in interest, and the sthall far- user has the : , yntpathy of the community, inasmuch as he directly aidsi busine4s ail about him, by employing help, patronizing stores, and in effect exchanging products for ,goods. The larger producers occasionally hold their products for a ise, make corners in wheat, corn, ;etc., and ontrol the market so far as their foreign cu touters permit them. The mOre demobratic, poorer but • more nuinerM4'element, are already sug gesting nitwit.cis in their respective orgam -1,, nations, as to the effect 9f immense farms ()I1 the market - 'and whether the Western tendency to, h nd monopoly is beneficial to i i . the general t ricultural interest. The in vestigmi(m ,Niil doubtless show that one monopt.ply is n& materially different from another in its efiect upon the Masses of the people, mid the business and political in tere:ls of the country; and that the natural result N ill be a weeding of the granges.— lln the 1 , 1:e.,i, owing not alone to our thickly settled population, but to our varied indus tries,' 1, , manufactories, workshops,. and coinaless individual enterprises, the gener al tonieney is toward small farms—such as can be 11),ed (sipleniently and profitably to supply exisling'horne markets. In this way our farmers create and control their own markets, no fiir as the law of supply and de niand,will permit them; and their position , is better. more useful, more permanently. ProaPeroa 4 all round than if each and all of them mid the control of thousands of, acre , ;. T tie la, , re land OWller.4 of Great Brit ain prod lelsi a sv;leul of tenantry which has entaip,s Illi))1.tV Auld poverty , for genera tions. 'lsht.melt farms of New England and the AI i die States have given incentive to growl II . id („mterpriie, and social and po litical bvi ittesA, never before equaled in m t . burnt ,•R tr any land. —Berk.; awl Sclinyl kal ,bm ru•el. __ A golt , i main to imitate mahogany can be nettle u u tomtit sienna and wafer, to darlc en win , , tnid VAsitlytte. brown: - Carefully Si7e •. .IZla , varnish; or 0 hot decoction of logWeoay-toi 10il - tv two or thre coats. Texas contains now forty agric Itural so cieties, nearly all of, which were organized during the last two years, and every one of them since the downfall of slavery.