Ofit ginga Qfinintig ,gitittot Is published every 'Wednesday Moerning per year, invariably in advance. COBB & VAN GELDER. vAN IEI,IIII m . ft ,eOllll.l "Si..liaVOL" I .5 I INT 1?....A21" rcx blitil:b OP MINION. OR LEM!, MANIs SQUA KE l iiiii. 11‘1 1 4.C, 81ue..1 71,11 . 1' —. 71 $l,OO $2,00 $2,30 $4OO $7,00 $12,00 ... 2,00 3,00 4,00 E r ro 12,00 18,00 , 10.00, 15,00, 11,00, 2 00, 30,30, 50,00 I 18,00' 20,001 30,00_1 40 t 00!_ , C0,001_ 00,00 I=lMil S,inari.,. Squares flail( C 01... OW , 14A.... Special N Local 20 ce 15 cents pc otiees is per MASONIC. OSSEA, LOUGH, No.:111, A, Y. M, meet s et their Moll over Dr. Itoy's drug store, on 'Tuesday ol enfieg, on or eeforp the Full Moon, at 7 o'clock P.M. ' t 1011 A CHAPTER, No. 194, R. A. M., oieet4 at the 11:01, on 'Thursday evening, on or heho e the Full "%loon, at 7 o'clock P. M. TVOLI A COUNCIL, N0..31, It. & S. MASTIAS, meets at tlid - Hall, On t h o third t•'riday of each calc•ud,tr 1110001, at 7 o'clock P. 't. TPA' AO IPPON COMMA fiDRII 28, TEMPLAR, and tho appendant °yam's, nteets at the 1141. on the drat Friday of each calendar month, at u'etoelt P. M. BUSINESS DIRECTORY, WILLIAM H. SMITH, rTuRNEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW in , uranco, Bounty and Pension Agency, Main tut Wellabor°, Pa., Jan. 1, 18118. WM, GARRETSON, _O:FOIINEY AND COUNSELO.4 ATiLAW, !iocir y Insurance Agent,,Moss burg, Pa., over Caldwell's Store. (IEO, W. MERRIC4C., I'IORNEY ANP C0111.1b111.1.0t AT LAW. °file° wilh W. 11. Sualtil, Esct., 1%1°404 Street, uppoaito Union .. l3lock, Wollbborcsi Pa. July 15, 1858. W. D. TEK.I.SELIt. at CO., 110LESALE DRUGGISTS, and dealers in Wall Paper, Koroseno Lamps, Window Glass, l'erfamory, Paints and Oils, &,(3., Corning, N. X., Jan. 1, IS(B.—ly. S. F. WiLsox WILSON & 14111 LIES, conNEvs b COUIgSELORS AT LAW, First door from .13i0moy's, on the Avenuo)— attend to business entrusted to their cure ta the counties of 'Piogn and Potter. Wollsboro, Jan. 1,, 1865. JOHN I. DIXTCHELL rfORNEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW, Welkhoro, Tioga Co., Pa. Claim Agent, Notary Public, and insurance Igent : He will attend promptly to collection 01 o,”sions, Back Pay and Bonn ty. Ae Notary 01 1,110 ho Likud acknowlialgpmant , ud ❑cwlalers oaks, and will act as COmmit.: , ioner to tostimouy. ~ , 7.7.,...5". 0 111ce over ltoy'a Drug Store, .03 , daing Agitator 011ice.—Out. 30. 1:167 John W• Guernsey, I Arip UrltlNSj LOIt AT LAW. It returned to tilts coati t„) , ' a view of (atiiiog it hi•a permanent re'sidonce, tiolleit, a hare of public patronage:. All business en tru-ted to his ear° will ho attontlect to pith \.r.taptnes , and tidolify• Office 2(.1 door south V.. 5. Fares hutel. Tioga Co., Pa. pr. 21).*r.ii.-tf. SOHN lit. SUALIKSPEARE, •K.IPER AND TAILOR. Shop over .luhtt i:owen's Store. Cutting, Fitting, and H}aiti - ng tlonlyroiniltly and in best style. ' , i'..lb , bore, Va.. Jap; I , I t 54-1 y GEOIitGE WAGN , - . Shop firm duo north of 1.. . Shop • Fitting, an it It Not ir dorm" pminpily acid ‘lt.tisl..tro, Pa:, 3 an. 1, IStii3.—ly• $OliN EIVE.tII, Lon AN I, currEit, 014 4 . /.111011 rl reel, rear of Seat a Doi I.:‘, n•pp, %%novelle props rcd to 1141411411414 . 1 4 1VC 42,11 r 4/1 . 4113r 111 1110 1.1,41 ,104:1111111411111.1111.4 I 11 , i W4lll 4111 , 4111 .1 4. P..1111 1 111412' 1111C1411 4 .1 1 p 11.1 i I 01411.111 g 41111! F111111::' r 4 l Il • 6 1:11. 1 13 Dr. twr.t.u- t , a II '.ill at tcmd, tv 1 calls ft, it r lIU.} ~ 1 :100 and I. 2.i 11.41 it I, I) :; WON, \I. 11., lat. ol th , - .:t1 l'.‘ t..',‘ till; 1 :di,, . :wad) I.nie y;-.111 Ilt 41,1 ', 1 it s t . N , 41 6- a 1.. 1 , , 1,..1,e1.::/1 field ltill Isi,Pliiii Prtil 1 , ... lift, "1 ,, I.V I , .1. ' L I. 1: Mt . in P , liCt . of iii o, lll . lW, Fi:l 1 1,111:10.11') . , 111 ' .ii1 ' 1 : 1, 11 , ) F..... , 1 11) . • I 1 .11i) . II (11' i.IIIC , . ' l . lll i 111.! 11 1 ...1 .1 111,:: , lt till , Pt 111.5311.11.ttl lital i V:11..11 01 , 11.•. I -- ''' n 'Y 1"11"1 flu' = I 1k it; ‘'.It•tillt:;;;;;;;;, or to -:: ri., -oil gicallopel:llmn.. NI; I, L. Ilit/il 1:1.) , W. I,p i: , . . ;:r. IV 11114;o. Pa.. 1111.1 Y. 1.5;1e..-1). .., -Wm. F 3. Smith, I~cll 11 .11, lir,lll,t . h :11.41 h. _1615[1011:: :lilt IV OA ii) 1.140 i td .4lti 10 it. I In ;.)N. l'a 'rhos 19 larycien . I 11101 . 1, .1; ,t, , iir pr.a.ipt ntkulitiolt ) , •I I I ,167.--ri it, 10, .1.-ki,1:1; ELI; V, ;,11,1 . 1.,i; r \% AILE.: - 31.e , t." , Violiu ;vg , . , Wah .111 d "ri 4/11FIV 11l plail i:i1;11•11.1111.1 lierwup. l ft-L4;+; I) I itlirdl'eSbillg Barkue , :-ture, t‘t Particular alteration paid to Ladies' `tatr-c. Shampooing, D 3 dug, atm. Itraids, attt :twit:lN: , on hand and innde to „or. It. N. DultSBY Ci• PUTNAM, , 11 [LI, +.V RAU RT-7-Agetit to! :01 11e I,e, T !MIN WATER 11 II A ; ,r , tewart's UHeillating Aluveitiew tor tLing izri Malay Saws. hoga, Pa., Aug. 7, 1805, ly. C. L. WILCOX, "•.i , ` iitt.7 u 001,s ~f 11.;;.‘10,tie ,OI,PV Nution:‘ . . 9ur az—urtniept i:; t ic ;04 priao•s kw. Store. If, Uuiuu Block. vulloman.--laily 20 1F,11:-.. 1y PLTRpLEintil lICAUSL, 1'..., 1'f4 , 1•1" now ot, thr ' Ine •tt,tl tuc :"V 11. I - " DIAZI4F4TVS _NOTE ff., 1100 N 'l' V I' A Uand Stabling, att.aellecl, and bus •r always. in atten , laneo. ti \V. .RAZLET'r, . . I:,:rrrELL) Borough, Tiogo Co. Pa , E. ti Proprietor. A tioei and 1 . . J 1110.111111: t , ,111 , 1111g %Mil all the . DlOd'..ll it V ,1 111(1 el , y drives 01 thebet.i ,:ioutols in Nortlicrii Con ye) ohcLi. hi,ohoot Toms nodent le! fiVALTON', Gaines, Tioga County, Pa. ‘rE e. ERNI I ',YEA, l'noi.'n. I: .0A hotel located %Obit' I,,try ILL siting and hunting ground: ii. North- r.l l'ollo,;Ivaoia.. No paiitq hill Lrapairrl 14 , 00miodation ul ple:osta; i‘rh. i litti 1311. I, I 1))011tIty and , l'entii()ll`...lgent..v. ~, ~ ;', •• ‘. 1•.1 10 he t. I ' 4l, kip! hal 1111111 41 't „I tit " • , r 1 Id tnlr.! It vi4qs tl t" t. 1, tII l„tr n II to lift y W.. I“ .'`l Poi .1 .•, I. bill I , lt, s i i (I' ell I I , illlllllslil ill I. .1i ti IlVfit 4,1 . Wll I !Tit `. II it florobvi 1,1 slit; HA RKNESS , BOOT AND SHOE MAK ERS, ' , .r 1, 4;14,,,, rowil lotely occupied /y uj. OUTS AND SHOES irf,3ll hid+ , inafi, order and in tho best wanner. REPAIRING of all kinds: ,lonoprumptl3 and (jive uri a cull. JOHN HA HEN SS, . RE • W elleboro, An. 2, WM 1888-Iy.. ILEY. VOL. XVI. line; Edith =I CITY WIOK BINDERY AND BLANK BOOK MANUFACTORY; (SIGN OP TUN 1100IC,-2D PLOOIO c_)132=?... MOTTO s 0011 Asp' Ell BST, CA CAP As Ili (3 II E A PEST 01 of cry ilnctiption, in all styles of Binding, and as lots, for qualify of Stuii, as any llindety in din State. Volutnea of overy description wound in tho, host annul and in any style or doted. Exeeuted in the beet manner, Old Boolit.ye.' bound and MAO good us now, RELakagNIM Mti.DM' I net prepared to furnish back numbers of all ROVieWE or Magazines published in the United States or Great Britain, at a low price. BLANIC. BOOK & oTuE l t p.A1 , 111., Of all zcs and qualities, 011 band, ruled or plain • ; BILL READ PAPER, Of any!inality or tzizo, on hand and rut up ready for plinting Also, I'Al'h:ll . , and CARD BOARD of all colors and quality, in hoards or cut to any size. Cap; Letter, Note Paper, Envelopes, I'ell6, Peneils,"&e. I On holu ngunt tor 4. B. Ni!..l.:s Prof. SHEPARD'S NuN-CORROSI E ST EEL PENS, OF VARIOUS :MRS, FOR 1..41,11:s Whicli I v,"111v:;, ;aut e. f aal to tiola Pen:, 'ie bett ii, 4:-se :Lll,l no inEstahe. The above stock,l will Bellat the Lowest Ha es at all times, al a small advance on New Yt pricer. and in quantities to ;.nit purchasers). 11 work an.1,...t0,;1: warrantoil tic represented. I respectfully solicit a ;hare 0: piddle patron age. order,. by mail pioniptl3 attended to.-- Atlilm-s, LOUTS KIES, Advertiser Elmira, N.Y. Sept. 23\ Joint C. Horton, - A p j'4 I :\ EV A., CO NS ELO R Al' LAW, Tinga l'a. El ('. 11. Sn,i, lunar, E-11. a tteb.iod t%ith j0rt , 1111411 , ,,. uvr. 7th, 'li9--I.y. LWALCIt IN trial (MODS, iiroet.ri(!,, Herd ware, Boots, Shoes, 1111 t....:, S.c., co; Der of Market and Utaft. , u AVelbbia. Jah. 6, 1548. e. p, (Gully atiliotincer to I!ri eitizeos of inottlel•ton e a rl tit icily, ttv.o 1.! ;41 atOol It. their pan 1,111:91 :It the eof (`‘),,t,cv no,l 1\.1.1.1t !tho .\1 luirt bidt I I, lat. ,•%( 1, 1 1,. 11. will, la, 11„ 0 .4, ; .1,Is tht.: 11 ,, I,•1, II 1111 11U 11014111 v II", [I.IIOIIT 1 , 1{)il.• iu iii.t•l 1:0 13. c 111.1. 1 ,:. e..lt J. T:. l'lwr lit lit CI 1.% elsil•l.t the 1$1:q 1111 lln I I!, I. 1.101 i.! p.1111(•-• II" I.llr .1 I , 'MR VIII tnIIII 1111 tit t .11.1.11; titilic 9, 1 frit i:.,,,:i ~,,:_.,,,,:t t, , . :1,,..) up 1.,,,, -1.1 i',.11.1- o d Ipi 1./ a:•, iii:Til -- --41.. I;itm4.l . v, W , ..11:1• , . i.., . 1 ,.1 I. 1„, 0 i,,,•pit,..i I,: 1.11 - 1 - 11 --- 4Q/1 rl (le Cali. 1..11'. ~v, I, 111, . Aleii 11 il I, , ie 111.1.• I iii-I lie Le: i it..ii. liul II i.ia ..! !Ali lit.) 1.11 ~ L :111,. C:: .: 11 .-- -1..11.1 i,•I 101,, I I t, iii 1\ i1i4.10 KOTEf,. 1I N NS. Pitlivi;JETou• :,,„ 411:11 1.1. 1.1111..11 11..1v1 t. ts WWI( ti lot tc irth“.ll‘.uhe. .filfl 11 Pc.,pelt. )1 I.• lit .1. , it (~ t i .1110101 - ‘ , lio.l W.•11.1 , 01 , ..r,... - • 7. WAG in/ AND 11:0STra1liftIVT, -111,10 r, icli ,i ,\l' tliitl, I: NN' 1 , :•i cc f I,LY :trottaoces 111, trading 1.111;I:c tliaj o 1,1 Itar ;t tiesto tl.ic -1 , .; I. 1.1 I:t et:i tallptlAti,!, I Ca:, ;-;;;;;;;., Mol:ts:Lt., ;33 nip:, aild tl;at et;11-iiittIcs a lirrt• clazt; o. ; .,tef: it; tsvers 613 It) at all tea sonablo, Itotn+. IYilllsboro,.l,lll. 2. 1567 -If. Dt:A.LEns A 11W 11E, I EON, STEEL. NAILS, 8 1 7 0 1 7 116', Ti AL IVA pp 8170 SIMS, CIITLEHL 1. .1011NSliN 1 1.;Al; YE! HEAR YE! ItEAR YE li• eo11: 4 tahll) •01l ii.lll.l t .iii.lll.lflii , hed to Or dLIT, 3 1 t,i I, It; 3 , 1 li,/1•r lob% , (J um+ 11), ' ! ie.V ,• t't lII'S I . r F l l , , i - " , ealvs, all i.rdinary I-1, •. y, t...tinter usc. wny l ?e o'. too II ,1 tt. at o 1 , . r0 ttt . liollerV , , :lA%) tllO / :46, ha" pat. e;kt :1114i lU.Ve , (,point ajnywhore. They tiro "' al° I" t' -1 - • tsio 7; ol t;:l." - n the I.l4mi tun at 1 I tlio,(ll :, e,dus it; this region I WI L1,1,1:11 R(IIII , ,It'PS• Ftiv 12, .... ---..44C ....) .71 : c.. ,01."7.......-- - At . . .. ~. •,. .. „. :„ 4 /./........-,;_>,.., .+. , , . . L il j Q st:t 2. , . . , ~.. ~.. ......, 4;?..... .. „ . ' , . .., .... .., , , , . L Illit ~,.., - ,:-., • \,.- 4 • P' , N 4 ',,. ..t. .. 'A . . . "4 4........:\.: .. . ' . 1 , . . . , . • . , . - • ii • . .. I ~., I 8 Baldwin Street, .1.1.,;'.1 - AVIIRA, N. V. BLANK BOOKS ALL [(INDS OF (ALT WORK COSIPLETE YOUR SETS! STATI ONE Ity, A NI , 1: NT LI:311:N, o'. E. lELLEY E. $. Terkinti. Y) Smith's Hotel 1. S T 011 IE HOTEL 1 /el E. IL KnIBALI4, 00: . 4 . qt. a WALICER St, LATHROP, \V ATER lit A 11.7,, I3lt'lJ;.llliNT` Carcian and Harness Trimmings 11.% RN E*- ES, ;=A 1)10,1,.::,, t' , i i.,,,N: Y., .I;rd. 2, 1:,11"1- ly BAI,LI LS, UII.KINS, 011.111:NS, auvrEtz NV. 'F. MATHEUS, New Tobacco Store 1' TII E I•ul.t:criber lia:t lit lvd ut, thc, roots; i/• r} p„bert, ar,l ;;Mc store t and :ali• I ILI iS, (all grad; l'amw curl Comma) ..,:jjoh - /NO • Tilli.P.:('o,lfirkptit.Pine Cu CILE ll' IN G, (nu/ till t(/' I'l. ii 1'01.1,107 0, PIPES, (yid Merin-4 Brand 0.1 CI S i t ..l •rrl 1:or priirsek . JitllN .W. kv T( I I.':-tin_LITS! 11 11.1, I: 1: I. STE!: 1.,.101,:r tll3. 11, .1 sv, 11,.. Ha r 1.1 A I:cru•.ne., al lhuir %rt*lL• on Elk !tu n . nn I iiip..11..1 We belie% t. it Ui he ryu 11 a mo. 14. (..y i 14.1 Pltv.ter. Davol :-Imi4l, :, At 0.,11111,10 'i . A P Cone MII t'..61, ii It "sii,ii t im,s .1 Lteloaner 11 IV lidrt.er ,I;.1 Smith .. 1: Slnill I; 11'.ivi: , Albert I:itt l t ‘ptiltn t' Millar .1 11 Watr4a):.. W i'l 11'.iti",1: i • I. l, Alarf.ti I:. M Smith 1) AlSinitli II M ri,ole J b St lil a . t' t.: yap fielder .) J Smith Jared Davi, J F Zimmerman Cl, King L 1, Smith. , . '; N. B.—Plaster always on hand at the Mill. Price $6 por ton. Nov. 4, 1888. I= Pleasant it was•in dayi gone by, When life was young and fail Upon eomo mosey bank to lie, Beneath the summer's, cloudless sky, And to hear the brooklet's sigh, • Borne on the slumbrous air. Methinks 1 hoar its mellow rhyme Steal on the breeze to-night, Where in my childhood's mountain clime, liHened Co ) its silrer" , chime, In the pl'easan't summin' O'er pebbles-smooth and nhite. 'Therelwitd•birds warble in the•morn, Amid their eulitudes, And modest flowers it, banksaidorn, Beyond the fields of golden corn, Where the violets ore born, Deep in the ferny woods. I've heard, while musing there alone, The uood-dos•e's plaintive wail; And when the moruning bird had flown, I lit-tened to the wind's low moan, Hgbing. in an undertone, Through all the fairy sale. 'ToaH there we built our tiny mill, When woods were sunnuer•crooned; Methinks I hoar its music still, Under the pinc:s honettth the hill," Blending witik (he noisy' rill, In one Ifurmeriions sound. • Put EOll4O 'OIIU watched that Inhuming title, Leap down in silver gleams, Hays hinted by the way.—and died, And now are ivith the glorified, t • But thcir•uuau'ry's ::anetir4, And lives imall my dreams. And oft rindet that Fainted throng, tht ;-ton-litintinntain tops; For lien soar-nn pinions strong, They t.enu jei fallow me along, To the holy worfir,of song, O'ur which ffo • Afidow 4/101,S. A Terrible Adventure in Iceland 'Mount Heela, on the island olleeland i, slightly under a mile in height. It has three peaks a little elevated above its body, and along its sides are limner- (Juror:tiers, the seats Or former eillOlOllS. The critter ()I' the principal peak' about one hundred feet in depth. It is entupo4o.l Chiefly of basalt• and lava, hut slag', ?and, and ashes cover a great part of its surface, and ob,inin,•l is a• nynn; ils most remarkable produels. There have been forty-three eruptions Ninnht, lleefa reeordeil within the lant I hulls:Ana of which have teen :Thtlitatteints v. ith four of mid our v, it h th(1:-ie t)t both The last, eruption be . gan l - 4 ,elitenilier 2, 1713, anfl lasted until Ai)r . il i. Is; In. in, the 23t1 of Iloveipher the tormit,pf lava, tt+u 11111eS 1 . 11)111 the crater, wasa mile ill ‘thith,:iii(l nom forty to ft l , et; iu Carl Steinman ecia Just pre vious to tlti terrific ertiption, anti lout =I horrible death tliza veer befell an ;1(1- • • ,ivi L, lisirtlitiv, iliObt ON% i) IV - 01 (IS (JO tUa next tnorliilig after toy ival at thertnull village at the letit„ a the vt.tenti.), I engaged a gedde, a ridtlifttl, fellow, and :-at ottt I‘.l* vi , dt to the 'rater, Frotri the vely rind, It', If I had 1 t t the et i uJiues and was etiftlilig a iicw world, :o t•litirely (11(1 . i:rent Was the y, Nt. A. lq,1;11 A:; towaid the went. oral' the. horror (if buriting .stt!tri you (hid I lit peril, &marines§ and th2#,olgi Lion until at length, its awfuluesg I ecomes sublime; and, at length, \viten you stautt on the Loptum-t point of this ltumnitig vvoild of etioas, •oti instinct ively raise . yout• heart to (loth, with a :-fitultle'rot tenor, to t•: , :tore pal to the gleat Unit you have left behind Noll, For i•ix mortal bows---three on horse . haul: .alit three on foot.--1 hail beet clambering upward front Lhe lower world and now, among the clouds- and mists that rolled around me, 1 stood in a world of lava, mountain*, ice and snow, the lava blade as ink, the snow of dazzling whiteness—and not in all the legitin the slightest Mush, shrub, plant, or living creature except the guide and myself. As far as the eye could discern, when the sweeping clouds alliirded a view, was a suecession of hills, glisten ing glaciers, snow-capped peaks, and frozen streams—a world devoid or life, the awful solitude of ilsell—filled with gaping eaverns, terrine abysses and rllgian eaves, which echoed only the sullen rembrations of thunder or the groanings of the troubled earth beneath. So impressive w::4 this scene that 1 felt a . :ltrange chill creeping through toe,- and I hitouted to break the horrible stillness which was more awe-iuspir- Mg than the thunders of a thousand Niagaras. I frequently found myself ' imagining that 1 was dreaming, and I I was only assured by pinehing my, limbs or conversing with my guide. Drawing toy blanket around me to shelter the from the 'chiding atmos- phere, and carefully puncturing the ground with, my sharp pointed stick before me, to n\ake sure of my foot steps, I began to pick- my way over., piles and heaps of lava and pitfalls andl patches of ice and snow, my guide keep ing near me, and often warning nio. When be inui"ined my footstePs were leading me into danger. Occasionally- Istruck the fraglUents of lava that rolled down behind m e , aunt as yet discovered no signs of the crater, Odell, eighty years before, had vom ited forth its tremendotis volume of melted black sand. At length, how ever, I reached the fall - 11111H,, and looked down into a sort of basin, open at the •loWer side, and having several deep seams or .C111121M3 in . the centre, into miiielt the melted snow 'or ice on its' sides were running in small streams. A repulsive odor, in the shape_ of . thin, slnolty vapor, came up, :unit fan, eied .1. heard a distant rumbling noise that sounded far down in the earth. . I tamed to my guide, and was about to speak, when 't observed he was trent hung and as pale as death. " What's the matter?" I asked, "yot scent. to be frightened." " Oh, my Clod !" lie gasped, g oin g to be nuetlier eruption." "l tow do you know that? Have you ever been here before?" " Yes ; but I never saw •it look like this. When 1 was here last these was no hollow there, -but a level piece . of slum and it . c."• Indeed !" T exclaimed, with intense interest; "and you judge-that fact to be decisive, with regard to an eruption ?" my master," said he in the ;great=est agony, "what else conid have caused this change, ? There must be lire hplow, or Altat has melted this glacier? You see the ice is nearly gone, and what is left is fast melting, and will soon follow it." observed at this point that my feet had a sensation of warmth, and stoop ing down found the ground quite hot. IIMIZI!I ,;, • t • " "Glihell,tlC l0 -ICIL or 8 1 11 .12.4001Lia11t tki4l3 3E103G13:1,313.1,33.G. of Itafirjlisicle.)33o..7r EMI ratto' T,orirtr. [For tho Agitator.] 33.11,00 K. • I=l `gtailino. WELLSBORO, PA:, SEPTEMBER 8, 1869. " inquired. He shook his head. "All wrong, there's trouble brewing caster, as you live. You had better cave." I recalled the fact that the last crap- lion of Becht occurred eighty years be-* fore, long previous to the birth of my guide, and consequently he could know as'littlo of that'ns I .did. This foolish thought prevented me from putting the faith In his Words that I ought to have done. I There is no hurry," I replied ; "I have been so long finding my way to the top, that I am hardly disposed to leave until I have seen more of the volcano." I observed his paleness and trembling increase, if possible, but I still felt a re luctance to retreat so ignominiously, after toiling so hard to make the sum mit. Ho stood a moment in silence, and then ventured again : " Let us go while there is time. lam afraid to remain here. We may be overwhelmed at any`- moment." "Hold on," said I, sensible of a curi ous fascination, such assometimes comes over one when on the brink of the most .appalling peril. "It iS-true the ice has melted, but it has done so very gradual ly. I have spent a great, deal of time to reach Iceland, and when I started it was with the resolve to seek Hecla." " I 3 eaven knows I have seen too much already," he replied ; "more than has ever been seen before by living man." " How do you know that?" I deman ded, somewhat annoyed at the dogmati cal manner of my guide. "At least I think so. " And I think you are mistaken. I cannot consent to go back until I have descended into this basin and looked down into one of those chasms." " Let me beseech you, do not. It will be the death of you 1" "If you are afraid, you can return," said I, with an unfeeling tone, for which there was no jastitication. "Oh, no, 'my master, I will not desert you." "All I ask, then, is that You will merely wait for me?" I had no right to ask even that, and I considered the guide a simpleton be (wise he heeded my request. `I will wait,' he mplied, 'but remem ber'when you go down that I kept,en ire: ting you not to do so.' `1 hold you blameless, whatever sho'd occur, so liavt»lo apprehensions upon that score.' The crater was about twenty yards in depth, with sides that slope se gradual ly, that it could be descended without difficulty if ordinary care was only ex ercised-. I first felt the lava, and found it wine hot ; but not unpleasantly so, and us ing my stick with great precaution, I began to &cond. I observed the tem perature the lava beneath my fect constantly to increase, but I had thick shoes, and I knew they would be un harmed; f notieed also, :t thick, sulphurous odor, bet censidered this nothing un useat , although it left a thick, tlimigree ahle taste in my mouth, and ga v e an unpleasant twinge to my olfactoris. The rill of water made by the melt hie, ico flowed hissing (him', and was lost lo view in the dark ebasm, from __ wide,/ came Puffs of but air, accomre' I arrived at my journey's cud le Hied by a trembling of the groiliqV Ts ~... - -,- t k ---.-. ---------.-,- c._.' , . zi AI a v 110114 P ,I , •ne.ru...-, • , ‘1.1 4 ,(1-NrTtl-1 , '." roll 111 i a nu i sance--a nins.inue cl o t, or b s sense of danger connected with it, held to myself', but to all the modest and me theta) by a sort of magnetic fasten:l- 500t .. 1 „o„th,d Sojourner.;. This pest tool, and I soon found myself strongly was nothing more or less than a young tempted to norke a fatal plunge into the lieutenant of art ill ery d ressed ill an awful abyss. Convions that reason fre- agonizing uniform, with very bright ((trendy loses her power at such times, lank:its, anti with straps of gaudy im -1 forced myself backward a few feet, hellishownt, covering fully half of but still remained fearfully near the either shoulder. They were the most opening heedless of the front-tie entreat- “stunnirign pair of shoulder-straps I les of my guide. ever saw. No carried a gold-headed (living no heed, therefore, to this ear-,r cane and strutted awfully. He looked nest eolieiLations I now determined, d n m own o common people, and a treetet I possible, tosountithe depth of the chasm the society of elaborately dressed ladies. before me, and then proceed to examine He talked big of war and battles, and the other. told the ladies stories of valorous decd' For this purpose 1 pulled off a small and hair-breadth espa,,e..4. piece of lava, and stepping to the very Two or three week:4 l ll:ld passed since edge ui the chasm"' dropped lid nwi' anti the lieutenant's arrival, anti more than listened to the ]tallow reverberations,,one good man had left in utter disgust. ° and I . went bouudine• froln side to sioe, pi le p oi n ni „ y ' s ta m. sti m e i eney an d long after it was lost to the eye. ar , rogance were really painful. ...The &b 1 ill was NO immense that It was at noun, on a cool, rainy day, beard it, lor fully a minute, anti then taut i , , , the sound seemed rather to die out front over l i o l ' ( i l ° l l , E i r iN ° , : i i l i n a i r e r a i i N n e . d, plet‘pitnitig up i n i e s distauce than to cease from the block horse, and ate his dinner, and then having reached its destination. It was tame down to see Inc. I asked him, in a territie depth, and as I drew back he tot . se of conversation, if he had with a shudder, a gust of sulphurous , tam 'the lieutenant. No—he bad not. air puffed upward, followed immediate- .Ithett gave him a little neeount of said ly by a hteatOilte vapor, and a heavy, individual, with a description of his hollow boom, as if a piece of ordnance oerso tr , had been discharged in the bowels of i , I know hint,' cr;ed O'Neil. ' He's the mountain. By this time I had re- it sneak of Bancroft's battery—on the gained my common sense, and became sick Ilist—never did a day's duty in impressed with thb danger that hung camp or on the field. , over me. I turned to fly, when all at 'reward evening he walked up to the once there came a uttibling crash, and hotel. O'Neil wore a common soldier's the ground, heaving, and shaking and, blue overcoat—one that he had taken rolling under me, began to crumble off to shed rain—a sloughed hat that had into the dread abyss. seen service, and a pair of ponderous I was thrown down, and on my hands cavalry boots. Ile walked like tubple and knees, praying to God for mercy, phant and scented almost as powerfol• was sclratatiug over it and upward, to As we, approached the hotel, the lienten save myself from a most horrible fate, ant stood upon the broad piazza in when - two blocks rolling together, company with a young lady, entirely' caught my feet and legs between ,them, flanking the main entrance. Robinson, and vilthout actually crushing held in his offhand, swingin way, ascended them as if in a 'ice. Then came another the steps, and started to g, push through crash turd erumble,..the lava slid away the flanking party. The lieutenant Irom behind me, and 1 was left, upon looked at him in astonishment, taking the verge of the awful gulf, now widen- him for a private soldier. t. ed to some fifteen or twenty feet, down , say, fedah I (let-out 0 1 t hi s ! H a i n t into which I looked with horror-strained you gut any manners? Don't ye know eyes, only to see darkness and death below, turd breathe the almost sufroca. r) .., bettertie than to trespass on are cow puny of officers and ladies? Get out Ling vapors that rushed up from. that. seeMingly bottomless pit. , (to awound if you want to get into the • . Oh, the horrors of that awful realria hotel'. -, O'Neil ~„„e ~),,,, look at f h ‘s ~,„,5 1 ,„,., -lion I W 1 hat. e " or tongue " il l 1 , ) , ° n r i t „ r , a y k then' it ‘ tivall ' c ' ed, ' t • l ' ml " t . o ‘ ok 1 ' 11;1 ' 1 '1 1;111 ' e them? There, oNer the mouth °:- ---.'". collar of his coat and by the seat of his and healed abyss, 1 was held suspen- pants ; lifted hint as though he had ded, a helpless and conscious prisoner, been a child, carried him Loan adjacent to be hurled downward I ly the next great throe of trembling nature. hitching post, and laid him carefully ' help! help! 1101)1 for the love of • down in a puddle of water. This done, the battle-scarred veteran went into the " ott, hel p I' I shrieked in the very ag- ony of my despair. olliee ;lad nd threw o his overcoat. lie • I had just divested himself, of the wet I looked up anti around to cateli sight f2,111111011t when the besmeared Heinen of m y g uide ' li"ie, with a "' lnnen"- aid„ frantic and frathing„nshed in. 'ltle prudence 1 could but admit, in 'my ' Where's—wherd's—that con—=, ' dire extremity, had sought his own safe- 'ls it me, sir?' quietly asked O'Neil. ty in flight. 'Eh ?—itlajor Robinson P. I had nothing to rely upon but the mercy of Heaven, and-I prayed to Clod 'At your service, sir, for anything but to go wombat.' Its I. had never prayed before, for a for giveness of my sin's, that they might The lieutenant cowered, and shrank away before the storm and smoke not follow me to judgment. stained uniform of his chief; and on It savig-ht be a second, it might be a , the next mornint , he was misslncr, he minute, it might be: an hour, that 1 had hired a man 1 3 () drive him to Isrortii .should have to undergo a living death; but be the time long or short, I felt that (--. ',„ ° ,,T;', a .. 3',', Bur i n ~.., ..g_ ~ t f l g n ' i l l i g, _ l , i _ L ; and those nit" presence saw Otero was no escape from a doom which ; I V ' I ' i ' ( 1 ) " 1 :: 0 " . :! e t . tu " ever now makes me grew pale and " shudder when 1 think of it. Above me, a clear, blue sky—beneatl use a black and horrible abyss—arouse me, vapors that made my brain grow dizzy. Rumbling and hissing sounds win - ned me that another convulsion - might take place at any moment, and another would Inc the last, of me. :Home and friends 1 should never see again, and my tomb would be the voleauie eleela! , . -, 1 strove with the madness of despera tion to disengage my anprisonedlimbs, but I might as well have attempted to move the mountain itself. Therel was fixed and fastened for the terrible death I was awa4ing. 0 God of Heaven! what a fate? , All at once 1 heard a shout, and, look ing around, I beheld with feeling&that cannot be described, my faithful guide hastening down the ta Ide s of the orator "there's 1!EMEIIIMI OM!! to my relief. lie had fled in terror at the first ominous demonstration, but had nobly returned to save me if possfl ble, by risking his life for mine. Warned you; master,' said he as he came up,' his 'eyes starting, and his countenance expressive of commisera tion and terror. You did,'•eried but .forgivo me and serve me, for 1 am perishing.' - will save you if 1 eau, or perish with you., • The noble fellow instantly set to work With his iron-pointed stick to break the lava around my limbs; but had scarcely n►ade any progress, when again the earth tre►nbled, and the rocks parted, one of them rolling down the chasm with a dull, booming sound. I sprang forward-1 seized a haild of the guide— we both struggled desperately, and the nest moment we had both fallen, locked in each other's arms upon the verge of the pit, and any moment might see us both hurled to destruction. quick ! quick !—there's not a mo ment to be lost !' cried the guide. 'Up! up! and run for your life P staggered to my feet with a wild cry of hope and fear, and half carried by my faithful companion, hurried up ,the sloping sides of the crater. As we reached the edge • above, the ground shook with a heavy explosion, and looking back, I saw, with a horror which no pen can describe, the dark, smoking pit, where we had so lately stood. Without waiting to see more, I turned and lied over the rough ground as last as my bruised limbs would per mit. We reached our horses in safety, and hurrying down the mountain, gave the alarm to the villners, who joined us in our flight across the country till a safe distance was gain 'd. A few days lattfr, when the mighty and long extipet Heela was convulsing the island, and pouring forth its tre mendous vollime of melted lava, I was far out upon the Alantic, upon my way home, where I devoutly thanked (Awl again and again that I had lived to tell lily wonderful escape from a death in its burning crater. Settling a Swell kN INCIDENT 01"111 I; 5',1 It \V. Robinson was ono of the best and bravest of all who fought dur ing the war. Six feet and an inch in his stockings ; broad, full and massive of frame ; of perfect, form ; bronzed almost to an Indian hue, from long ex posure; he was not to he passol by un observed. lie was a graduate of _Bow khdil College, audalawyerhy•prolession. h.: entered the service as a Captain of the Fourth (mounted) Battery of Maine,. and after long months of hard work and severe lighting, during which Banks, Sigel, Ikurnside and Ifooker, learned to honor and prize him, he was made chief of artillery with the rank of major, and took command of the artillery brigade of the Third Army Corps. It was shortly all er Ibis that he came home to old Oxford County on a furlough. I met, him :IL Waterford, while on my way to Conway, N. 11., and had a plenantehat with him ; and by f:u• glee most pleasing thing he said to mice was that, he should meet me at A six-year old boy was asked by his Randier to write a composition on the subject of water, and the following is the production : ' Water is good to drink, to swim in, and to skate on when frozen. When I WaS a little 6aby, the nurse Used to Lathe me every Morning in Walk'''. I have been told that the injuns don't wash themselves but once, in len ye:u•s. 1 wish' was an injun !' Francis Egerton, Duke cf Bridge water, never would let any one come to him—he always would go to them : For,' said he, 'if they come to me, they may stay as long as they please. It 1 go to them 1. can stay as long as 1 please.' —Au unnecessary Reform—Thu abo lition of surfdom at Long Branch. CONSTITUTION OF THE EARTH, &c. NUMBER FIFTEEN .To Sigma :---In order to intelligently understand an argument, it is requisite that terms made use of should be dis tinctly defined and understood. Two persons may enter into a disputation, both in reality maintaing the same posi tion though apparently diametrically opposed to each other; this apparent op- 1 position springing from a misconcep tion Of;terms used. Now my theory is that the earth and all the heavenly bodies belonging to this system are living organizations, each part of each having certain func tims to perform, and all the parts and functions of each operating harmon \l io ;sly together as a whole; and that) lh's organization is analogous to, the' I tn like, the organization of the animal and vegetable body. The definition of life, in man, in the worm, the jelly-fish, the oyster, the bird, the whale and the trout, is the same, though- man is almost entirely different from the worm, and the bird from the whale, and each from each. You \\*mild not say that the angle worm, which lives in the earth, or the maggot which is engendered in thelllth of the cess-pool, or the lisp whose habi tat is the wider, or the muscle which never moves from the rock to which itt is 'attached, is any less a living organ ization than mini. We have, too, the living animaleuhe that float in the air, act as poison in the blood and burrow in animal flesh, so small as to be invisible to the nailed eye, and yet we never think of denying that they are living organizations. We take a powerful microscope and examine the water front. the stagnant pool, and see in it an inialculie so small that a million of them are contained in a single drop. We turn our eye - from them to the elephant, and never for a moment doubt that both are living organizations, though the tirst is almost infinitely small, and the other, as coin pitred with the first, almost infinitely huge. . Let us suppose that these small ani nialeuhe are endowed with sight, hear ing, .i.e., and also with the meulty of comparing and reasoning, and let u.s suppose that a race of them hi the jungles of India located on the body of zui elephant, are engaged in speculating upon the nature of the body on which they live, and upon the various similar 'homes whieh they see psi limning their evolutions in the neighborhood. Would their perceptions of the nature of the eh:pliant on which they live, or of the other elephants which they see abodt them he any clearer than Man's concep t den of the earth, or of the heavenly Lo oil ieb xi liich lie sees r,:volving around him ... I. imagine that their knowledge of the eteruir of nature would, both that of man and the•aninialenlie, be, very much alilw, but that the latter like man Nvould have but a faint, concep tion of the vast. interior of universal nature. . Let, us suppose still further that one of these imunaleuliti SllOlllll blalt the theory that the elephant, 'was a body emnposed of similar materials :is him sell and his 1)11411er 11 . ,111111t1.10.11:e ; that the elephant on V. liltth they tiro 3111111 nourish during, these.ephemeral exis tence of a few days or hours, was not , h mass of dead matter created by some ~....•. -1,-•.-, I-. (lie vSpeel:ll. benefit of allillitliell1:12, bill a living organized be ing analogous' to theniselve;s mid hiritt nig :t part, of one stupendotili whole of living existence whose law is eternal lite and eternal change. What, a shout ~t derision, might we not imagine would go up from these gaping LlM puts, at, a theory so strange, co improb able, and to them so ridiculous, because to them so incomPreitensible 1 1,(4, us pursue this thought a little furthpr. Huppose these almost infinite ly small anunaleuhe should hear the rumbling of the gases, engendered by the chemical change:; going on within the elephant, of the food taken into the body ; Or li viler in the neighborhood of some diseased' purtuberance, or boil, upon the body of " their living world" should listen to the low sounds produced by the effervescing of the diseased tis sues, or should see the oVerflow'of the putrefying tutst- it burst volcano like front its prison, and overwhelmed in its liquid mass thousands - of their fel low animaleulte, would they cOmp c lient' this, to them, terrible convulsion, or for a moment imagine that this ter rible disastrous oveillow of pus, or hot disintegrated tissue, bore any analogy to operations going on within and upon themselves. 1 make the above remarks to call the attention of yourself and others to the similarity of the relation between man and the earth lie inhabits, to the rela tion between the smallest living exis tence and the largest living existence tet the earth, and to the apparently an alogpus positions they occupy ; though tlleo':dilleitatee between man and the earth is almost, immeasurably greater than that between the smallest known aniantlenhe and the largest animal of the present or tiny fernier age. -- In your note of enquiry of .1 illy 14th, ycitt ask me to explain " to which class of diseases earthquakes and volcanoes belong," and further "if the earth is an organized living animal, do you think it has had, or ever will have, oth-pring? Is the moon a child of the earth': Is the earth a child of the sun ? Are all the planets of the solar system brothers and sisters, having the same common parent, the sun ? Is our sun the child of some other sun or planet?" I judge from the perusal of your note that ;N:Oil ask liaise questions frolll a sincere desire to learn fully what this new theory is, and to, what it leads; and further that you have something more titan a mere vague notion that the ordinary crude ideas of the struc ture of the earth are somewhat errone ous. Von have probably read the the ories of Herschel and Laplace, have been somewhat, familiar with works on microscopic life and have been struck with the wonderful similarity between the theories of these two astronomers, as to the formation of worlds and the actual propagation of life among sonic classes of the world,Of 1 cannot, however, afford to have you attribute to me a theory 1 have not put forth. liecause I have called a growing vegetable a living organization, it does not follow that a vegetable is an animal. Thu whole living physical world is by general consent divided into animal and vegetable, and yet there are whole classes I that appear topartake or the naturekif both ; and asyou go down in ,the stale of nature, you limn classes that science hardly knows whether to call animal or vegetable. Concede the doctrine that the whole planetary system is made up of living individual organizations, you need not necessarily call them either animal or vegetable, though they may partake, as far as hie is emicerned, of Alio nature of both. There may be a planetary life as well as au animal and a vegeta ble life. 1111 1 contend for is that (led has pur- tined one plan throughout, in the crea tionof matter. I flo not go back to the Beginning. When that was, neither you nor I know. All we lc.now about it . is that in the beginning wits the be -I,onning„, and we assume that the begin ning was God. We cannot compre Mend in our own coneolousnees a begin =II ning, for to eamprehend that we must comprehend a period 146 re the begin ning of all things, when •there was nothing, and the mind cannot compre hend nothing. 'We must, therefore, take all •things as we find them. We can in a measure comprehend the uniVerse as it is, but can we comprehend why it is and. l whcaz it lirst was. low w e ilnd in 'all living nature, that i 4 i i all nature recognized as having an 1 "org inized.. life, a system by which its kind is continued. Vegetable and ani mal lifelias a beginning and an ending as far as the individual is concerned, yet it makes itself perpetual as a class or family by a system 'of propagation widely different in afferent classes, yet analogically alike. The seed from the living produCes its representative, and thus continues its kind, or as Moses puts it in the first chapter of the Bible, " 0 . 1183 and herb yielding seed after his kind, and the tree yielding fruit whose seed is in itself after his kind." Such, being the leading principle by which iVing nature is continued, the questions which you ask as to the of and origin Or parentngelof the earth are very proper ones, bedause if the earth is a single isolated being, without origin or deseen tin analogy to all acknowledged living nature, and created by a single exertion of the Di vine Will, ill accordance with no law of nature, and to end its isolated exis tence by being mechanically destroyed; then we fail to make the first step in the proof of its living organization. As to .the other question about vol canoes and earthquakes, it naturally re sults that, if the earth and the heavenly bodies are living organizations, then they will be subject to the sante gener al laws and the rattle irregulatities as other I iving organizations. I ant not sure Hint the term• Wm - /mil is properly :Tidied Lu vc lbatioes and earthquakes, or even to th appar ent diseases or irregularities of animal and vegetable life, any inure than it would be if applied to the safety valve of a steam engine. But °cliffs here after. . J. E7gEl:l'. Wel'shot°, l a. , August 23, IfG9 Letter ;Prom Wisconsin Ctsll . l,),ltb IWe - id tlit• A g itator. As I was Opel) it school-boy in your town and have many pleasant recol leetions thereof, and many acquaintan ee); Whonl t have not heard of in sixteen t•Ncept, through your valuable paper, awl litany of them have not heard front me, I thought 1 would pen a few lines' for your paper, not. only to let my friends know my whereabouts, hut also live them a history of this ,part of the not 11-west. ,Sixteen years ago I livol in the Court House and was what the people tailed " turnkey." I also attended school at the Wellshoro' Academy Wiled 1 tosford was prin cipal. There l travelled up " the hill of science," perhaps slow, but did learn untethiu ; not. ill se'lool, then at the Court _House, for I rt member once letting a colored individual out of his cell to empty a pail of ashes. 1 - le emptied a of iedies into Illy taco and eye)-. , , and then ran for dear life, hid, niter all that, did not get- away.---,- Well, I think this is history - enough of myself in NVeilshoro, and Malan who knew toe then \V - 111 reliteldber MC by the above. lived ill ilidittllft ten yearS to Ist Mill ell, lit which time I came to i , consin and !sought a farm, where I now reside. I purchased a farm of 100 sties, acre; unproved, and this year my oft profits therefrom tall sprint; 1 crops) will not fall short of •.: , 800, with common prices for farm products. ant a little moro than two hundred miles not thrwcst from Chicago. The country for many miles around me is nearly level, except occasionally tt low blutr or small lake.' The most of the laud is tiptop farming land—like all other countries some Nair tAselhats:— Thei e ale t housands or neres about here that have been cropped from twelve to seventeen years, With lit) !dandle. Or any kind of fertilizer, and yet produce good erev. The staple productions are wheat, rye, oats, corn, buckwheat, po tatoes, turnips and rutaltagas. \Ve are now in the middle ()I' harveA, which is rattier late this year._ • We.have had a verb - cola, wet season up to the time of the eclipse. Yours, OUT WEST. Plainfield, - Wis. Aug. MG9, Foun'on FivE T ItouF3A - Nn Nos.—Mr. S., or Kentneky, bo the story. goes, is the ov, 1101 . or, a huge farm, and lisps.— Once on a tithe his overseer told him he blooded some hogs on 1 110 place. . ' Very well,' SityB Nlr. S., go and buy ror - io . live how th and pigth, right awar, and h i lt them on the farm.' Tia, marlt..custred to obey, and that without questi I ning, asked : 1 ' Shall I to be the money to pita:base. with '." No, thin. Theylall know me. Aenk Amu heic—Pll pay tor them or give you the inOney to pay for then] when you gc:l. 110111. 1 The oVertzCer twat his way, and• iii two weeks rettirned, When the follow ing conversation look place : Well, Mr. S., I can't get that many 1 have ridden all over the. coun -6ry;all ahoul, and can kitty but between eight or nine hundred: Eight or nine hundred what?' Eight or nine hundred pigs.' ' Eight Or nine hundred pigth ? Who . . told you to buy that malty pigth? Are you a fool?' You told me to buy thein, two weeks since. 1 have tried to do it.' Eight or it hie hundred pigth? -I never told you any thuth thing.' ' Ito( you did—you told toe to go and my four or livt? thou;,;and didn,ll do no thuth thing. I told •on to go and buy four or live thows old their little pigth, and you have lour it, I thonld A, farmer in ) a remote district of the Yorkshire wolk luPt country rector who had been two years absent on trav el. ' btr. hector,' said the farmer. you've been to the Iloly I,a„nd, I hear.' ' I have, John, and got safe back, you' sec," Well,' said John, often thou't like to hear about that spot. It's a. tine country, I say.' Well,' said the rector, I saw Lebanon, and Jerusalem, and the Twelve Palm Trees, anti the \yells or water in the Great Desert ; and we went across the Jordan, and went up Monnt•—" Exeuao tuc interruptitt . you, Mr. 'Rector. ' - ;aid the fartger ; but, if it be a testion, Itua W aS turnips lookin' der Cellars that :t f .,1 with insects be prON ith which to k e ep arijok' fwid. These t a ta t ..., mo od, In IJe :o-oni•crl fteiptently. up on ! t win 4reen leave 4 a sage, or tain:y, s od ~ . .„pr. i gs Of soul horn wood s h m od he replit`ki With fresh ones when dry'. The legi4 of these table.. should he :-et, in pans of watch.; to be kept tilled during - the summer ; this water and the leaves will be the de struction of red emmets, black ants, and sometimes huge vermin. Keeping wood in the eellar (Men brings inseek. there. Amy dog that runs up to every one he sees, and wags himself all over, Il * ) NO. 36. = JOBBING DEPARTDIEIVT. Thoproprietorehavestookodthoootabliehme with a now a vario assortment JOB AND CARD TYPE AND EAST TRESSES, and aro prepared to execute neatlyand promptly POSTERS, HANDBILLS; CIRCULARS, BILL. HEADS, CARDS, PAMPHLETS, &0., &o. Deeds, Mortgages, Leases, and a full assortment of Constables' sod Justices' Blanks on hand. People living at a distance oan dopondon hav ing Moir work Bono promptly and sent book In return mail. 4 Fall Brook Mines. We extract from th 9 Corning Journal the following notes of a trip of the Ed itor, Dr. Pratt, with a company, to the Fall Brook mines. It will repay the reader: We reached Fall Brook at a quarter past eleven, and stopped at the spacioug Hotel, which is kept In an excellent manner by Mrs. Phillips, formerly of Rathbonevillo. Mr. James Heron, the Manager of the Coal Property, gavetho party a cordial greeting, -and devoted his .entire time to promqte . the enjoy ment of all. After dinner Mr. H., provided con veyances for the Ladies, to carry them , to the mouth of one of the mines, called Drift No.;l 3. They had previously pre- _ pared, for the trip into the mines, by discarding hoops and putting on water proofs. A train of small cars filled with straw, each car seating two per sonst 3 was in readiness. Miner's lamps were lighted and distributed among the gentlemen, who were thus compelled to exercise extreme caution, lest the,straw and dry goods of the respective cars should be accidentally ignited. With a yell from the driver the mule that furnished the motive power sped into the darkness. The excavation is generally about live feet high by eight broad.. The walls are of coal, and the roof of slate. (`The vein of coal ranges from three to fkve feet in thickness, and the slide rock tibove is therefore blasted away to ensure sufficient height for the mules. After proceeding about 1,500 yards, over four-fifths of a mile, the, train halted. We were at the end_ of that route. , Near by, the miners wore at work with the, pick, lying on their sides, cutting away the base of the coal to the depth of perhaps two feet. Oc casionally there is a fall of coal upon the toiling miner, whose limbs or life ay thus be sacrided. After thiS ex teavation a hole is drilled diagonally,iE: to the coal, at the seam, close to thelh cumbent rock. This is filled with powder, and then the charge is explo ded by a slow 'Match, the explosion throwing down a huge mass of coal, and the concussion reverberating thro'- out the caverns of the mine. As one was ready for applying the match, our party With invited to remain, but for prudential reasons were requested to step into an intersecting " street" to avoid the missiles. The workmen hid behind the supporting posts of the roof, and the charge was fired, and from the report and the fall of the coal, one might easily haNie imagined, the roof falling in to imprison him a hundred feet beloW the surface. We had omitted to mention that on our inward journey, in order doubtless to propitate the ruiners, and prevent all contrasts of complexion, Supt. Gorton drew his hand over the drizzling roof- ing, and smeared the face of the lady in the next ear. She pluckily followed suit, and soon the faces of all the party were sooty, or deusely striped with coal-dust. It looked as though indis criminate kissing had been in order. In returning we tact several trains at , passing places, and halted at a crossing to allow another to- plunge into the cavernous depths of, the mine. The boys who drove these trarbs looked like imps of darkuesS,' and as they yelled at the mules or thus recognized each oth er, the lamps shedding a sickly light, the deep darkness in the distance, the roar of the blasting, the rattle of the cars, the rush of the train as we sped onward, all seemed to indicate that we had reached, by a short cut, the pre cincts of the mythological pandemo nium, and were thus doomed to wander itydelluitely through its unknown depths. light of day soon shone in the distance like a star of hope, and then we emerged into the broad and beauti ful world. The transition from the coolness of the mine to the open air was such that we looked around expec- Ling - to see the huge tire that is kept burning to secu re the proper ventilation of the mine. Fall Brook contains a population of about two thousand five hundred. The dwellings are mostly neat and comforta ble. In two or three locations there are regular streets laid out. A church hap been recently built. We had not time to visit it, nor to go about the "settlement." Neither could we visit the spacious store of which Mr. C. L Halsey has long had charge, where a couple intending to be married can be fitted , out at an hour's notice with house-keeping efreels, even to cradles, and where air sort's of goods, wares, and merchandise are. kept for sale. There are now about 30(1 miners em ployed at Fall Brook. They work abOut eight hours daily and their earn ings are large. Fifteen years ago this was lan entire wilderness, but the em inent sagacity and business enterprise of Hon. John Magee, deceased, devel oped its resources and planted there a tlonrishing village. He was very ably seconded in this by the late Duncan S. Magee. This Coal proper,ty is worth many millions of dollars,land it is a fact that when lion. John Magee began, the work of exploring the tract for coal, lie was past• sixty years of age, a time when most men wish to retire from ac tive Pursuits, instead of assuming the immense burden involved in the work of pushing forward such au important enterprise. "'There is no accounting for taste." We chew tobacco, the Hindoos and the Patagonians guano. Our chil dren delight in candy, the Africans in salt, while the Esquiinsux leap for a bit of tallow candle. To us turtles are a savory dish ; the French revel on frogs and snails; other savageii og snakes. - —On a tombstone. at Atlantic city is the following inscription : "Here lies below a tailor dead, His name was Edward Prim, . lie cabbaged buckram, silk and thread, Till Satan cabbaged him." Josh Billings divides the human race into three classes i- ' Those who think it ie so, those who think it ifiti't so, and those who don't care a,d—n whether it is so or nor' Of 'these classes the last is the most objectionable. To regard to wonian's rights, - Rev. lney Smith remarked, many years ago, that the dear creatures had the power in their control, for' they had only to be all of one mind, and the human race would be wiped away like al old sum in multiplication on a slate. A bachelor remarking that a hot flat iron was good to I:eep the feet warm iu winter, Was answered by a blooming young lady, that as very great improve ment had (lb:covered on that in - vention. ' Papa,' saLi Mr, ilrown'a youngest son the other day can I go to the circus No, my ' bey, alleetionately replied 11r. Brown?; you are a good boy I will take Au to see your grantt mother's gravo•sothe A lot no one covets-11 lot in the cem etery. QUACK-a doctor whose science lays in his bill.