1
. ; . - .... . . . . -. I. .• ' , . , - - ; - -...•-.: .•. ,', - . ..• ,• t' ! •• 1 . •I . , .•.• •1 •, ' 4 - ••• .• :_ -.4• ------ ____— —,. t VOL. 'XIX. ! i 1.,-,.. ... •A. al (4111)t* Aottiiiitt . 7 ~ . . . L t•OXilailltlin XVltal 7usan.av nv ' 1 ; / i\ 13411E4.2•Tri1Eg 4tAts R.C3O - si * , - 1 r V. ,4N F 5, . ~ A, .Itt. nor. i & el Lama :—52,00 per annum in advance. - I RATPR OP ADVERTISING. _ . . _---------------. Ittee. lin tin. 31n. 4111; .400 1 hiCol 1 Col. 1 Week $lOO $2OO $5OO El (X) 85 00 $9OO $u 00 j vioAs IGO 300 400 6po 70011 00 16 Od sit'oela 200 300 6,00 800 800 13 0 , 1 Is 00 plutdb I '1 60i 4 00 6 00 7 00 11 00 15 00 20 00 iVontbe' I 00 000 900 10 00 12 00 20 00' 25 00 11)0013 500 'it 00 12 00 13 00 15 00 25 00 35 00 i'.•loidlti 900 12 . ,00 00 18 00 20 00 22 00 35 f)o 00 00 Sear. 00 r. 11 Irl 25 CU 28 0() i 5 Ob dO 00 100 00 F J.., -- - , xatotttsutneuts are calculated by the Inch In length 4 a outaam, and Any less apace is rated ai a full inch. 0 Foreign advertisements must be paid for before In- •.: , r tiou,eicept on yearly contracts, -when half-yearly ;,hymentsin advance will be required. Lic•ineigs Noxious in the Editorial columns, on the 'Wad page. 15centa per line each insertion. Noll- 11i 0530014 for loss than 04 1.,00.k1. NOTICV.9 in Locat mann:alp:o cents per line it ~e than Ave lines ; and BO cents for a notice of Ore :see or lees. veroctienis.NlS of M.VIRIA.6na and DzaSsalneerted. :It; but all obituary liete•Pa will be charged 10 centa It lies. ' nsciAL Nortars BO par cent abOverevlarrates. rclassCAmis 511ues °rinse, ss,fril per year. ~ ' -,.-... , 41 r- 8U15Me...98 , - Carcis— . " 1.1. ZGriG ...---:---' -• ." .----=--..—.. ,i ;a, eapirp4X.R.: •4- . ,', 'l 4 _, Ir. ,a; .11311140:1. ~, lElatehelder Li Johnson, - I.l..tattiu•ara •ot Monuments. Tombstones. Table 14e, Com:item& c. Cali and see. shop, Wain et, ..t Mite Foundry. Velleboro, Pa.—July 5, 185% . A. Redfield, i; !•. 11.55 N-1-7 AND GOUNOELLOit AT LAY...-Collect- i vas paoraptly attended to.—filcasintrr The& court- :7 1 , Penn's,. jr.A 1, 18:'2-9m. C. IL Seymour, `,iOSNEY A LAW, Vogt, Pa. All business on- ;csteta tc his care will receive prompt attention ,A67% Gen. NV. Merrick, J. C. Stra n g, LANEY AT LATi . & DISTRICT ATTORNEY.- -,itk J. B. Nllea,Esq. Virellsbato,Pc-Jau.l,'72, C. N. Dartt, Tuat ti made with the Mar /51PBOVEWMCS: give better' itittieraction: than any thing eLe i , a Often to Wright & lli9gk. Wella- o:• ‘3,:t 15.187'2. J. B. Ni ofi,s- ii LA.W.—Will attend promptly to bus. Vti tarutted tJ tale C111•0 In the counties of Tloga I Pater, (Mee" on the .venue.—Wellsboro, Ya., 01. IS/. Jno. W. Adams, "Al:it'S )T LAW, iNloandagt, Tiusnycinitity, Pa isttbalea to.--Jan. L. Peek, , I;NEY AT LAW. Allelattusi.vouiptly collected ...with W. B. ninth. Knovitile. Tivga Co., Pa. C. 113. Kelly. Crpettery, China and OISUBS ware, Table Cut- :l and Plated Ware. Alan Tubb) spa douse Fur• l'a.,, gapt. 17, 1872. ..1111). W. UaNEY AT him 1 tis ru-mukciy at : tended to.-011toe Isl, cloo; south 51,Asheuu 6 Faer's store. Tioigs, Tioo county, Pa. 1, 1672. Armstrong & Linn, xiers AT LAW, Williamsport, Pa. e. Asuerrirozio. ,1 an LINK, Jan. 1,1972 Wzni B. &aid), Ingham, M. D., a6PATHIST, °Oleo at hie reetdanoe on the .tlO —W , Alsboro, Pe., Jan. I, 187/ 90,e10;., Conte -S."; Ce,,, Enva, 241.-IW:sive money . 1 1.411, ,tiLt nCtei, ateir dri.1213 on Nnw I,, ty CailetUcts prAnp9l .. Ana I - 1 -Li nEiLEY, Wucla VINE Cit.c.IDALL, 1 1372 rll-13) Co t-re Pi . trkhorst & Co,, ,11>3,sPa PA.REIMIET, 1:7, PAr;.a-acb,ll, C P.1..:-:1304 'Vale now4e, . . " - Litt:, e.t. A: ip.3.6, PzurlK.t..% . 'llili 6 in g, .., .:3 condi ilLak tc; ti.,:arimodiato the travel- -4 hil: in i, eupgrf or nistur6r.--.Ter. 7, 1972. Petrolititn. Hquse, iff- 1 - 0 , bA., c..., loge. n.O mar; and Yeaat t2,ar!ea tz.a mt,r,t.ou Ly:•••,0 t,i a it 7t•• IS7I Air.. Mary E. Lamb. ?" t i h••,• it loud.* ai,d the. tnat ale iLat eu? . .aoti Ulu ../J3ll bllSinin thia nud that story, nest door to the blucl: . 4, 4r/a ,^z Wltliatue.—Mu9. E. E. Evar.aht. has Pox the tusking kti.l usuiroiTiffeleDartMeikt and [lre tar attest ou es, luelvely fo 12,12.-tt. ellisboro Etiotet, COB MAIN ST. t irfl AXENUE, Wellsboro, sot..BUNREL, Prop'r. I I.4ular Hotel lately kept 1,) B. B. Holiday. :in-.tar will sp.are tlkl rains ( 43 make it a first- All the staged arrive and depart from this ; t iopdLoatln•tu attendance, irrLiverl THE OLD ISDISYLVANIA gousv the Townsend House Rua 'bale ociuptla by D, a Holiday, has been retittod an 4 PP!' l °" ll 'y , 1 . Ft. 'Ev ie 014. N Oil, -e h4py to accommodate th's oi3 friends o! l st rcr l reasonable rates. A.T. R. O'CONNOR. ESTATE F()11 SALE. I.:tscriber offer's§ for sale libt 14a1 catate in the ,1; Intern part of the borough. to 'suit imam. Gt the premiaes is likely situated to lots. and pasture and timber iota. ' 4la covered with timber is well wooded with 14 Lad hemleck. The large lot on which he ~.r4l be sold off in village -iota, inclndl Wit 472.4zu ROURT RELS Y. . -, ' . . , . . . r , . . . . , ~ . , . .., . , • _ ,, , , 7. •-•.,--..-. . . ~.,_ , : , , . ~ .-- . , . . .. tt i ‘' C . , . ~ , . . ._ .. . ..,..., .. . ... .... ~..: . . . . , . . ..,.. .. , ~ _ ..-.r. . ---"'"”' '- ~. .1. 0'" -• ' - ' :t 7 .: ." -,,,•, a , J,,. ,....,-.,,,.;.:, - -, .,., at o,,-, .. y i , ll -- . , •,. ~,,„-, , -:'-• $:- . •ti? - 4itt ' ,. 44, ,,t , . . '-,--:-.-.. ,- ~ : . ~,.. .- , 111 . ' 111 , .-: ' ' tri.' ''sr - ' - , . , - •‘' ii ' AltKre t' l,- ;,.. , :r.,_...4, ;',t.3',..7r. ,' . - i ,;'. -7 1 . .` '.i . - Nitr ,•.--:, *" - Vi - ".•--. - iriii 'h - ~ s; ...: ' ri• , -), ~.. ...... ..F-1,•„.,. •[...rigAt, ,, '1": ..„:..,.. .-:. ~,4; 1-, . 'l'y; - 41 ,1 .1 v'' ': ,j ' ~ .., ...:•„ ••• l: ''''..;: l . - u s '.. , ),..* P.:./../...:,'. •'"-.1 •••• " I.‘ - !••••••• \/. . N '''- ..•.: , ' . ~. ‘O. . ,•tr '.i .: ' V- ,,.. . _. ~ z it..... _ I . - . ' :\f: '7.' ~.., . . •-•:. •-i % •-",; 2 .. , c t 4, , , , t 2, . - - -.-- -- , , - ..r , - f . yz'i- i - ", 1 ' ir - , Ir ' '- '- .7, . , :, „.„,,,. ' , 7' - ''.. i.'Z' . , : ,-; ' -1 . -.- :44 .:. 5 1,-i "': ( ;,. 4111':, , , z_t_ 2 ::-;: h. --...,„4' ,; ,-! `' ../:- iv' ' l 'l7 : ~ ~ - -•,. ' .:?5,.. .i ,,.- 11.- , . : A*414 41 ',11- Wi - flz, :.7'i l riVpa' .4:l '-. '-' . _ '42 , . . . ' I . , ..... , , . , . ---- ______ —,....--.......---.........................- 7.-......... ItAILWAYJTIME TABLES. EigtlfgWaWE Well shorn Lawreticeville It. it. Time No. 4.. _ TAIto Effect \luuda}• ono 3,.1, 1872. 12 2 h stations. 1 3 - Sf p.m. p.m. a.m. , . n.nt. p,m. Vl5O 5 ;t5 141 041 Ir. C:.cming, Dep. 800 .7 35 560 12 28 •1 ✓0 $ '$ 00 8 44) .4; 18 121:: 42:: Bdl Dc•p. Dutiuing -911 Udti i:2B 12 08 '4 19 S4O Lathrop 915 830 053 11 43 4 0.5 8 3.6 llogn, V,llavu 989 901 i 53 11 23 if 52 wl3 fiummund 343 918 7. 13 11 13' 3 4:1 893 Hill's Creek., ' 952 997 723 11 07 340 800 Holliday 32 37 929 719 10 ,57 3 3'2 7.53 Middlebury 'lO 03 u3B 138 'lO 49 327 7.17 Valley 10 08 943 7 .47 10 30 319 710 , Sinkeadalii '-10 10 951 759 10.25 310 721 Pe. Welitsboro, Arr. 10 25 1000 810 2 43 Cinirlestuti, 10 52 21C; , 11 12 ' 130 'Antrim, 11 45 '3 A. 11. 41(MITON, Sup't.f slosshurg Corning tt Tiogit R. R. -1-• Time Table No. a. Takes Effect -11°13day Juno Si, 1872. Dap.ol2' xaom calmao. I A /11.0ZaliV/10, D. 1 000 L m, ND, 3 10 45 a. m. 8 7 05p, m. I " —.1020p.m. 15. „. . ...... 220 p. m, 1 t. 15 G25 p. as. DEW= 1131111 BLOGSBURG. mouve 1T COIDTMG, do 2 45 . p. m. No. S 5 p. m. 705 p, m. ,• 4 —lOOO a.m. 720 m. 140. B 11 4.5 a. ta. A. H. GOIiTON, Sup't 8..4 O. R. B. H. SHATTIICE.,'Snp't Tins, R. R. go. ~ .flaiaNirisia• Railroad. Depot, toot of Pine Street, 77:41Lauaspert, Pa llielldep. ,WlllleLeport, 9,00 a. In. AC , COM,Thi !dation :ter,. Williamsport, p. m. Jdail arridla at Will tainepo,-+ a 10p. in. Accorainodaticn arrive at Williain.ept+rt,.....o.2s a in. An additional train Itaves Depot it Herdic Howse. ii"znsport, at P.OS a. Philadelphia, N. York, Boston ebd tr.tanneVate. points. Rettiriait , g, direct connection ie raatie at Williamsport with tretzte for the weal:. Ho change of car* between Philadelphia, New yak and Williamsport. GEO. WEBB, Sv't. Erie Rh'Way. ill;. TAsizz Anorrzn Jrwr. 310.: 187,2 Vow and Unproved Drawing Room - anti Bizaping Coacher, combining all 4noiern Improvement', are ran throng/4, on all traing_bstveart l'iow York, 800-boa- ter, Sc.apenaion Bridge, 0/ere- land and liestrrard STATICaS. 1 N. York, LSO Binietu , " Elmira, -, 270.1- 370. 5. 170- 7.7 NO. 3. 900 am 100 am 630 pm 100 p m 444 pm 9 451 m 500 sm. 840 am 026 " .12 Kt" 520 " 625 "' 707 " 120sza 6 ^ 68 " 617 " 1 26 " :. ...:, .. . Via'., 4, Pt'd Post, 4. Rotheat'r. tar Elorcevlie, 4, Buffalo, Hiag. Patti .4 Dunkirk: 4, 6 30Sup 260 /2 Oka 8 10 a m. / 265am 1 9 60 ;.H: 160 H DI ).0 :12 4, 7 25Bit 1145ata 1230 pip I 135 4. 10 82 .. I 20 Btt 1246p2 t36 pm ADDMOILS.L LOCAL TRAIRI WFAiIVARD 5 a. tn., except Sundays, from Owego /or Hornet's- rills and Way. 16 a. m.,omcept Sundays, from Susquehanna for Efrrneltscile and Way. 5 80 a. m., daily from flelquettertna tor: flarnellavale and Way. - " '4; ~.__ _ 110 p. m , except Sundays, from Elmita'for Avon; to Buffalo and Way., ..: 220 p. m.', exsept .kiurtisys; from ,13.1nebair.ton to Hornellevllle and Way. I EftAward 1 No. 4 STATICINS. itio• IV' i 1 No. 8.1 1 Dui/kirk. Lva 12 2'6,p m 1 . 1 1000 pm 1 - , ?..11/g.Falle,.. 145 " 6 ,50 pm 11012 pm 1 7 ISO raa Buffalo, IJO .. 1625 .. 11135 .• 1 745 " liornlove, .•1(1 OS Su p. 11030 -" 3lb e.m I'lo 50 " IlotLe/ter, .. 1400 p m 530 " . 1 800 •Cornlus., .. 7 2.5 .. 12 01 '.' 437 .. 1 1203 pm. Elmira. .. 803 " 12 40am 513 .. 11243 .. I.ll.ug'rutu.*. 10 10 ..9 35 .. 17Di .. 1 235 .. Sew 'Volk," 700 a La lI / 1 1 . 0 !. 1 3 30prn j„0,1;5 .. - -- .I7.44nONALLO:AtTft&I'S.3 F.ASI .VidtD. 5 tts a. tn. except gluuttaya. from flarlinlitt\ tlla .otvego and %Nay. 6 00 a.., flatly from Ifortt.lla rifle for tittsquctlematt and Wayi M 7 2tt a. tu4 except tintrlaya. from Huruellaville tut Itiagbauttoft and Way. 7 00 a. w. ' except Suudaye, from Owego tor SlltiqUe hautia end Way. ,. 2 00 p. in. ' exempt Sundays, from Fainted Post for Elmira and Way. , s„ e 150. p. oxrept suuaisys,- from tiornellsylils Susquehanna atsii Way. •Lily. tidays oteepte:l. bbtwoon Htuiquebautia nud Port Through As to all points Rent at the sery Low- est Rates. far sale itt the Company's office at the Corn- ing liipat. - Thin is the only stothorized Agency of the Erie Rail- way Company for the sale of Western Ticket fi in Corn- tog 'Baggage will he theeken only on Tickets purchased at tit..t Conlpaity'A _ JNO s. .1.13130TT, PP.SWC Ag't Northern :Central Railway. Ttatna arrive and depart at Troy, since June 9th, 1872, 49 follows nor.zuwAr:r.. CO 13111MOW. Niagara Expregs, 407 p to Salto. Express. al3p in Mail, 915 p m Philada "Express, 915 p rn Cincinnati Dap, 10 20 ain Mail 652 a to A.l / 1 . FISKE, (long Sup't. 1081." CyrDeSilL WHOLIifiALE DEALER IN Foreign and Domestic, Liquors WINES, ko., Agent 'for Fine Old Whiskiee, CORNING. •N. H. Houghton, Orr & Co., sfb YORK, PA. MontlZoftrers of "" Buggies, 'Sulkies, PLATFORM SPRVG, TRUCK AND 1., IatIIIIBER WAGON*, C:u J.LEE% SLEIGIiI3 AND 808 SLEDS Wo are pepared to do anything in our Line on sbor !loge.° gni In the beat wanner. B.&t Aiactlon gnaran teed- }IOUGIITOIT, OUR k co ELLSTI:4O , B COLES, Agents Wt:teS:oro. St:ny Fcr, July , 1872, E. B. Yor:ca E. B. . 3,1, t.:4:1 WErll.l ., Young & e 0t14)5 Young ".1. (2o ) haksel(eis and Statiotiers, and Dealere r, wir,dnw .*12,2,1E8, \ ' Window rtstures, IL.trlanqLtv Z7Ctl , i/10. Picturs Frarnes end G:ass, Pictures, all sorts, Coal I.?w Hlay, a netl.'e Blank all strts.4, Newmpal)elu, Niuslazlneß, V.'t it aig Dania. ..krtists Lits: ItOPf e, Hooke; ItMtglove 130ule, mid every cuticle in otir.lfua or --New York I.wlltes at (inc Dollar a month. ') --Elmira Dailies at 75 Cents a month. —Stit;serlptious fora wick. (r month, or year. -.Orders for Dooki4 notin Stock promptly attenii ed to —An Etpress package received Dom New i, rk cv nry day tre agentd of the Aueltor Line and tb.• Onion Line of U. S. Mall Ocean Steamers, Pasaug,e tt f to and Prow any point in Europe at the lowest rtaf Drans cold on any . Bank in Enrope of rnr r 9.11.1. rates-tit E.,'Xi:lnnige. - Jau. 24, 1872 .ly E. B. YOUNG k CO TO T4E FADIERS OF TLOOA 'COUNTY lAllt nosy bulb:llAT at my mauu fgetory, to LVA Xe vile, a auperior - FA.liNtrim zrLt,„ which poesesiwe the following adtantsges over all other d. It sepales rye, oats. rat and foul ?end, atict andkle, from wheat. 2; It deans Ilas seed, takes out yellow'eeed, end all otht , r seeds, perfectly. 9."-It cleans timothy seed. , 4. It does all other separating required of a in This Wilt of the beat and most durable tim- ber, In good etyle, and Is cold cheap for cash. duce. r I Will iii a patent Stare, for separating oats from wheat, to other mills, lon reasonable terms. lowrenzavillto. den. I, 11n. J. H. 144111E11. THE NEW sum MACHINE 6 4 1:7T1C: 6X:1.4,79 Latest ltaproveAL . 11f-nce BEWF. HAS No SPIRAL SPEING':;. W"EVERY 3 iTION POSITIVE. .- HanSelf Setting NeFdle and Improved SHUTTLE Tut; vicron v .11,1, be put out on trial for pai ties willique. and I ou easy, monthly payments Before purcluotinth call and evuniue ' the IriCTOll, et L. F. Truntan's atoralu Welishoro, E: JENNINGS, !!.gent. . Machine Sill:, Twist, Cotton Laid Needier or ail kinds constantly on N. 11.--Machine of 41 11 .- intlt repair ,, A LL ressonehle terms. soli. 9, 1572-43 tn. Tioga Marble Worics., I'll4E undersigned Is now plepared to execute ail Or. / dere for Tomb Stones and Nfounini-uts of either Italiait orßutland Afarble of the latest atyle and approve'i werkurinship and with dispatch. lie keeps conetautly on band both kincli of .71farble end will he able to suit all who may favor him with their orders, on ea maw:Labia terms am can be obtained In the country. FRANK ADAMS. ' Au. 1,1572, I ‘,, Parva Dom a--lifOgziti Gales. A narrow home; but 'lttley. still it Seenteth; : silent home, no stlr.or tnninit here. :' Who wins thlit pillow of no abrrOw dreametb, No Whirling &lines Jar Ms:sealed car: The'lired hand hes very calm' and quiet, The weary foot no More hard paths will tread, The great world may revave In clash and riot, To its loud auminons leaps'nor heart nor head. The violets Woom abote the tranquil sleeper, The morning dews tall gently 'on the graea, Antid the dalaies Eneela the lonely weeper; l;le knows not when her lingering footsteps peas The autumn Winds sigh softly O'er hie slumber, The winter piles'the pnow-drifte o'er his rest; Ho °pea not -care the flying years to number, The narrow home contents its silent guest. No baffled hope can liannt;!no doubt perplexes, No parted love the deep repose can chafe, No potty care can Irk, no trouble vexes, From mlsoonstructiou his hushed h ,, art la Rafe, Freed from the weariness of Worldly fretting, From pain and falliwe, bootless toll and etrite, From the dull wretchedness of vain regretting He ties, whose course has passed WAN; from Ufe . A narrow horse, and far beyond it Beth The land whereof no mortal lips can tell. We strialn our,sad eyes as tbo oplrit fileth. Our fancy loves on heaven's' bright hale to dwell Q-od r ebutirtbe door, no angel lip uncloses': They whom Christ rstsed no word of guidance said Only the firma speaks where our dust reposes, " Trust Him who calls unto his rent our dead." —412 The Tear Round. ,Managing a - Man. Nellie- Davis was the prettiest, sweetest,' best, and dearest little girl in Hillsdale, and when Torn Carter fell head overheels in lOve'sith'her, no one . blamed hinf in the least. And whet the parson gave consent, and they went to housekeeping in a cozy, bird- nest of a littleliouse on the south side of the town, everybody prophesied all sorts of happiness for the pretty 'Ade. ' And, truth to tell, I , 4ellie Carter was very hap It py. iS a very pretty thing to, go to house- keeping for the first time, with everything spick and span new, and shiny; and if you have some one you love very much for a companion it is still pleasanter. Now Nellie did love that greatblubber- ing TOm Carter with all l her Might and main, and there was only one thing to dis- turb her peace. She was the vefy pink of tidiness, and Tom was the most careless fel- low alive. I He kept his person neat and nice, hilt be kept his personal belongings anything, else. In vain did Nellie braid altlindsothe merino case, and,tack it inside the ;closet door for Tom to put his slippers in. Tom would in- gat in tossing them under the parlor sofa, "to have 'em bandy." ' In vain did she gently suggest that the racklin the hall was the plape- for his hat and overcoat; wet or dry, he would lay his overcoat on her pretty, smoothly-made bed, and drop his hat any- where. In vain did Nellie make a place for eve- rything, for Tom invariably tossed every- thing into some other place. Now little Mrs. Nellie was only human, and - Tom's slovenly ways annoyed her exceedingly.— 'She resolved,,not to spoil the peace of their cozy home by scolding, bit how to cure m she could not tell. She bore with him with tie patience of 'an angel, till one morning WI en he had gone up town she went into the parlor, broom in hand, and there lay Tom's big shawl right across the center table, ruthlessly crush;fig beneath it the trifles that lay' ,on the marbl top. I "Now, I can't have this, land I won't, t7 ' said she, as she raised the shawl from the delicate treasure and discovered the , ruins of a favorite Bohemian vase. " I don't know what to do, but this I will not have," she continued, with, a little bit of wifely snap, which every' gdpd wife must have. if she expects to get along at all with that occasionally unreasonable animal, a .1:111111.< ' " So”ie way must be discovered to cure Torn of such performances as this!" went on Mrs. Nellie, as she removed the ruins of the vase, and all the morning she, went around at her work with scarlet lipS closely com- pressed, and a little flash in her brown eyes which argued well for Mr. Tom's domestic subjugation. Woman's wit, having a witseldom fails to find a way. And when a determined lit- tle woman says " must" and "ioliall," mas- culine insubordination might aslwell surren- der at once, Before Mrs. Nellie closed her-bright eyes that night, she had arranged plans for that campaign against her' iege lord, who slept the sleep of innocence at her side, - But she meant to give him one more chance. So, after breakfast, when Tom drew on his boots and gave his slippers the usual toss under the sofa, she gently said: "Tom, dear, hadn't you better put the slippers In the case?" "NO, let 'em alone, they'll ; be handy to- night." " Bat, Torn, they look so untidy!" "Why, no they don't. A thing looks as well in one place as anotheri What's the use of a man's having ri home if he can't keep things where fie wants to?" " What's the use of keeping a woman on her feet all day to pick up things after you?" asked Nellie, without the least show of any temper. / , "Don't pick 'em up. Just let 'em alone, and then I can find 'em when I want ' s ,ni," declared Torn, as he gave her a kiss and took himself off. 1 And at the moment the door closed on him Nellie's red lips compressed again, and,her brown eyes wore the same lOok they had worn yesterday. " Waris it, then," she said to herself.-- "Now, Master Tom, we shall see who wins the field..' She set quietly about her morning's work, and when Tom came home to dinner every- thing was in its usual -good order. It re- mained so, and Nellie „busied herself with her sewing until nearly time for Tom to re- turn to supper. Then she arose, put away her work, and prepared to open the campaign. First, she put Tom's slippers where be al- ways left them, under the sofa. Then she tossed the shawl upon the piano, and his best bat Upon the center table. She brought some of her dresses and flung them across the chairs and on the sofa. Her furs and sacque reposed op Tom's especial arm chair, and her hest bonnet kept Tom's slippers company• under the . sofa; while her own slippers,lay on the mantel., And then, on thinking t,he.t feminine in- genuity could make no greater sacrifice than her Sunday bonnet, she sat down to her crocheting. Presently the door opened, and in walked Master Tom, Ile gave .a low whistle of surprise as he glanced at the unusual disor- der, and at Nellie sitting calmly in the midst with her crochet work, and then came into the room. i . "House cleaning, Nell?" he asked. , " Oh, no. Why?" said Nellie, looking up in sweet maconaciousness. 1 " I thought may be you had been! all," remarked Torn, drYly; as he loot 1 - a place to sit down. , I 1 i Nellie quietly pursued her v)tik. I Presently Tom said: 1 It l " Paper come this evening?l " Not yet," answered iNelliel , 1 I Tom gave a half sigh " Nellie, I met Granger up town, and he said he'd call around thiwevening." "Very well; probably he Won't ,come be- fore tea. It will be ready soon," 'said Nel- lie, working away in demure innocence. - "Hadn't you better pick up t hinge a little before he comes?" said Tern, glancing around the room. ,' " Oh, *a; just let 'eau lie," answered Net- .lie, sweetly. " But they look so bad!" stu'll Tom. " Oh, n s t o. they don't," said Nellie, as sweetly t s before. "A thing looks as well in one pl ce as another." ' ' ! Toni' face reddened. - I " I ne er saw your room look like this be- fore," li said, heSitatingly. :" I shouldn't like to h ve any one step in."' ~, "Why not?"said Nellie; "we might as well keep things handy_ What's the tlf , e, in having -a house if you can't keep things where you want to?" Tom's face grew redder and redder, He tried to loon sobee, and , then i broke into a laugh. " Oh, that's your game, is itr he said, "trying to beat me with my own weapons, are you, little woman's" Well, don't you like the plan?" said Nel- lie demurely. " No, by George, I don't,,) cried Toni. " Well, then, I'll make a bargain with you. As long as you will keep your things in their places I'll do the same with mine, and whenever you don't—" " Oh, Iva'," interrupted TiAn. that's [b.ed for " Come, ,WELLBOIQ,,. TIOGN :CQ,i- .14. A..„. GEO. O. DnltitY JOH FISITLER 4 ' DERBY . 4 i NISBIE '- , _.i , --, ,-----: ' . 4,IE_OVE: Piet rofornal troin'tlic city with ilio largest JUL Mock of -, . ,I3OOTS _A - Nl. ` SHOES edas i . r.,.. eunnitifive of ' Ladies' )i'id and loth Bal- moral s and Gaiters;‘ N Ladies, .111iSses, and, Babil4Shoe Geitts' Cloth, Boots 4- i_Srikotes l Prince,.4lbert edif . Boot.Y,,• - Boys'Rip Boots. Youths! Youths! Boots. In act, all Ithida Irepe' 111sti cS'omeu'a wear k‘pt rt. e tral-elnee Shbe Store. The beet EIt,WOU Wonou'a slloes ever offered In than marl;et. tie defy tno world C USTO:fg AV R you don't biglove7us, try Stir buy only t1“.1.:35t stook, Old have as goo;1 Caratt'at!trr< 1s njcniv can hire. REPATRINGr dime nzatly, anti with diepatpli, Leather, and Findings of .1.1 Livia ,‘o3traantly-tn hsral , Cask palid for Hides. Deacon Sti'inS, Pelte a 11(1 Furs Having justflied up oar eh:lves with a claCt446 stock, personalty selected for tuis market, we reepectfully solicit a fair share of trade. "Small probas and quick returns," we believe to be a good busiuspe maxim : and we hold the beet goods, to-be tba cheapest. We keep no ithoddy. Our assortment is awl:Meat to meet all aixesland tastes. -We 'invite our patrons arid the public generally to call end examine our stock. No trouble to show goods. Always to be found, one door north of p. B. Ilelley's t, 3latn Street, W4hshore, Pa May 1,; 1972: puutv r Fxvti,Eß P,TOGRA.PHY, AasLL kinds, stiles and sizes of Pictures taken and exeduted in artistic manner . at D. IL Naransore's ry, Opposite Cone Elcuss,'Llells'ooro. Portraits on Porcelain Plates. Nothing f,ner can be oi3 , :red than thew) beautiful Por- celain Pieturee in a velvet Ce.. 36 or tame. Their BOft• nose and delicacy are superior to scything produced on Iron or paper. 11) ou went a Good Picture. of rAueelf, go to Natal:to:B'a If you tar,t the ve,,y beat that (Au be bad, go to Naramorea. If you trautoometbtog tbatlooks like you. go to Nar- amore'e. Ifyou want an old baguerrnot) tin Atntrotype, or other Pleturee coped and enlarged, he can do that as reasonabiß as <uy other nian. They will be finished in India Ink, till or 'Water Colon) %lien desired Person 4 wiehing picttnea at gtoupe and will reeelVe eepecial atiout:o». A large Aatfortniont of Fru:ilea aaa Fferatag Muterlai coaatTatil on' baud. Ali kind, 4PictoreN FrAroma] to Ordeß N. D.—Don't ullateke th, phice., over A. 11.F,161.1.1:ah'e Dental 1141orne. Aprll24. 1872.-t.f. D. Et NARAIIORE. ;--- Now Boot, Shoe, Leather AND FINDIN(.; 4-Slesstri-m 1N THE FIELD AOAIN New Shop, New, Stock; atol tit t- clus;s I,\'ork I 4 NYTHE•R from a Thud Ch.•k to a ll<• lA_ hue of Ladies' Kid and Clttli, Bal- morals and Gaiters, Ditto Chi ldren,' s and Misses. Gents' Cloth, Morocco, and Calf Gaiters. Oxford and Prince Albert Ties. A rod line of OVERSHOES, and a fgll line of FINE BOOTS; rertgiug in Price from SAX° to $7,00, pegged and leTred CUSTOM BOOTS from $6,00 to $16,00, and worth the money every time Leather and Findings at the lowest rates, as uraal The Undoreigned having spent twenty years of his life in Welleboro—mnch of the time cn the stool of penitence. drawing the cord of affliction for the good of sole", believes ratiter in hammering than blowing. Wherefore, lie will only remark to his old customers and as many 'new ones as choose to give him a call, that he may be found at his new shop: next Poor to 13. T. Van Hones were rooms, with the best end cheep- ed stock in Tioga county C. W. SEARP. Vrellsboro, April 24. 1872 :: :IwEsDAAr .l _-,,,Dgepipgi ,17' 'lBl,. ,ITellie,, `l lll nwn up ilkeitrntui-,,you've beat tneAhls ," Only just, Straighten .up this' Afurtupto;auttlll never •tlirow• anything Adman. ttgniit. y 'There, - 116 w, 'let's kiss and untke.up, as the, children say." Nellie urns and laughingly held up •her aW et ttiOnthlor, It Ishii!~ of peace; and then, un(ler. the intluttnee of her deft fig I.sere, confuStun. was suddenly banished,•and when Oranger came amnia t o spend the e) ening, he deeide,d that, notysly had a pret- tier Wife or a tidier home than his friend Torn Carter. ' \Vise little Nellie having once gained pea- session*.ol' the inattisnotriai tietd, took care to lccep it. until Tern, NV :la- quite cured ef' Lis careless habit: 'S'Ornetlinea,be skilled , threatened with a rei l ii,se, 1)11aq -elite, friar mail of seolding, only had quietly t9;bring something, of her own and lay,it ,down beside whatever Tom had toased downoilid it was sure to be paaivay immediately, for Toni seldinn failed.to take the hint. And if static other little - whinan,..lis- wise and tidy' as `Nellie, takes - a bint also, thia story will littve'served 'its purpose.- _ Otarva,tion at Sea. Mr. ,latatia%Dugan,- who arrived in Itel,v York from -Sydrul, Cape Breton, yesterday, gives the, following account ,of a' wrecked brig which the schooner Lancaster (M which Mr. Dugan Was' passenger) came .up. with and boarded the - I.9th of September, On the right of the 18th a strong head wind prevailed, At different periods the captain's attention was drawn to a mysteri- ous object; now off the port, and now oti the starboard_bow. The hiokouts were con- tinually reporting the black hull that'llept in sight all the time, until the , captain gave his opinion that the object seen ahead was a dismasted and deserted vessel. The Lan- caster, was bound to Sydney, Cape Breton, from Charlottetown, Prince Edward's isl- and, with a cargo of produce, :and the wind increased BO Aitrongly before daybreak that the captain was compelled to order a large deok load to be thrown overboard in order to lighten the, vessel. Just , after dawn the unknown object hove in eight again; but none of those on watch could distinctly make out what it was, The captain however satisfied• himself that it was an abandoned , vessel. It rang eight bellsi,and the steward announced breakfast ready., While atbreakfast the second mate, Mr. Prior, hultriedtinto the cabin, and ad- dressing himself to the captain; said: "There's s abandoned hull adrift offtbe starboaril,quaiter; her spars are gone, and she looks to hafebeen a brig orbrlgantine." soon after Captain Martin went on deck the bull of . a,likrge craft was plainly discern- ible off the- start oard ',quarter, about two points to the nortlyilat the disman- tled vessel had been deserted there _VV7I.9 no question, as the heavy mass was beingloiss i ed about like log. The captain gave or- ders to bear away for the wreck, and at midday the,sc ooner Lancaster was, broad- side to the ab dolled vessel, It was a well- shaped,' stron ly-built hull, but the bulwarks and stanchion bad been badly dealt With by the eleme ts, and the whole was much weather beats At one bell, the wind had lowering of 'a tin, of the Lak mate, (Mr, Pr in chvga of and Mr. James ing wreck.'o presented itse Bled in canvl planks of aljo and sea, were lor half an hour after noon, o eubsided as to admit of the oat, in which Captain Mar- caster, and Nr. Butlidge, the or, Ftcond maw, remaining the schooner.) two -seamen, Dugan put out for' the drift- 'n boarding it a dismal sight f. Splintere, i span, entan- Is and rigging gear, and the ct torn asunder by ,the wind scattered around in sad con• fusion. ' More dismal still wire the "scenes which further mestigation brought to light. Below a heap of motley rigging, and, bro- ken by ite welght (f a spar %vhich lay across it, .wera ,the bones of a human being—a skeletoti:•„'!T*4cull. and ribs had been erushe&anost on a level with the deck.— Shreds of can as trowsers and a Guernsey frock were fouird among and near: the bones. Furtheretal revealed five other skele- tons. ;A 1410 covering of crisped flesh re- mained on four of the skeletons, showing that they had 'died more recently than the other two. Many of the utensils of the galley were found, and Otptain Martin made a' strict search among them to assure himself .whe- ther there had been any food on board at the tim e of the death of there men. Not a single remaining pot or vessel of any nature in the cooking department of the ill-fated craft contained the least particle of food.— This discovery seemed to satisfy the cap- tain that all - tin hoard bad Perished' from hunger—haring failed, after months of ea- ger eipectation and short allowance, to meet with anybelping hand. The spectacle on board the 'sepulchral bull - was at least appalling. The hardy sailors themselves. seemed to sicken at the revolting disclosure, and an ominous silence seemed to have been spontaneously determined on by the living ones who stood among the skeletons of the drifting hull, It was ascertained that the vessel had been rigged a b ig. Therhnll bore no name on its sternpost- On the bowsprit the word " GlenalvOn ' as barely legible. In the forecastle, which was almost filled with water, a most rarthly stench was discov- ered,•and only wo inert could be ,found to enter and remain long enough inside to re- port what they had seen there. There were two corpses on the floor, and one stretched across a "hunk." These• sad relics were removed on deck, and the nine bodies were arranged in line and covered in canvas by the captain's order. . The wheel house had been carried away, and fastenings of the rudder broken.— This, as the captain remarked was the work of some tremendous sea. The foremast bad been cut away to save the vessel from foun- dering—one of the extremest emergencias in a hurricane at sea. The jibboom was gone. and the entire craft, as she then ap- peared, was the most complete wreck Cap- tain Martin bad seen or heard Of in his nau- tical experience of nearly forty years, Entering-the cabin, a foul odor was dis- covered, bi:at not intense enough to forbid a thorough investigation. Toward the end of the steps ldading down to the cabin a fetid pool of water was seen. and the men had to wade through it in order to reach every por- tion of the cabin. "Between a stationary ta- ble and a couch the head of a corpse pro- truded from a berth in the-wall. and, when brought on deck, it was found to he in a state of .decay.. A buttoned jacket of good material, blue pantaloons, a flannel shirt marked " T. F.," and one boot covered the corpse. The chronometer in the cabin pointed to 4.30 o'clock; and on the station- ary table was an open Bible turned down- ward, a revolver with two chambers loaded, and a bottle containing a piece of paper up- on which was written• " Jesus, guide Oda to some helper. Irreifol God, don't let. us perish." The wort s were detached, and a hiatus occurred betlveen every two or three , id them, which ehoriw e that the writer must have been in either the lowest stage of de- bility or driven to thadneas by hunger, . In the captain's stet& room - hie corpse was found lying bent on ahe door, as though he had fallen from weakness, *addle struggling, with faint hoe, to save himself and men. lOn his bed were scattered hooks, papers, I ite.; but one sheet attracted particular at- ' tentien, it was dated "MARTINIQUE, May 30, 1872. " Dear Kate :—I will post this letter here, to assure you of my well-being; btu do not attempt to hazard an answer to this port; as you kill not find me here a week hence. I have kept all my.strong promises tb you, in spite of a thousand bad advices [from my comrades. I drink a little beer, but that is all. Your precious photograph is a Lille silent angel—at least I think it so—and I , read your letters over a hundred and a lama Bred times again. You say in yor dated' No. 16 Hope street, Liverpool, gm the old man was altogether turned in my itiyor when he heard of my having passed the board.— Now mind and keep him so until I get home again, when everything will be comfortable and jolly, Write to Hal's address in' St. John, 'yew Brunswick, for should it . not reach me there, Hal et least will know where I am. Wishing you good health and cheer- fulness and good fortpne, my 'own dealing lime, I am forever your own liohti.rt. " Rot' - 1 , U. li,km." The ship's regular papery were not found open, but Captain Martin took in; charge a neat writing desk found in the captain's trunk end lucked, There was a slate on the table in the cabin, which table was covered .by guards such as are used at meals in rough weather. The slate, intended for taking doivn the l _9g in rough, contained only Meg, ihl ivriling and-blurred- figures. ' The - Otp; taln's trunk contained numerous letters. Toward three o'clock a dead calm pre- vailetVand the boat's company that went on board the dismal wreck rowed back to proeure 'something to eat and drink. At seven p. att., the calm continuing, Captain Martin proposed to set out" for the ill-fated vessel again, to perform the sorrowful ser- vices of a burial at sea. For coffins a•quan- tity of old canvas was brought, and rude WO were quickly formed out of that inate- rini. At 6:80 &clock, the pale moon shin- ing solemnly over that lonely sepulcher of the sea, a long board was laid upon the sound portion of the bulwarks, and two bag s,'to which weights were tied, were laid down, and rattled as they fell. A lamp was held by a sailor on each aide of the tempoTiary hearse, and after Captain Martin bad read late usual service, the plank was lifted upward, whereupon the coffin bags and slfeletons slid into the sea. The cere- mony,jol.r, the party put back again for the .T.,ancaste ~ happy to quit the gloomy craft that had harbored so many dead, heard so many dyipg grOans, and such awful roaring of the wihd end sea that had caused all that death and destruction. Captain Martin has procured every clue, all of which he will give to the authorities at Halifax or Sydney, so that thetrue history of the ole- ?elvon may, be learned.—.N. Y. 2lmee. A Story of Society. About f rty years ago an heir was born to one of th families claiming Brahmin caste in this co ntry. If any such claim be just, we might rant It to the traditions, the cul- ture, the thorough breeding of this man's race. Cu 'ture and traditions and breeding were 'facts assured to them for so manygen- erationsth t they were the least self-assert- ant of h man beings. Philip, having reached m nhood, lived with his mother in the quietest of stately old mansions, on the quietest stiteet of the gravest of American cities. The house stood back among cen- tury-old hemlocks and oaks; it held a fair proportion of the few really fine paintings' there are in this country; there Were in it, also, one o i c two fine marbles, and on the walls som priceiess etchings. The old- faihion. ed r i rms were full of bric-a - brac-- the closets f marvelous china. Philip was a tall; darpt, lean man, with the erect carriage and high features of an Indian; something e had, too, of the gravity and o the red man. Rook, the liquor reticen dealer arou d the corner, seeing the fault- less fit of its boots and gloves, andthe thor- oughbred grays he drove, sneered at him every Morn ng for a " bloated aristocrat;" the colport ur and tract distributor looked at bric-a-ba and horses and inquired why these thing were not sold and the money _given to thl poor. some of us, perhaps, in bitter mood, watching 'him come out of church, might have questioned whether he and his cll Sfl were not serving God and Mammon. Neither Rook nor colporteur Understoodhat to Philip paintings,ous surrou dings, and well-fi -luxuri- ous 'clothes 1 1 since 1).1s biqh, bad been common-place ne- cessaries to be assessed or dispensed with as little as daily air or light. If Philip was a hero, he had none of the ear marks IN which that genus of men are known in nvels or ordinary life. He was not hilioutti, cynical nor boyishly enthusi- astic;l appar ntly he had never discovered human natu e to be corrupt or society based on falsehood and tyranny; he had not evolv- ed from his inneronselousness the ghost of a theory to Set the Wqrld right; he had nev- er hinted refarin in a book or a lecture, or even a leading artiele; ; Le was not •ft mem- ber of a society of any sort; his name never was found on a subseription,,list; the appa- rent tenor of his life was strictly that of his class; lie read law enough to enable him to manage his estates; he was a hard, student in such branebe.s of science as :41ted - his whimL;his companions were wellbred4nen and refined, beautiful women; he innt a keen appreciation of the heat music; lie went to balls, to the opera,', in winter; be hunted,' or sailed his yacht in summer. If any of his compatriots had liken asked for Philip's story, they might have quoted:— " Story, God bless you: theta is none to tell, sir." But few of them noticed the one sin- gular trait inithe man, the entire absence in his talk or thoughts of all mention o r re- membrance Of himself. Whether the pecu- liarity was hereditary, or whether sonic un- wonted accident had given to him in early life the second sight, which showed him how insignificant each human atom was be- fore God and among his fellows, no one knew; but the result was a quiet, life-long ignoring of Philip by Philip, as far removed from conseioXis humility as vanity. " I saw him mentioned in an English journal as one' of the first ti;ree chess players in this court-, try," said on , friend. " I had been intimate with him ford nine years, and never knew be-' fore that he understood the,game." "He had the healthiest, sweetest moral nature I ever met with,",st id one of the first of our Chris 7 tian teachers 1 " but no titan lever heard him talk of hls re'ligion or his creed.", There was Lto be a private concert one winter's evening, where none but critics and artists were tp be present. They waited for Philip, for ho verdict was important to the debutant; mine than one 'lair fastidious face, too, turned impatiently to the door, watching for him. Some one then brought the word the Philip lay dying; dying of a foul disease ontracted in visiting a jail.— The shock o surprise was as great to his friends as t at of pain, we can easily be- lieve. Thesefair, -delicate women could tot associate jails and death from foul dis- ease with the Philip they had known. Af- ter he was dOad it was told quietly (people spoke of Philip quietly, alifre or dead) that there was_not a jail or almshouse, nor a purlieu of vice and misery in the city with /.Ihiflt he la.l not been familiar for years. How much' of his income had gone to his poorer brother, only God remembered. The story is, after all, one of negatives. Assuredly flap made no mark in the world, no brut among men as Americans are taught it s the highest aim of life to do. But we tell h. a story because we believe this type among is class of countrymen is not uncommon, tad in these days, when a man so easily bey mes his own demigod, it is as' worth while to suggest it to our boys as those varnished with cheap glory of adver- tised philanthropy. Nobody would call Philip's a sUccessful life; the mention elf him in the inewspapers eren was the brief- est, he dropped silently out of the circle of his friends; but they who knew him are startled even yet to find how his memory re- mains, unlike that of others who are dead; how, remembbring hint, it is eav to do right, to take their proper humble place be- fore God and among His creatures• bow he seems even in the .silence of the grave to 'live with Nature, fulfilling- God's word—- with the breath of every summer day, po- tent, healthful, calm.--tr. E !Tribune. A Lake of Pitch, l - :ume thirty-six miles south from Port of Spain lies the famous Pitch Lake, covering a space of ninety-acres, and containing mill- ions of tons of so-called pitch. It is situa- ted in the Laßrea district, the whole of which is of bituminous character, much of the ground looking like en asphalt pave- ment, half overgrown with marsh-loving weeds, whose roots feed in the sloppy water overlying the pitch. The whole air is per- vaded with a smell of bitumen, and on ap• proaching the lake the evil odors grow op- pressive and sickening. The pitch however certainly does nut injure vegetation, though plants will not grow actually in it.. La Brea is famous for ninny kinds et tropical plants. Pine apples, for ex.aniple, are brought here to special perfection. They grow anywhere; clinging to the patches of richi brown soil, seemingly unmindful of the pitch spewing out of the earth iirodd wreaths and lumps. Even on the very shores of the lake itself are groups of - Moriche fan palms and thick undergrowths of corcorite. The surfixce of this Stygian pool, glaring, and glittering, in the sun, presents a most, bingular appearance, The black mass of iviphalt is ,divided by• narrow channels of clear w ater into hundreds of isolated, patch- es, ab if huge foul blotches were dotted all over the .9114aCe of x Like of sparkling tress. Straggling along in the center are a number of small islands coveted with thick low scrub, near which is the very fountain of foulness., the place where the ail halt is still oozing up. The -pitch here is b.'ellow and white with sulphur foam; Et) are the water channels; and out of both water and pitch innumerable bubbles of gas arise, smell. !1 On.. upping.' one's, hand' Into his. liquid pitch; one istastonigilied to find that it does not soil the fingers. The old" proverb that one cannot touch,pitch without being defiled, happily'does not stand true here, or the place would be still More loathsome than now. It may be scraped up and moulded into any shape you will, but 'nothing is left on the hand save clean gray mud and water. It Inv be kneaded for an hour before the ,inud,be sufficiently driven out of it to make it sticky. I This very , abundance !of earthy matter it is which, while it keeps ! the pitch from soiling, makes it far less-valuable than it would be if it was pure. It is easy to understand whe4ce this earthy. matter (twenty or thirty per cent.) comes.— Throughout the neighborhood the grmindis full, to the depth of 'hundreds Of feet, of coaly and asphaltic substances. !Layers• of sandstone, or of shift containing this decay- ed vegetable alternate with layers Whieli contain none.' And if, as Seems fprobable, the coaly, matter is continually !changing into asphalt and oil, and then working its way upward through every crack and pore, 'to escape from the enormous pressure of the superincumbent soil; it must needs carry up with it innumerable particles of the soils through which it passes.—Ltarper'.'s Magaz'e. Wit in Parliament. Of the vit that can convey reproof with the keenest sting, 'and yet without giving offense, unless he who takes it makes it,' there are numerous examples in ' both -hou- ses. The'very best, or certainly among the very best of these specimens came, in the Lorda, from Bishop Atterbury; in' the Com- mons, from Pitt. The former example is well known, but it will bear recalling to the memory of those who may have let it slip from their memorabilia. Atterbury had observed of -some bill before the Lords, that he had in a previous session prophesied that an attempt would be made to bring in this bill, and he regretted that his prophecy bad come true.,_ On this, ever-blustering and blundering ' Conlngsby started to his feet, .and ridiculed the prelate for. likening. him- self to a prophet. "But, for my part,", said Coningaby, I don't know what prophet to liken him to, unless it be to that furious prophet Balsam who was reproved brhis own ass." To this, ever cool and self-pos- sessed 'Atterbury replied: . 1 ' Since the noble lord has discoVered In our manners such a similitude, I am well content- to be compared with the prophet Balsam. But, my lords, lamat a loss how to make out the other part of the parallel.-- I am sure that I have been reproved by' no- body but his lordship!" The elder Pitt was as brilliant in the Commons as he afterward became, when Earl of Chatham, Jo the Lords. In both houses he, gave many instances. We take a characteristic one from the Commons. In a debate [Mr. Moreton happened to say, "King, Lords and Commons," adding, as he looked. at Pitt, '" or,. as the honorable gentlemanwould prefer to put it—Com- mons, LordS, and King." Pitt arose. He had often, he -told the house,. been surprised; now his blood ran cold. He moved that the words bsi taken down. The clerk of the house obeyed; and at the words of Pitt, solemnly / uttered, " Bring them to me!" Mr. Moretorrfell into such, a fright that he appealed to the Speak- er, protesting that he had really meant noth- ing. " King; lordS,? commons! commons, lords,. king! Tria ,juncta in uno. I meant nothing. Indeed, I meant nothing!" He looked at Pitt, and Pitt gravely rejoined: " I don't wish to push the matter farther. The moment a man acknowledges - his error he ceases to be guilty. I have al great re- gard Ifor the honorable member, and, as an instance of that regard, I give him this ad- vice: :Whenever that member - meens noth- ing, I recommend him to say nothing."— Temple Bar. Gentlemon's Fashions in OldOn Times. In tdl the short-lived splendors lof which the old chroniclers tell so much, women had but little part, whether as the wearers or Makers. ,The first 'milliners were bearded men. It Was a tailor, not a mantuamaker, in the modern ,sense of the word,' who took home, Rathrina's•new gown to the, house of Petruchio. Nor did the comparatively sim- ple; and becoming attire of the,ledies of feu- dal times Change by any means so often from the-decorous grace of its original type as that of their own fickle lords. , There is; less difference, sartorially speak- ing, between Queen Eleanor mud Margaret of Anjou, between Betertgaria and I4abel of France, than between the men of their re-• spectiVe times. They seidoin made them- selves sublimely ridiculous, as masculine vanity so constantly urged the fops of the period to do. Until we reach the bristling ruffs and steeple hats of Elizabeth's reign, there is nothing—unles it be the fantastic contrast; of colors brou ht in by Henry the Sixth's imperious consort—to provoke a smile,' from the daysof the Confessor to those of the Defender f the Faith. i But the men of thos centuries were ar- rayed as superbly as so many bright-winged butterflies—flashing with rainbow tints and powdered with gold. In every household of any pretension to rank, evenlin those of the poorer gentry, who groaned over the fashioner's charges and haggled smartly with the Chapman who sold the wares, a large slice of the family income was devo- ted to clothing his head. Andl not merely vanity and ostentation, but the gregarious instinct which we share with sheep, pushed medieval mankind into a practical compli- ance with fashions which ,'were directly in- "jurious to health. The warm clothing, - an4 in particular the weighty hoods, worn in Edward the Third's reign, were excellent allies to the deadly ep- idemics of the times, and may even have whetted the scythe of that Black Death that mowed among our forefathers as among thick grass, and that swept away half the population of Europe. The extravagant tightness of the French hose and doublet worn under Louis -the Eleventh—and of 1 which Charles the Bold's towering effigy, as he stands in stone larger than in life. be 'l side the famous chimney piece of the Bru- ges town hall, is the best example—was suc- ' ceeded by the ludicrous bulk' of the born. basted garments of Francis of France, and the bluff Harry o England. Trunk hose and Flanders coats, stuffed out with hair:and wool, with bran or straw, ac- cording to the liberality of the customer, was what tailordom had then to' offer to a discerning public; and soon afterward the stiff Elizabethan ruff, excruciatingly-starch- ed, and with its bristling points as shaft; as the spiked leaves of the holly hedge, began to incase the much-enduring necks of both sexes. Then, to the brocaded doublet and short hose of the original of the Vandyck portraits there succeeded -the lace falls, the knee buckleS, flapped coats, fathomless waistcoats, and majes.tic, periwigs of that Atigusta» age in which the ,Ctesar held his revels at Whitehall; and spent in a month of easy-going, careless, almost joyless prod- igality, the yearly income which England and the French king subscribed for Charles the Second.—Harper's Bazar. The pro Visions of grace are such that the strongest habits can be overcome, the most depraved hearts can be made clean, the most abandoned character can be saved, the most desponding spirit can be made happy, the most fiery trials can be patiently endured, and, finally, a home in Heaven ; where all i 3 love, joy and peace, can -be •eternally sessed. Then, brother Man, lift up thy fallen head—for you there is a plenteous ri,- demption. I have always noticed that wherever you find flowers, no matter Whether in a garret or in a palace, it is a pretty sure sign that there is an inner refinement of which the world is not cognizant. I have seen flowers cultivated and cherished by some of the lowest and most degraded of our people; even in the dens of vice you will sometimes find them. Where these emblems of purity are found, you may rest' assured that they represent a hope and speak of a heart 'nor to he found where they are absent. A bill seems, before the Committee on :Ways and Means of thellouseiernbo.iy, ing a scheme of postal telegraphy, which at one time met iv)th favor. It Is an appa- rently pertinent suggestion that the comma tee report as a substitute a hip abolishing the franking privilege. Certainly, whoever proposes to burden the Post Ciflice ,Depart- ment with the novel and onerous work of a national telegraph, ought to be willing to ce it first relieved of the enormous load DIV 'posed by the franking abuse. US FUL Saute thirty y! urday to Monda country who w: hie for Sunday led ,pork, boiled it, I thought it t requested - "rid for curing par! " soon as m enough to be cu; barrel or eask,w of each piece, a: immediately rol in water until ,sink in the vess ' D SUGGEinii/S. i I ' ;1 I 1 : Pork. , .._ are ago I lodged froa, Bat: with annn-keeper in the :5 also a f#mer. On the ta- ginner, there was somerpick- the day before. On tasting he most delicious I ever ate: e host" to give his 'receipt lie replied as follOwsl hogs are: dressed and alai. ~, I pack the side pieces in a ithplenty of salt on all sides ad when my barrel is full I it to mypump and ;Plimp ~ can see Ithe water cease to ri 1, or to moisten the salt . on the top of the c; sli. I then lay a flat stone, as large as the. essel will, receive, on` the contents, so as t keep the •pork always un- der the salt or p ekle. I put it lnmy cellar, covered sofas to xclnde the flies, and there. it reinains'until a piece is wanted. Care must be taken t keep the meat under., the pickle, or it will rust." nere is-the whole secret of . maki g gook. jiickled pork for family use. W have used the above Meth- od, and we wan no better, easier or more economical plal. . It has . often ' happened that. when we vented to put ' dow.Ertlievi i• ,porkthere rem ned saine,of the old in the. 'bottom of the c k: In that, Cassivre poured off the pickle, ook the undistelved salt, packed the fres! pork on top of the >old, l using the salt w ich had been in the cask_ ;with the additio of fresh silt if liectsilary, I L and theatioured on the old pickla.or water. in this way we ave had pork:afters or-four years in the hat m Of our porkl3hrrel, and when used 4 w free from rani t' as 'it was three weeks after it was put do*n..- In- deed, we seldom, emptied our pork barrel, except when it lwanted hooping. We be- lieve that boiling Tickle is tiseless, if notin- jurlous. Pork ought not, if it can be-pre- vented, to be frozen before it is put dam.. The best porkweever saw was that from some pigs under the charge of a lad who took es much cake of them - as some' pee* do of ,their children. Every day be.used.tO give-them aditaier of , het potatoes .for ha said that he didn't seewhy his pigh"Shotildn't have their tate ~ hot es- well na‘ithzisalf." Then he used to scrub theni several ttraeaa , i week Witt a,bru h and soap, rinsing• , thelsi with'clear Water The anitnala,Inietnitflo . enjoy their /av on. and used to pAbisittli r e eagerly toward I.lm -as lie- `040310 - in - tag with his pail a.d scrubbing-bra:b. ',,Th sty Was also kep perfactlycleart e . and 'their. tronghs. washed . . t frequently. la , conse- quence the pork was perfection. As ageneral t ing it is a good plan to re. . ject pork made rom hogs -that have-beeja kept by distille or butchers; but, if possi- bie get pork tha' has been tired and fed, by a dairyman, and finished off with corn. Bow Dee naiad Bbtllk he E(sti For years this has been kips:Looted quest= with butter malt-113,. But the general prac- tice has been to tut about 2iinehes of' milk in each vessel is summer, adds about _3 in winter., Experi ss eats made with great care the summer pass have ,proved the error Of this usage, and i is now g,eteridly coteeded that more cream and betteri•cah be secured by allowing the silk to stand in deep,pails:; A corresponsien of 2'he Rural ,New -Yorker sends the results of two experiments as fol- lows: The first aerie of experiments was niacte at Hummerson it Wiley's dairy, sin` Little Valley, in cans 18g- inches in diameter anti 20 inches deep, cith 157 Ihd. of milk taken froze their dairy 'of 10.9 644; the rest of the milk`was sent to the- f9etsiry. The 44- perimeots' were conducted hy. Mr. B. hit- self, each time producing 6 1b,4. of butterof superior quality. The . cream was token. from the milk as soon as the change ebegam to showitself, or before touring. This was made in July when the thermometer stood in the room at. 90 deg. and upward, in tlr afternoon' of each day. The milk. wiz*. brought by the l cooler as low as (10 deg. lu one hour and ten minutes after, it was put iti the ean,l and kept at that temperature , the change (the time varying from N To.6q hours,) and the cream was churned at once;' yielding 0 lbs. for each experiment, or near-' ly 1 lb. of butter from WI lbs. of •milk. Mr. that the surroundings did not give a fair test. The next experiment was tried at' Cold' Spring, .in 'the dairy of Wm: K. Miller. They have 40 cows, and have ,been using . for the last,two years the Pope 'and Tuttle' pans in their dairy in Cold Spring, also in their dairy in Alachiees. They are using all the known facilities for makinglgoOd butter having running, water in their." milk-meal, and ice whenever it is needed toR keep the desired temperature. This trial was' made II the tirs,t tot days et' August, and' designed to tie ath aougit test of the manner ' - e -. ting milk. Tht: morning's milk . 4 used ,each tillAq' the ittilk - being divided ill o near- ly equal parts; first experiment, 18; lbs. in the deqp:i an 17--i inches, and 141* lbs. in the pan t! : inches deep. The water was taken from thtsame tank to keep the tem- perature of th milk standing at about"6B deg., it sourin,: in the pan in 40- hems, and not changing I , s the can till 48 ,hours, .-frite' cream was eh rne:d as soon as taken. from the milk, the 4 an producing 6 Ibs. 'of .bitter before salting, and the pan 6 lbs. 10 oZ: or 1 lb. of butte from 23 lbs. 6 oz; of milk, and the can 1 tb. of butter froth 22,Thif. pa oz. . gtorin' harm Implemenia. . . , ‘warnscot's tool-houSe yeater- ,of the rain. His grass is cut, lave no further use for his orthodox way of doing with navy farms, is to unhitch it e where the last hay cutting leave it in the field, Swam- eretic ! I found his mower n one corner of his tool•house, it had been there when the built, and had never cut any ceci it had been thoroughly the bearings oiled. I rather I said so. Swamscot said, t tle way i make money. I've ~,er six summers, and. it'a' a t day than Joe Peet's that he IT•.,As lay in the field until l' . was then put into an open .1 sheep ran and the hero las a nice looking object this DTV that he expended fifteen I went into day to get-out and he will mover.The a.mower,' on from the pia: wPs done, an scot must be packed away as snugly as i tool-house we grass. I not cleaned, and liked the idea " Wiry, that's used that mo better mower bought last y- NOternber, shed where roosted. It -a spring, and I dollars on it b ylThy, sir, he lore he could make it run. -ver took the sickle out of it h quit until he wanted to or did he oil it." from the time use it again; r I th plows, etc., eti by Swamscot. that you may 1 tion of bring fsimer. He his diaing•root literary men. w his hire and magazines things; they re family, and dis degree of irate hoes, cultivators, harrows, were all snugly put away I mention these little things ;now why ho has the •reputi4 - fi thrifty, thorough,' Hindi'. * more current literatures ti table evenings than , Auld care for; but you ought men go through the papers And they ,share the good' Id with each other and the luss the same with no small ligeno.e —Cop. Rural `• New . T KICK AT D:4011T. The, kicking at night o ft ener .q. vow.3ness anti reStlessnesa propensities. It is a forru he limbs, We have cured by attaching - a round hall of %vo pounds to the hindlet- most used in kicking, by 1 - 101 4 .:3E3 TH. catve of n horn the resnit n tbhn of vicious of hybterin of t animals of' wood xceig.,liing lock of the limb means of a stral feet long. Wln to biin - s , lf n blo hurls that it Wow, and cense! two and a lief or three a Le kkks he administers from the Ball. He quick. e . keep ,' still he receives no .to New York- 1,1 izt A 13. E, yo. lll' IWO oVa4 . until h trup•Lly 1110: .'ll4l one for I.KT Arica hr horsit's nodo and lion' off ' lwant4 to go. ;: Jo n#B one' It' has long tlied ttis" Thu IC, al wa) s at linott, and a the beast. Tt•i• -CtiONv - Oect) tomatot2B s ;i1; ptipers (Wit) fretllvr.ttlitt 11011 t I:Vott eider vi tos :iy after iticrep:,-, --Tio ' l one peck Of old three good sized Onion 4, ) Feeds taken'out); chop to- i ree minutes in three quarts iegar, ff 1/ row this vinegar of nice flow two cupso cloves, grbui natuon, tomatoes 3v OE NO..' 51. Eilll Ell

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Page 1: panewsarchive.psu.edu · .. _. ; •. - •.... • .. . -. I..• ' ,. , - •- ; • - -...•-.: .•. ,', - • . ..• •,• „ t'! •• .1 •I. ,.•.• • •1

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____— —,. tVOL. 'XIX. ! i

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•A. al(4111)t* Aottiiiitt.

7 -

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. L t•OXilailltlin XVltal 7usan.av nv ' 1;-

• / i\13411E4.2•Tri1Eg 4tAts R.C3O-si*, -

1r V. ,4NF5, . ""'-.-." ~ A, .Itt. nor.

i

&el Lama :—52,00 per annum in advance. - IRATPR OP ADVERTISING.

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Ittee. lin tin. 31n. 4111; .4001 hiCol 1 Col.

1 Week $lOO $2OO $5OO El (X) 8500 $9OO $u00jvioAs IGO 300 400 6po 70011 00 16 Od

sit'oela 200 300 6,00 800 800 13 0,1 Is 00

plutdb I '1 60i 4 00 6 00 7 00 11 00 15 00 20 00

iVontbe' I 00 000 900 10 00 12 00 20 00' 25 0011)0013 500 'it 00 12 00 13 00 15 00 25 00 35 00

• i'.•loidlti 900 12.,0000 18 00 20 00 22 00 35 f)o 00 00

Sear. 00r. 11 Irl 25 CU 28 0() i 5 Ob dO 00 100 00

FJ..,• -- - , •

xatotttsutneuts are calculated by the Inch In length4 a outaam, and Any less apace is rated ai a full inch.

0 Foreign advertisements must be paid for beforeIn-

•.: ,r tiou,eicept on yearly contracts, -when half-yearly;• ,hymentsin advance will be required.

Lic•ineigs Noxious in the Editorial columns, on the

'Wad page. 15centa per line each insertion. Noll-

11i 0530014 for loss than 041.,00.k1. NOTICV.9in Locat mann:alp:o cents per line it

~e than Ave lines ; and BO cents for a notice ofOre:seeor lees.veroctienis.NlS of M.VIRIA.6na and DzaSsalneerted.:It; but all obituary liete•Pa will be charged 10 centa

• It lies. •' nsciALNortarsBO par cent abOverevlarrates.rclassCAmis 511ues °rinse, ss,fril peryear.

~ '.

-,.-... , 41 r-• •8U15Me...98,- Carcis— . "

1.1.ZGriG ...---:---'-•." .----=--..—..

,i ;a, eapirp4X.R.: •4- • . ,', 'l4 _, Ir. ,a; .11311140:1.~, lElatehelder Li Johnson,

- I.l..tattiu•ara •ot Monuments. Tombstones. Table14e, Com:item&c. Cali and see. shop, Wain et,

..tMite Foundry. Velleboro, Pa.—July 5, 185%

. A. Redfield,i;!•. 11.55N-1-7 AND GOUNOELLOit AT LAY...-Collect-i vas paoraptly attended to.—filcasintrr The&court-

:71 , Penn's,. jr.A1, 18:'2-9m.

C. IL Seymour,`,iOSNEYA LAW, Vogt, Pa. All business on-;csteta tc his care will receive prompt attention,—

A67%•

Gen. NV. Merrick,

J. C. Strang,LANEY AT LATi . & DISTRICT ATTORNEY.-

-,itk J. B. Nllea,Esq. Virellsbato,Pc-Jau.l,'72,

C. N. Dartt,- Tuat ti made with the Mar /51PBOVEWMCS:

give better' itittieraction: than any thing eLei,a Often to Wright & lli9gk. Wella-

o:• ‘3,:t 15.187'2.

J. B. Niofi,s-ii LA.W.—Will attendpromptly to bus.Vti tarutted tJ tale C111•0 In the counties of TlogaI Pater, (Mee" on the .venue.—Wellsboro, Ya.,

01. IS/. •

Jno. W. Adams, •

"Al:it'S )T LAW, iNloandagt, Tiusnycinitity, Paisttbalea to.--Jan.

L. Peek,,I;NEY AT LAW. Allelattusi.vouiptly collected...with W. B. ninth. Knovitile. Tivga Co., Pa.

C. 113. Kelly.Crpettery, China and OISUBS ware, Table Cut-

:l and Plated Ware. Alan Tubb)spa douse Fur•l'a.,,gapt. 17, 1872.

..1111). W.UaNEY AT him

1 tis ru-mukciy at:tended to.-011toe Isl, cloo; south51,Asheuu 6 Faer's store. Tioigs, Tioocounty, Pa.• 1, 1672.

Armstrong & Linn,xiers AT LAW, Williamsport, Pa.

e. Asuerrirozio. ,1an LINK, Jan. 1,1972

Wzni B. &aid),

.

Ingham, M. D.,a6PATHIST, °Oleo at hie reetdanoe on the .tlO

—W,Alsboro, Pe., Jan. I, 187/

90,e10;., Conte -S."; Ce,,,Enva, 241.-IW:sive money

.11.411, ,tiLt nCtei, ateir dri.1213 on NnwI,,ty CailetUcts prAnp9l..Ana I -1 -Li nEiLEY, Wucla VINE Cit.c.IDALL,

11372 rll-13) Co t-re

Pi.trkhorst & Co,,,11>3,„sPaPA.REIMIET,

• 1:7, PAr;.a-acb,ll,C P.1..:-:1304

'Vale now4e, . ." -Litt:, e.t. A: ip.3.6, PzurlK.t..% . 'llili

6 in g,..,.:3 condiilLak tc; ti.,:arimodiato the travel--4 hil: in i, eupgrfor nistur6r.--.Ter. 7, 1972. •

Petrolititn. Hquse,iff-1- 0, bA., c..., loge. n.Omar; and Yeaat • t2,ar!ea tz.amt,r,t.ou Ly:•••,0 t,i a it 7t••IS7I

Air.. Mary E. Lamb.?"ti h••,• it loud.* ai,d the.

tnat ale iLat eu? ..aoti Ulu../J3ll bllSinin thia nud that

story, nest door to the blucl:.4,4r/a ,^z Wltliatue.—Mu9. E. E. Evar.aht. hasPox the tusking kti.l usuiroiTiffeleDartMeikt and[lre tar attest ou es, luelvely fo 12,12.-tt.

ellisboro Etiotet,COB MAIN ST. t irfl AXENUE,

Wellsboro,sot..BUNREL, Prop'r.

I I.4ular Hotel lately kept 1,) B. B. Holiday.:in-.tar will sp.are tlkl rains (43 make it a first-All the staged arrive and depart from this; tiopdLoatln•tu attendance, irrLiverl

THE OLDISDISYLVANIA gousv

the Townsend House Rua'baleociuptla by D, a Holiday, has beenretittod an 4 PP!'l°"ll'y

, 1. Ft. 'Evie 014. N Oil,-e h4py to accommodate th's oi3 friends o!l strcr l reasonable rates.A.T. R. O'CONNOR.

ESTATE F()11 SALE.I.:tscriber offer's§for sale libt 14a1 catate in the,1;Intern part of the borough. to 'suit imam.Gt the premiaes is likely situated tolots. and pasture and timber iota.'4la covered with timber is well wooded with14Lad hemleck. The large lot on which he~.r4lbe sold off in village -iota, inclndl Wit

472.4zu ROURT RELS Y.

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' tri.' ''sr - ' - , . ,- •‘' ii' AltKre t' l,-;,..,:r.,_...4,;',t.3',..7r.

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"'"7.-.........

ItAILWAYJTIME TABLES.EigtlfgWaWE

Well shorn Lawreticeville It. it.Time No. 4.. _

TAIto Effect \luuda}• ono 3,.1, 1872.

12 2 h stations. 1 3 - Sfp.m. p.m. a.m., . n.nt. p,m.Vl5O 5 ;t5 141 041 Ir. C:.cming, Dep. 800 .7 35 56012 28 •1 ✓0 $ '$ 00 8 44) .4; 18121:: 42:: Bdl Dc•p. Dutiuing -911 Udti i:2B

12 08 '4 19 S4O Lathrop 915 830 05311 43 4 0.5 8 3.6 llogn, V,llavu 989 901 i 5311 23 if 52 wl3 fiummund 343 918 7. 1311 13' 3 4:1 893 Hill's Creek., ' 952 997 72311 07 340 800 Holliday 32 37 929 71910 ,57 3 3'2 7.53 Middlebury

- 'lO 03 u3B 138'lO 49 327 7.17 Valley 10 08 943 • 7 .4710 30 319 710 , Sinkeadalii '-10 10 951 75910.25 310 721 Pe. Welitsboro, Arr. 10 25 1000 810

2 43 Cinirlestuti, 10 52_

21C; , 11 12 '130 'Antrim, 11 45 '3

A. 11. 41(MITON, Sup't.f

slosshurg Corning tt Tiogit R. R.-1-• Time Table No. a.

Takes Effect-11°13day Juno Si, 1872.Dap.ol2' xaom calmao. I A /11.0ZaliV/10,D. 1 000 L m, ND, 3 10 45 a. m.

8 7 05p, m. I " —.1020p.m.15.„. .

......220p. m, 1 t. 15 G25 p. as.DEW= 1131111 BLOGSBURG. mouve 1T COIDTMG,

do .., 2 45. p. m. No. S 5 p. m.705p, m. ,• 4 —lOOO a.m.720 m. 140. B 11 4.5a. ta.

A. H.GOIiTON, Sup't 8..4 O. R. B.H. SHATTIICE.,'Snp'tTins,R.R.

go.

• ~.flaiaNirisia• Railroad. •Depot, toot of Pine Street, 77:41Lauaspert, Pa

llielldep. ,WlllleLeport, 9,00 a. In.AC,COM,Thi !dation :ter,. Williamsport, p. m.Jdail arridla at Will tainepo,-+ a 10p. in.Accorainodaticn arrive at Williain.ept+rt,.....o.2s a in.

An additionaltrain Itaves Depot it Herdic Howse.ii"znsport, at P.OS a. Philadelphia, N.York, Boston ebd tr.tanneVate. points. Rettiriait,g,direct connection ie raatie at Williamsport with tretztefor the weal:.

Ho change ofcar*between Philadelphia, New yak

and Williamsport. GEO. WEBB, Sv't.Erie Rh'Way.

ill;. TAsizz Anorrzn Jrwr. 310.: 187,2•

Vow and Unproved Drawing Room- anti BizapingCoacher, combining all 4noiern Improvement', areran throng/4, on all traing_bstveart l'iow York, 800-boa-ter, Sc.apenaion Bridge, 0/ere-land and

liestrrard

STATICaS. 1N. York, LSOBinietu, "

Elmira, -,

270.1- 370. 5. 170- 7.7 NO. 3.900 am 100 am 630pm 100 p m444pm 9 451 m 500sm. 840 am026 " • .12 Kt" 520 " 625 "'

707 " 120sza 6^68 " 617 "

1 26 "

:....:, .. .Via'., 4,

Pt'd Post, 4.

Rotheat'r. tarElorcevlie, 4,

Buffalo,Hiag. Patti .4

Dunkirk: 4,6 30Sup 260/2Oka 8 10a m./265am 1 9 60 ;.H:160 H DI

).0 :12 4,

7 25Bit1145ata1230pip

I135 4.

10 82..

I 20 Btt1246p2t36pm

ADDMOILS.L LOCAL TRAIRI WFAiIVARD5 a. tn., except Sundays, from Owego /or Hornet's-

rills and Way.16a. m.,omcept Sundays, from Susquehanna for

Efrrneltscile and Way.5 80 a. m., daily from flelquettertna tor:flarnellavale

and Way. - - - " '4; •.._ - ~.__ _

110 p. m , except Sundays, from Elmita'for Avon;to Buffalo and Way., ..:

220p. m.', exsept .kiurtisys; from ,13.1nebair.ton toHornellevllle and Way. I -

EftAward

1 No. 4STATICINS. itio• IV' i 1 No. 8.1 1Dui/kirk.Lva 12 2'6,p m 1 . 1 1000 pm 1- • • , •?..11/g.Falle,.. 145 " 6,50 pm 11012pm 1 7 ISOraaBuffalo, .. IJO .. 1625 .. 11135 .• 1 745 "

liornlove, .•1(1 OS Sup. 11030-" 3lb e.m I'lo 50 "

IlotLe/ter, .. 1400p m 530 " . 1 800•Cornlus., .. 7 2.5 .. 1201 '.' 437 .. 1 1203 pm.Elmira. .. 803 " 12 40am 513 .. 11243 ..

I.ll.ug'rutu.*. 10 10 ..9 35 .. 17Di .. 1 235 ..

Sew 'Volk," 700 a La lI / 1 1.0 !. 1 3 30prn j„0,1;5 ..

- -- --.I7.44nONALLO:AtTft&I'S.3 F.ASI .VidtD.5 tts a. tn. except gluuttaya. from flarlinlitt\ tlla

.otvego and %Nay.6 00 a.., flatly from Ifortt.llarifle for tittsquctlematt

and WayiM7 2tt a. tu4 except tintrlaya. from Huruellaville tut

Itiagbauttoft and Way.7 00a. w.'except Suudaye, from Owego tor SlltiqUe

hautia end Way. , .2 00 p. in.'exempt Sundays, from Fainted Post for

Elmira and Way. , s„e

150.p. oxrept suuaisys,- from tiornellsylilsSusquehanna atsii Way.

•Lily.tidays oteepte:l. bbtwoon Htuiquebautia nud Port

Through As to all points Rent at the sery Low-est Rates. far sale itt the Company's office at the Corn-ing liipat. -

Thin is the only stothorized Agency of the Erie Rail-way Company for the sale of Western Ticket fi in Corn-tog

'Baggage will he theeken only on Tickets purchasedat tit..t Conlpaity'A _

JNO s. .1.13130TT,PP.SWC Ag't

Northern :Central Railway.Ttatna arrive and depart at Troy, since June 9th, 1872,

49 followsnor.zuwAr:r.. CO 13111MOW.

Niagara Expregs, 407 p to Salto. Express. al3p in.Mail, 915 p m Philada "Express, 915 p rn

Cincinnati Dap, 10 20ain Mail 652 a toA.l/1. FISKE, (long Sup't.

1081."

CyrDeSilLWHOLIifiALE DEALER IN

Foreign and Domestic, LiquorsWINES, ko.,

Agent 'for Fine Old Whiskiee,CORNING.•N. H.

Houghton, Orr & Co.,,

sfb YORK, PA.

MontlZoftrers of

"" Buggies, 'Sulkies,PLATFORM SPRVG, TRUCK AND

1.,

IatIIIIBER WAGON*,C:u J.LEE%

SLEIGIiI3 AND 808 SLEDS

Wo are pepared to do anything in our Line on sbor!loge.° gni In the beat wanner. B.&t Aiactlon gnaranteed- }IOUGIITOIT, OUR k co

ELLSTI:4O,B COLES, Agents Wt:teS:oro.St:ny Fcr, July , 1872,

E. B. Yor:ca

E. B.. 3,1, t.:4:1

WErll.l .,

Young &

e 0t14)5 Young ".1. (2o )

haksel(eis and Statiotiers,and Dealere

r,wir,dnw .*12,2,1E8,

•\ ' Window rtstures,IL.trlanqLtv

Z7Ctl ,i/10.Picturs Frarnes end G:ass, - •

Pictures, all sorts,Coal

I.?w Hlay, anetl.'e

Blank all strts.4,Newmpal)elu, Niuslazlneß,

V.'t it aig Dania.• ..krtists

Lits: ItOPf e,• Hooke;

ItMtglove 130ule,

mid every cuticle in otir.lfua or--New York I.wlltes at (inc Dollar a month. ')--Elmira Dailies at 75 Cents a month.—Stit;serlptious fora wick. (r month, or year.-.Orders for Dooki4 notin Stock promptly attenii ed to—An Etpress package received Dom New i, rk cv

nry day

tre agentd of the Aueltor Line and tb.• OnionLine of U. S. Mall Ocean Steamers, Pasaug,e tt f toand Prow any point in Europe at the lowest rtaf

Dranscold on any . Bank in Enrope of rnrr 9.11.1. rates-tit E.,'Xi:lnnige. • - •

Jau. 24, 1872 .ly E. B. YOUNG k CO

TO T4E FADIERS OFTLOOA 'COUNTY

lAllt nosy bulb:llAT at my mauufgetory, to LVA Xevile, a auperior- FA.liNtrim zrLt,„

which poesesiwe thefollowing adtantsges overall other

d. It sepalesrye, oats. rat and foul ?end, atictandkle, from wheat.

2; It deans Ilas seed, takes out yellow'eeed, end allotht,r seeds, perfectly.9."-It cleans timothy seed.

,

4. It does all other separating required ofa inThis Wilt of the beat and most durable tim-ber, Ingood etyle, and Is cold cheap for cash.duce. • rI Will iii a patent Stare, for separating oats fromwheat, toother mills, lon reasonable terms.lowrenzavillto. den. I, 11n. J. H. 144111E11.

THE NEW sum MACHINE6 41:7T1C: 6X:1.4,79

Latest ltaproveAL . 11f-nce BEWF.

HAS No SPIRAL SPEING':;.

W"EVERY 3 iTION POSITIVE. .-

HanSelf Setting NeFdle and ImprovedSHUTTLE

Tut; vicronv .11,1,be put out on trial for pai ties willique. andI ou easy, monthly paymentsBefore purcluotinth call and evuniue ' the IriCTOll,

et L. F. Truntan'satoralu Welishoro,

E: JENNINGS, !!.gent. .Machine Sill:, Twist, Cotton Laid Needier or ail kinds

constantly on• N. 11.--Machine of 41 11.-intlt repair ,,A LL ressonehleterms. •

soli. 9, 1572-43 tn.

Tioga Marble Worics.,I'll4E undersigned Is now plepared to execute ail Or./ dere for TombStones and Nfounini-uts of either

Italiait orßutland Afarbleofthe latest atyle and approve'i werkurinship and withdispatch.

lie keeps conetautly on band both kincli of .71farbleend will he able to suit all who may favor him withtheir orders, on ea maw:Labia terms am can be obtainedInthe country.FRANK ADAMS.'Au. 1,1572,

I ‘,,

Parva Dom a--lifOgziti Gales.A narrow home; but 'lttley.still it Seenteth;:

silent home, no stlr.or tnninit here. :'Whowins thlitpillow of no abrrOw dreametb,

No Whirling &lines Jar Ms:sealed car: -

The'lired hand hes very calm' and quiet,The weary foot no More hard paths willtread,The great world mayrevave In clash and riot,

To its loud auminons leaps'nor heart norhead.The violets Woom abote the tranquil sleeper,

The morning dews tall gently 'on the graea,Antid the dalaies Eneela the lonely weeper;

l;le knows not when her lingering footsteps peasThe autumn Winds sigh softly O'er hie slumber,

The winter piles'the pnow-drifte o'er his rest;Ho °pea not -care the flying years to number,

The narrow home contents its silent guest.

No baffled hope can liannt;!no doubt perplexes,No parted love the deep repose can chafe,No potty care canIrk, notrouble vexes,From mlsoonstructiou his hushed h,,art la Rafe,Freed from the weariness of Worldly fretting,From pain and falliwe, bootlesstoll and etrite,

From the dull wretchedness of vain regrettingHe ties, whose course has passed WAN; from Ufe

. A narrow horse, and far beyond it BethThe land whereof no mortal lips can tell.We strialn our,sad eyes as tbo oplrit fileth.Ourfancy loves on heaven's' bright hale to dwellQ-odrebutirtbe door, noangel lip uncloses':They whomChristrstsed no wordofguidance saidOnly the firma speaks where our dust reposes," Trust Him who calls untohis rent our dead."

—412 The Tear Round., ,

,Managing a-Man.Nellie-Davis was the prettiest, sweetest,'

best, and dearest little girl in Hillsdale, andwhen Torn Carter fell head overheels inlOve'sith'her, no one. blamed hinf in theleast.

And whet the parson gave consent, andthey went to housekeeping in a cozy, bird-nest of a littleliouse on the south side ofthe town, everybodyprophesied all sorts ofhappiness for the pretty 'Ade. '

And, truth to tell, I,4ellie Carter was veryhap

Itpy.iS a very pretty thing to, go to house-keeping for the first time, with everything

spick and span new, and shiny; and if youhave some one you love very much for acompanion it is still pleasanter. '

Now Nellie did love that greatblubber-ingTOm Carter with all l her Might andmain, and there was only one thing to dis-turb her peace. She was the vefy pink oftidiness, and Tom was the most careless fel-low alive. I

He kept his person neat and nice, hilt bekept his personal belongings anything,else.In vain did Nellie braid altlindsothe merinocase, and,tack it inside the ;closet door forTom to put his slippers in. Tom would in-gat in tossing them under the parlor sofa,"to have 'em bandy." ' In vain did shegently suggest that the racklin the hall wasthe plape-for his hat and overcoat; wet ordry, he would lay his overcoat on her pretty,smoothly-made bed, and drop his hat any-where.

In vain did Nellie make a place for eve-rything, for Tom invariably tossed every-thing into some other place. Now littleMrs. Nellie was only human, and -Tom'sslovenly ways annoyed her exceedingly.—'She resolved,,not to spoil the peace of theircozy home by scolding, bit how to cure

m she could not tell.She bore with him with tie patience of

'an angel, till onemorning WI en he had goneup town she went into the parlor, broom inhand, and there lay Tom's big shawl rightacross the center table, ruthlessly crush;figbeneath it the trifles that lay',onthe marbltop. I

"Now, I can't have this, land I won't,t7'said she, as she raised the shawl from thedelicate treasure and discovered the, ruinsof a favorite Bohemian vase.

" I don't know what to do, but this I willnot have," she continued, with, a little bit ofwifely snap, which every' gdpd wife musthave. if she expects to get along at all withthat occasionally unreasonable animal, a

.1:111111.< '" So”ie way must be discovered to cure

Torn of such performances as this!" went onMrs. Nellie, as she removed the ruins of thevase, and all the morning she, went aroundat her work with scarlet lipS closely com-pressed, and a little flash in her brown eyeswhich argued well for Mr. Tom's domesticsubjugation.

Woman's wit, having a witseldom failsto find a way. And when a determined lit-tle woman says " must" and "ioliall," mas-culine insubordination might aslwell surren-der at once,

Before Mrs. Nellie closed her-bright eyesthat night, she had arranged plans for thatcampaign against her' iege lord, who sleptthe sleep of innocence at her side,-

But she meant to give him one morechance. So, after breakfast, when Tomdrew on his boots and gave his slippers theusual toss under the sofa, she gently said:

"Tom, dear, hadn't you better put theslippers In the case?"

"NO, let 'em alone, they'll ;be handy to-night."

" Bat, Torn, they look so untidy!""Why, no they don't. A thing looks as

well in one place as anotheri What's theuse of a man's having ri home if he can'tkeep things where fie wants to?"

" What's the use of keeping a woman onher feet all day to pick up things after you?"asked Nellie, without the least show of anytemper. /

,

,"Don't pick 'em up. Just let 'em alone,and then I can find 'em when I want 's,ni,"declared Torn, as he gave her a kiss andtook himself off. 1

And at the moment the door closed on himNellie's red lips compressed again, and,herbrown eyes wore the same lOok they hadworn yesterday. •

" Waris it, then," she said to herself.--"Now, Master Tom, we shall see who winsthe field..'

She set quietly about her morning's work,and when Tom came home to dinner every-thing was in its usual -good order. It re-mained so, and Nellie „busied herself withher sewing until nearly time for Tom to re-turn to supper.

Then she arose, put away her work, andprepared to open the campaign.

First, she put Tom's slippers where be al-ways left them, under the sofa. Then shetossed the shawl upon the piano, and hisbest bat Upon the center table. She broughtsome of her dresses and flung them acrossthe chairs and on the sofa. Her furs andsacque reposed op Tom's especial arm chair,and her hest bonnet kept Tom's slipperscompany• under the . sofa; while her ownslippers,lay on the mantel.,

And then, on thinking t,he.t feminine in-genuity could make no greater sacrificethan her Sunday bonnet, she sat down toher crocheting.

Presently the door opened, and in walkedMaster Tom, Ile gave .a low whistle ofsurprise as he glanced at the unusual disor-der, and at Nellie sitting calmly in the midstwith her crochet work, and then came intothe room. i . •

"House cleaning, Nell?" he asked.," Oh, no. Why?" said Nellie, looking up

in sweet maconaciousness.' 1" I thought may be you had been!all," remarked Torn, drYly; as he loot

1 - -a place to sit down. , I 1 iNellie quietly pursued her v)tik. IPresently Tom said: 1 Itl" Paper come this evening?l" Not yet," answered iNelliel , 1ITom gave a half sigh" Nellie, I met Granger up town, and he

said he'd call around thiwevening.""Very well; probably he Won't,come be-fore tea. It will be ready soon," 'said Nel-lie, working away in demure innocence. -

"Hadn't you better pick upt hinge a littlebefore he comes?" said Tern, glancingaround the room. ,'

" Oh, *a; just let 'eau lie," answered Net-.lie, sweetly.

" But they look so bad!" stu'll Tom." Oh, nst o. they don't," said Nellie, as

sweetly t s before. "A thing looks as wellin one pl ce as another." ' ' ! -

Toni' face reddened. - I" I ne er saw your room look like this be-

fore," li said, heSitatingly. :" I shouldn'tlike to h ve any one step in."'

~, "Why not?"said Nellie; "we might aswell keep things handy_ What's the tlf ,e, inhaving -a house if you can't keep thingswhere you want to?"

Tom's face grewredder and redder, Hetried to loon sobee, and , then i broke into alaugh. " Oh, that's your game, is itr hesaid, "trying to beat me with my ownweapons, are you, little woman's"

Well, don't you like the plan?" said Nel-lie demurely." No, by George, I don't,,) cried Toni." Well, then, I'll make a bargain withyou. As long as you will keep your thingsin their places I'll do the same with mine,

and whenever you don't—"" Oh, Iva'," interrupted TiAn.

that's[b.ed for

" Come,

,WELLBOIQ,,. TIOGN :CQ,i- .14.A..„.GEO. O. DnltitY JOH FISITLER

. ,

4'DERBY .4 i NISBIE '-

,_.i , --," - ,-----: ' .

4,IE_OVE: Piet rofornal troin'tlic city with ilio largestJUL Mock of

-,.,I3OOTS _A-Nl.` SHOES

edas i .r.,..eunnitifive of • '

Ladies' )i'id and loth Bal-morals and Gaiters;‘

NLadies, .111iSses,

and, Babil4ShoeGeitts' Cloth, Boots 4- i_SrikoteslPrince,.4lbert edif.Boot.Y,,•

- Boys'Rip Boots.Youths!Youths! Boots.

In act, all Ithida Irepe' 111sti cS'omeu'a wear k‘ptrt. e tral-elnee Shbe Store. The beet EIt,WOU Wonou'aslloes ever offered In than marl;et. tie defy tno world

CUSTO:fg AV Ryou don't biglove7us, try Stir buy only t1“.1.:35t

stook, Old have as goo;1 Caratt'at!trr< 1s njcniv canhire.

REPATRINGr dime nzatly, anti with diepatpli,

Leather, and Findingsof .1.1Livia ,‘o3traantly-tn hsral ,

Cask palid for Hides. Deacon Sti'inS,Pelte a11(1 Furs

Having justflied up oar eh:lves with a claCt446 stock,personalty selected for tuis market, we reepectfullysolicit a fair share oftrade. "Small probas and quickreturns," we believe to be a good busiuspe maxim :

and we hold the beet goods, to-be tba cheapest. Wekeep noithoddy. Our assortment is awl:Meat to meetall aixesland tastes. -We 'invite our patrons arid thepublic generally to call end examine our stock. Notrouble to show goods. Always to be found, one doornorth ofp. B. Ilelley's t, 3latn Street, W4hshore,Pa

May 1,; 1972: puutv r Fxvti,Eß

P,TOGRA.PHY,. ,

AasLL kinds, stiles and sizes of Pictures taken andexeduted in artistic manner. at D. IL Naransore'sry, Opposite Cone Elcuss,'Llells'ooro.

Portraits on Porcelain Plates.Nothing f,ner canbe oi3,:red than thew) beautiful Por-celain Pieturee in a velvet Ce..36 or tame. Their BOft•nose and delicacy are superior to scything producedon Iron orpaper. 11) ou went a

Good Picture.of rAueelf, go to Natal:to:B'a

If you tar,t the ve,,y beat that (Au be bad, go toNaramorea.

If you trautoometbtog tbatlooks like you. go to Nar-amore'e.

Ifyouwant an old baguerrnot)tinAtntrotype, or other Pleturee coped and enlarged, hecan do that as reasonabiß as <uy other nian. Theywill be finished in India Ink, till or 'Water Colon) %liendesired

Person 4 wiehing picttnea at gtoupe andwill reeelVe eepecial atiout:o».

A large Aatfortniont of Fru:ilea aaa Fferatag MuterlaicoaatTatil on'baud. Ali kind,

4PictoreN FrAroma] to OrdeßN. D.—Don't ullateke th, phice., over A. 11.F,161.1.1:ah'e

Dental 1141orne.Aprll24. 1872.-t.f. D. Et NARAIIORE.

;---

Now Boot, Shoe, LeatherAND FINDIN(.;

4-Slesstri-m1N THE FIELD AOAIN

New Shop, New, Stock; atol tit t-clus;s I,\'ork I

4 NYTHE•R from a Thud Ch.•k to a ll<•lA_ hue of

Ladies' Kid and Clttli, Bal-morals and Gaiters,

Ditto Chi ldren,'sand Misses.

Gents' Cloth, Morocco, andCalf Gaiters. Oxford

and Prince AlbertTies.

A rod line of OVERSHOES, and a fgll line of

FINE BOOTS;rertgiug inPrice from SAX° to $7,00, pegged and leTred

CUSTOM BOOTSfrom $6,00 to $16,00, and worththe money every time

Leather and Findingsat the lowest rates, as uraal

The Undoreigned having spent twenty years of hislife in Welleboro—mnch of the time cn the stool ofpenitence. drawing the cord of affliction for the goodofsole", believes ratiter in hammeringthan blowing.Wherefore, lie will only remark to his old customersand as many 'new ones as choose to givehim a call,that he may be found at his new shop: next Poor to 13.T. Van Hones were rooms, with thebest end cheep-ed stock in Tioga county C. W. SEARP.

Vrellsboro, April 24. 1872

:::IwEsDAAr.l_-,,,Dgepipgi ,17' 'lBl,.

,ITellie,,`llll nwn up ilkeitrntui-,,you've beattneAhls ," Only just, Straighten .up this'Afurtupto;auttlll never •tlirow• anythingAdman.ttgniit. y 'There, -116w, 'let's kiss and„

untke.up, as the, children say."Nellie urns and laughingly held up •heraW et ttiOnthlor, It Ishii!~ of peace; and then,un(ler.the intluttnee of her deft fig

I.sere, confuStun. was suddenly banished,•andwhen Oranger came amnia t o spend thee) ening, he deeide,d that, notysly had a pret-tier Wife or a tidier home than his friendTorn Carter. '

\Vise little Nellie having once gained pea-session*.ol' the inattisnotriai tietd, took careto lccep it. until Tern, NV :la- quite cured ef' Liscareless habit:

,'S'Ornetlinea,be skilled, threatened with areilii,se, 1)11aq-elite, friar mail of seolding, onlyhad quietly t9;bring something, of her ownand lay,it ,down beside whatever Tom hadtoased downoilid it was sure to bepaaivayimmediately, for Toni seldinn failed.to takethe hint.

And if static other little -whinan,..lis-wiseand tidy' as `Nellie, takes -a bint also, thiastory will littve'served 'its purpose.- • _

Otarva,tion at Sea.Mr. ,latatia%Dugan,- who arrived in Itel,v

York from-Sydrul, Cape Breton, yesterday,gives the, following account ,of a' wreckedbrig whichthe schoonerLancaster (M whichMr. Dugan ' Was' passenger) came .up. withand boardedthe -I.9th of September, •

On theright of the 18th a strong headwind prevailed, At different periods thecaptain's attention was drawn to a mysteri-ous object; now off the port, and now otithe starboard_bow. The hiokouts were con-tinually reporting the black hull that'lleptin sight all the time, until the , captain gavehis opinion that the object seen ahead wasa dismasted and deserted vessel. The Lan-caster, was bound to Sydney, Cape Breton,from Charlottetown, Prince Edward's isl-and, with a cargo of produce, :and the windincreasedBO Aitrongly before daybreak thatthe captain was compelled to order a largedeok load to be thrown overboard in orderto lighten the, vessel.

Just, after dawn the unknown object hovein eight again; but none of those on watchcould distinctly make out what it was, Thecaptain however satisfied• himself that itwas an abandoned ,vessel. It rang eightbellsi,and the steward announced breakfastready., While atbreakfast the second mate,Mr. Prior, hultriedtinto the cabin, and ad-dressing himself to the captain; said:

"There's s abandoned hull adrift offtbestarboaril,quaiter; her spars are gone, andshe looks to hafebeen a brig orbrlgantine."

soon after Captain Martin went on deckthe bull of . a,likrge craft was plainly discern-ible off the-start oard ',quarter, about twopoints to the nortlyilat the disman-tled vessel had been deserted—there _VV7I.9 noquestion, as the heavy mass was beingloiss

ied about like log. The captain gave or-ders to bear away for the wreck, and atmidday the,sc ooner Lancaster was, broad-side to the ab dolled vessel, It was a well-shaped,' stron ly-built hull, but thebulwarksand stanchion bad been badly dealt Withby the eleme ts, • and the whole was muchweather beats .

At one bell,the wind hadlowering of 'atin, of the Lakmate, (Mr, Prin chvga ofand Mr. Jamesing wreck.'opresented itseBled in canvlplanks of aljoand sea, were

lor half an hour after noon,o eubsided as to admit of theoat, in which Captain Mar-

caster, and Nr. Butlidge, theor, Ftcond maw, remainingthe schooner.) two -seamen,Dugan put out for' the drift-

'n boarding it a dismal sightf. Splintere,i span, entan-Is and rigging gear, and thect torn asunder by ,the windscattered around in sad con•

fusion. ' More dismal still wire the "sceneswhich further mestigation brought to light.Below a heap of motley rigging, and, bro-ken by ite welght (f a spar %vhich lay acrossit, .wera ,the bones of a human being—askeletoti:•„'!T*4cull. and ribs had beenerushe&anost on a level with the deck.—Shreds of can as trowsers and a Guernseyfrock were fouird amongand near:the bones.

Furtheretal revealed five other skele-tons. ;A 1410 covering of crisped flesh re-mained on four of the skeletons, showingthat they had 'died more recently than theother two.

Many of the utensils of the galley werefound, and Otptain Martin made a' strictsearch among them to assure himself .whe-ther there had been any food on board atthe tim e of the death of there men. Not asingle remaining pot or vessel of any naturein the cooking department of the ill-fatedcraft contained the least particle of food.—This discovery seemed to satisfy the cap-tain that all -tin hoard bad Perished' fromhunger—haring failed, after months of ea-ger eipectation and short allowance, tomeet with anybelping hand. The spectacleon board the 'sepulchral bull -was at leastappalling. The hardy sailors themselves.seemed to sicken at the revolting disclosure,and an ominous silence seemed to have beenspontaneously determined on by the livingones who stood among the skeletons of thedrifting hull,

It was ascertained that the vessel hadbeen rigged a b ig. Therhnll bore no nameon its sternpost-On the bowsprit the word" GlenalvOn ' as barely legible. In theforecastle, which was almost filled withwater, a mostrarthly stench was discov-ered,•and only wo inert could be ,found toenter and remain long enough inside to re-port what they had seen there. There weretwo corpses on the floor, and one stretchedacross a "hunk." These• sad relics wereremoved on deck, and the nine bodies werearranged in line and covered in canvas bythe captain's order. _.

.The wheel house had been carried away,

and fastenings of the rudder broken.—This, as the captain remarked was the workof some tremendous sea. The foremast badbeen cut away to save the vessel from foun-dering—one of the extremest emergenciasin a hurricane at sea. The jibboom wasgone. and the entire craft, as she then ap-peared, was the most complete wreck Cap-tain Martin bad seen or heard Of in his nau-tical experience of nearly forty years,

Entering-the cabin, a foul odor was dis-covered, bi:at not intense enough to forbid athorough investigation. Toward the end ofthe steps ldading down to the cabin a fetidpool of water was seen. and the men had towade through it in order to reach every por-tion of the cabin. "Between a stationary ta-ble and a couch the head of a corpse pro-truded from a berth in the-wall. and, whenbrought on deck, it was found to he in astate of .decay.. A buttoned jacket of goodmaterial, blue pantaloons, a flannel shirtmarked " T. F.," and one boot covered thecorpse. The chronometer in the cabinpointed to 4.30 o'clock; and on the station-ary table was an open Bible turned down-ward, a revolver with two chambers loaded,and a bottle containing a piece of paper up-on which was written• " Jesus, guide Odato some helper. Irreifol God, don't let. usperish." The wort s were detached, and ahiatus occurred betlveen every two or three

, id them, which ehoriw e that the writer musthave been in either the lowest stage of de-bility or driven to thadneas by hunger, . Inthe captain's stet& room -hie corpse wasfound lying bent on ahe door, as though hehad fallen from weakness, *addle struggling,with faint hoe, to save himself and men.lOn his bed were scattered hooks, papers,

I ite.; but one sheet attracted particular at-' tentien, it was dated

"MARTINIQUE, May 30, 1872." Dear Kate :—I will post this letter here,

to assure you of my well-being; btu do notattempt to hazard an answer to this port; asyou kill not find me here a week hence. Ihave kept all my.strong promises tb you, inspite of a thousand bad advices [from mycomrades.

-I drink a little beer, but that is

all. Your precious photograph is a Lillesilent angel—at least I think it so—and I ,read your letters over a hundred and a lamaBred times again. You say in yor dated'No. 16 Hope street, Liverpool, gm the oldman was altogether turned in my itiyor whenhe heard of my having passed the board.—Now mind and keep him so until I get homeagain, when everything will be comfortableand jolly, Write to Hal's address in' St.John, 'yew Brunswick, for should it . notreach me there, Hal et least will know whereI am. Wishing you good health and cheer-fulness and good fortpne, my 'own dealinglime, I am forever your own liohti.rt.

" Rot' -1 , U. li,km."The ship's regular papery were not foundopen, but Captain Martin took in; charge a

neat writing desk found in the captain'strunk end lucked, There was a slate on thetable in the cabin, which table was covered.by guards such as are used at meals in rough

weather. The slate, intended for takingdoivn the l_9g in rough, contained only Meg,ihl ivriling and-blurred- figures. ' The- Otp;taln's trunk contained numerous letters.

Toward three o'clock a dead calm pre-vailetVand the boat's company that wenton board the dismal wreck rowed back toproeure 'something to eat and drink. Atseven p. att., the calm continuing, CaptainMartin proposed to set out" for the ill-fatedvessel again, to perform the sorrowful ser-vices of a burial at sea. For coffins a•quan-tity of old canvas was brought, and rudeWO were quickly formed out of that inate-rini. At 6:80 &clock, the pale moon shin-ing solemnly over that lonely sepulcher ofthe sea, a long board was laid upon thesound portion of the bulwarks, and twobag s,'to which weights were tied, were laiddown, and rattled as they fell. A lampwas held by a sailor on each aide of thetempoTiary hearse, and after Captain Martinbad read late usual service, the plank waslifted upward, whereupon the coffin bagsand slfeletons slid into the sea. The cere-mony,jol.r, the party put back again for the.T.,ancaste ~ happy to quit the gloomy craftthat had harbored so many dead, heard somany dyipg grOans, and such awful roaringof the wihd end sea that had caused all thatdeath and destruction. Captain Martin hasprocured every clue, all of whichhe will give to the authorities at Halifax orSydney, so that thetrue history of the ole-?elvon may, be learned.—.N. Y. 2lmee.

A Story of Society.About f rty years ago an heir was born to

oneof th families claiming Brahmin castein this co ntry. If any such claim be just,we might rant It to the traditions, the cul-ture, the thorough breeding of this man'srace. Cu 'ture and traditions and breedingwere 'facts assured to them for so manygen-erationsth t they were the least self-assert-ant of h man beings. Philip, havingreached m nhood, lived with his mother inthe quietest of stately old mansions, on thequietest stiteet of the gravest of Americancities. The house stood back among cen-tury-old hemlocks and oaks; it held a fairproportion of the few really fine paintings'there are in this country; there Were in it,also, one oic two fine marbles, and on thewalls som priceiess etchings. The old-faihion.edr irms were full of bric-a- brac--the closets f marvelous china. Philip wasa tall; darpt, lean man, with the erectcarriage and high features of an Indian;something e had, too, of the gravity and

o the red man. Rook, the liquorreticendealer arou d the corner, seeing the fault-less fit of its boots and gloves, andthe thor-oughbred grays he drove, sneered at himevery Morn ng for a " bloated aristocrat;"the colport ur and tract distributor lookedat bric-a-ba and horses and inquired whythese thing were not sold and the money_given to thl poor. some of us, perhaps, inbitter mood, watching 'him come out ofchurch, might have questioned whether heand his cll Sfl were not serving God andMammon.

_

Neither Rook nor colporteurUnderstoodhat toPhilippaintings,oussurrou dings, and well-fi-luxuri-ous 'clothes1 1since 1).1s biqh, bad been common-place ne-cessaries to be assessed or dispensed with aslittle as daily air or light.

If Philip was a hero, he had none of theear marks IN which that genus of men areknown in nvels or ordinary life. He wasnot hilioutti, cynical nor boyishly enthusi-astic;lappar ntly he had never discoveredhuman natu e to be corrupt or society basedon falsehood and tyranny; he had not evolv-ed from his inneronselousness the ghost ofa theory to Set the Wqrld right; he had nev-er hinted refarin in a book or a lecture, oreven a leading artiele;; Le was not •ft mem-ber of a society of any sort; his name neverwas found on a subseription,,list; the appa-rent tenor of his life was strictly that of hisclass; lie read law enough toenable him tomanage his estates; he was a hard, studentin such branebe.s of science as :41ted -hiswhimL;his companions were wellbred4nenand refined, beautiful women; he innt akeen appreciation of the heat music; liewent to balls, to the opera,', in winter; behunted,' or sailed his yacht in summer. Ifany of his compatriots had liken asked forPhilip's story, they might have quoted:—" Story, God bless you: theta is none to tell,sir." But few of them noticed the one sin-gular trait inithe man, the entire absence inhis talk or thoughts of all mention or re-membrance Of himself. Whether the pecu-liarity was hereditary, or whether sonic un-wonted accident had given to him in earlylife the second sight, which showed himhow insignificant each human atom was be-fore God and among his fellows, no oneknew; but the result was a quiet, life-longignoring of Philip by Philip, as far removedfrom conseioXis humility as vanity. " I sawhim mentioned in an English journal as one'of the first ti;ree chess players in this court-,try," said on , friend. " I had been intimatewith him ford nine years, and never knew be-'fore that he understood the,game." "He hadthe healthiest, sweetest moral nature I evermet with,",st id one of the first of ourChris 7tian teachers 1 " but no titan lever heard himtalk of hls re'ligion or his creed.",

There was Lto be a private concert onewinter's evening, where none but critics andartists were tp be present. They waited forPhilip, for ho verdict was important to thedebutant; mine than one 'lair fastidiousface, too, turned impatiently to the door,watching for him. Some one then broughtthe word the Philip lay dying; dying of afoul disease ontracted in visiting a jail.—The shock o surprise was as great to hisfriends as t at of pain, we can easily be-lieve. Thesefair, -delicate women couldtot associate jails and death from foul dis-ease with the Philip they had known. Af-ter he was dOad it was told quietly (peoplespoke of Philip quietly, alifre or dead) thatthere was_not a jail or almshouse, nor apurlieu of vice and misery in the city with/.Ihiflt he la.l not been familiar for years.How much' of his income had gone to hispoorer brother, only God remembered.

The story is, after all, one of negatives.Assuredly flap made no mark in theworld, no brut among men as Americansare taught it s the highest aim of life to do.But we tell h. a story because we believe thistype among is class of countrymen is notuncommon, tad in these days, when a manso easily bey mes his own demigod, it is as'worth while to suggest it to our boys asthose varnished with cheap glory of adver-tised philanthropy. Nobody would callPhilip's a sUccessful life; the mention elfhim in the inewspapers eren was the brief-est, he dropped silently out of the circle ofhis friends; but they who knew him arestartled even yet to find how his memory re-mains, unlike that of others who are dead;how, remembbring hint, it is eav to doright, to take their proper humble place be-fore God and among His creatures• bow heseems even in the .silence of the grave to'live with Nature, fulfilling- God's word—-with the breath of every summer day, po-tent, healthful, calm.--tr. E !Tribune.

A Lake of Pitch,l-:ume thirty-six miles south from Port of

Spain lies the famous Pitch Lake, coveringa space of ninety-acres, and containing mill-ions of tons of so-called pitch. It is situa-ted in the Laßrea district, the whole ofwhich is of bituminous character, much ofthe ground looking like en asphalt pave-ment, half overgrown with marsh-lovingweeds, whose roots feed in the sloppy wateroverlying the pitch. The whole air is per-vaded with a smell of bitumen, and on ap•proaching the lake the evil odors grow op-pressive and sickening. The pitch howevercertainly does nut injure vegetation, thoughplants will not grow actually in it.. La Breais famous for ninny kinds et tropical plants.Pine apples, for ex.aniple, are brought hereto special perfection. They grow anywhere;clinging to the patches of richi brown soil,seemingly unmindful of the pitch spewingout of the earth iirodd wreaths and lumps.Even on the very shores of the lake itselfare groups of- Moriche fan palms and thickundergrowths of corcorite.

The surfixce of this Stygian pool, glaring,and glittering, in the sun, presents a most,bingular appearance, The black mass ofiviphalt is ,divided by• narrow channels ofclear w ater into hundreds of isolated, patch-es, ab if hugefoul blotches were dotted allover the .9114aCe of x Like of sparklingtress. Straggling along in the center are anumber of small islands coveted with thicklow scrub, near which is the very fountainof foulness., the place where the ail halt isstill oozing up. The -pitch here is b.'ellowand white with sulphur foam; Et) are thewater channels; and out of both water andpitch innumerable bubbles of gas arise,

smell. •!1On.. upping.' one's, hand' Into his. liquid

pitch; one istastonigilied to find that it doesnot soil the fingers. The old" proverb thatone cannot touch,pitchwithout beingdefiled,happily'does not stand true here, or theplace would be still More loathsome thannow. It may be scraped up and mouldedinto any shape you will, but 'nothing is lefton the hand save clean gray mud and water.It Inv be kneaded for an hour before the,inud,be sufficiently driven out of it to makeit sticky. I This very , abundance !of earthymatter it is which, while it keeps! the pitchfrom soiling, makes it far less-valuable thanit would be if it was pure.

It is easy to understand whe4ce this earthy.matter (twenty or thirty per cent.) comes.—Throughout the neighborhood the grmindisfull, to the depth of 'hundreds Of feet, ofcoaly and asphaltic substances. !Layers• ofsandstone, or of shift containing this decay-ed vegetable alternate with layers Whielicontain none.' And if, as Seems fprobable,the coaly, matter is continually !changinginto asphalt and oil, and then working itsway upward through every crack and pore,'to escape from the enormouspressure of thesuperincumbent soil; it must needs carry upwith it innumerable particles of the soilsthrough which it passes.—Ltarper'.'s Magaz'e.

Wit in Parliament.Of the vit that can convey reproof with

the keenest sting, 'and yet without givingoffense, unless he who takes it makes it,'there are numerous examples in ' both -hou-ses. The'very best, or certainly among thevery best of these specimens came, in theLorda, from Bishop Atterbury; in' the Com-mons, from Pitt. The former example iswell known, but it will bear recalling to thememory of those who may have let it slipfrom their memorabilia. Atterbury hadobserved of -some bill before the Lords, thathe had in a previous session prophesied thatan attempt would be made to bring in thisbill, and he regretted that his prophecy badcome true.,_ On this, ever-blustering andblundering ' Conlngsby started to his feet,.and ridiculed the prelate for. likening. him-self to a prophet. "But, for mypart,", saidConingaby, I don'tknow what prophet toliken him to, unless it be to that furiousprophet Balsam who was reproved brhisown ass." To this, ever cool and self-pos-sessed 'Atterbury replied:. 1' Since the noble lord has discoVered In

our manners such a similitude, I am wellcontent- to be compared with the prophetBalsam. But, my lords, lamat a loss howto make out the otherpart of the parallel.--I am sure that I have beenreproved by' no-body but his lordship!"

The elder Pitt was as brilliant in theCommons as he afterward became, whenEarl of Chatham, Jo the Lords. In bothhouses he, gave many instances. We take acharacteristic one from the Commons. Ina debate [Mr. Moreton happened to say,"King, Lords and Commons," adding, ashe looked. at Pitt, '" or,. as the honorablegentlemanwould prefer to put it—Com-mons, LordS, and King."

Pitt arose. He had often, he -told thehouse,. been surprised; now his blood rancold. He moved that the words bsi takendown. The clerk of the house obeyed; andat the words of Pitt, solemnly/ uttered," Bring them to me!" Mr. Moretorrfell intosuch, a fright that he appealed to the Speak-er, protesting that he had really meant noth-ing. " King; lordS,? commons! commons,lords,. king! Tria ,juncta in uno. I meantnothing. Indeed, I meant nothing!" Helooked at Pitt, and Pitt gravely rejoined:

" I don't wish to push the matter farther.The moment a man acknowledges- his errorhe ceases to be guilty. I have al great re-gard Ifor the honorable member, and, as aninstance of that regard, I give him this ad-vice: :Whenever that member-meens noth-ing, I recommend him to say nothing."—Temple Bar.

Gentlemon's Fashions in OldOn Times.In tdl the short-lived splendors lof which

the old chroniclers tell so much, women hadbut little part, whether as the wearers orMakers. ,The first 'milliners were beardedmen. It Was a tailor, not a mantuamaker,in the modern ,sense of the word,' who tookhome,Rathrina's•new gown to the, house ofPetruchio. Nor did the comparatively sim-ple; and becoming attire of the,ledies of feu-dal times Change by any means so oftenfrom the-decorous grace of its original typeas that of their own fickle lords. ,

There is; less difference, sartorially speak-ing, between Queen Eleanor mud Margaretof Anjou, between Betertgaria and I4abel ofFrance, than between the men of their re-•spectiVe times. They seidoin made them-selves sublimely ridiculous, as masculinevanity so constantly urged the fops of theperiod to do. Until we reach the bristlingruffs and steeple hats of Elizabeth's reign,there is nothing—unles it be the fantasticcontrast; of colors brou ht in by Henry theSixth's imperious consort—to provoke asmile,' from the daysof the Confessor tothose of the Defender f the Faith.iBut the men of thos centuries were ar-rayed as superbly as so many bright-wingedbutterflies—flashing with rainbow tints andpowdered with gold. In every householdof any pretension to rank, evenlin those ofthe poorer gentry, who groaned over thefashioner's charges and haggled smartlywith the Chapman who sold the wares, alarge slice of the family income was devo-ted to clothing his head. Andl not merelyvanity and ostentation, but the gregariousinstinct which we share with sheep, pushedmedieval mankind into a practical compli-ance with fashions which,'were directly in-"jurious to health.

The warm clothing, -an4 in particular theweighty hoods, worn in Edward the Third'sreign, were excellent allies to the deadly ep-idemics of the times, and may even havewhetted the scythe of that Black Death thatmowed among our forefathers as amongthick grass, and that swept away half thepopulation of Europe. The extravaganttightness of the French hose and doubletworn under Louis -the Eleventh—and of 1which Charles the Bold's towering effigy,as he stands in stone larger than in life. be 'lside the famous chimney piece of the Bru-ges town hall, is the best example—was suc- 'ceeded by the ludicrous bulk' of the born.basted garments of Francis of France, andthe bluff Harry o England.

Trunk hose and Flanders coats, stuffed outwith hair:and wool, with bran or straw, ac-cording to the liberality of the customer,was what tailordom had then to' offer to adiscerning public; and soon afterward thestiff Elizabethan ruff, excruciatingly-starch-ed, and with its bristling points as shaft; asthe spiked leaves of the holly hedge, beganto incase the much-enduring necks of bothsexes. Then, to the brocaded doublet andshort hose of the original of the Vandyckportraits there succeeded -the lace falls, theknee buckleS, flapped coats, fathomlesswaistcoats, and majes.tic, periwigs of thatAtigusta» age in which the ,Ctesar held hisrevels at Whitehall;and spent in a monthof easy-going, careless, almost joyless prod-igality, the yearly income which Englandand the French king subscribedfor Charlesthe Second.—Harper's Bazar.

The proVisions of grace are such that thestrongest habits can be overcome, the mostdepraved hearts can be made clean, themost abandoned character can besaved, themost desponding spirit can be made happy,the most fiery trials canbe patiently endured,and, finally, a home in Heaven; where all i 3love, joy and peace, can -be •eternallysessed. Then, brother Man, lift up thyfallen head—for you there is aplenteous ri,-demption.

I have always noticed that wherever youfind flowers, no matter Whether in a garretor in a palace, it is a pretty sure sign thatthere is an inner refinement of which theworld is not cognizant. I have seenflowerscultivated and cherished by some of thelowest and most degraded of our people;even in the dens of vice you will sometimesfind them. Where these emblems of purityare found, you may rest' assured that theyrepresent a hope and speak of a heart 'norto he found where they are absent.

A bill seems, before the Committeeon :Ways and Means of thellouseiernbo.iy,ing a scheme of postal telegraphy, which atone time met iv)th favor. It Is an appa-rently pertinent suggestion that the commatee report as a substitute a hip abolishingthe franking privilege. Certainly, whoeverproposes to burden the Post Ciflice ,Depart-ment with the novel and onerous work of anational telegraph, ought to be willing toce it first relieved of the enormous load DIV

'posed by the franking abuse.

US FUL

Saute thirty y!urday to Mondacountry who w:hie for Sundayled ,pork, boiledit, I thought it t

requested -"ridfor curing par!" soon as menough to becu;barrel or eask,wof each piece, a:immediately rolin water until

,sink in the vess

' D SUGGEinii/S.i I ';1I 1 : Pork.

, .._

• are ago I lodged froa, Bat:with annn-keeper in the

:5 also a f#mer. On the ta-ginner, there was somerpick-the day before. Ontastinghe most delicious I ever ate:e host" to give his 'receipt. lie replied as follOwslhogs are: dressed and alai.

~, I pack the side pieces in aithplenty of salton all sidesad when my barrel is full Iit to mypump and ;Plimp

~ can see Ithe water cease tori 1, or to moisten the salt . on

the top of the c; sli. I then lay a flat stone,as large as the. essel will, receive, on` thecontents, so as t keep the •pork always un-der the salt or p ekle. I put it lnmy cellar,covered sofas to xclnde the flies, and there.it reinains'until a piece is wanted. Caremust be taken t keep the meat under., thepickle, or it will rust." nere is-the wholesecret of . maki g gook. jiickled pork forfamily use. W have used the above Meth-od, and we wan no better, easier or moreeconomical plal. . It has . often ' happenedthat. when we vented to put ' dow.Ertlievi i•,porkthere rem ned saine,of the old in the.'bottom of the c k: In that, Cassivre pouredoff the pickle, ook the • undistelved salt,packed the fres! pork on • top of the >old,lusing the salt w ich had been in the cask_;with the additio of fresh silt if liectsilary,ILand theatioured on the old pickla.or water.in this way we ave had pork:afters or-fouryears in the hat m Of our porkl3hrrel, andwhen used 4 w free from rani t' as 'itwas three weeks after it was put do*n..- In-deed, we seldom, emptied our pork barrel,except when it lwanted hooping. We be-lieve that boilingTickle is tiseless, if notin-jurlous. Pork ought not, if it can be-pre-vented, to be frozen before it is put dam..

The best porkweever saw was that from •somepigs under the charge of a lad whotook es much cake of them- as some' pee*do of ,their children. Every day be.used.tOgive-them aditaier of ,het potatoes .for hasaid that he didn't seewhyhis pigh"Shotildn'thave their tate ~ hot es- well na‘ithzisalf." •Then he used to scrub theni several ttraeaa, iweek Witt a,bru h and soap,rinsing•,thelsiwith'clear Water The anitnala,Inietnitflo .enjoy their /av on. and used topAbisittlir eeagerly toward I.lm-• as lie-`040310-in- tagwith hispail a.d scrubbing-bra:b. ',,Thsty Was also kep perfactlyclearte.and 'their.tronghs. washed . . t frequently. la , conse-quence the pork was perfection.

As ageneral t ing it is a good plan tore. .ject pork made rom hogs -that have-beejakept by distille • or butchers; but, if possi-bie get pork tha' has been tired and fed, bya dairyman, and finished off with corn.

_

Bow Dee naiad Bbtllk heE(sti• For years this has been kips:Looted quest=with butter malt-113,. But the generalprac-tice has been to tut about 2iinehesof' milkin each vessel is summer, adds about _3 inwinter., Experi ss eats made with great carethe summer pass have,proved the error Ofthis usage, and i is now g,eteridly coteededthat more cream and betteri•cah be securedby allowing the silk to stand in deep,pails:;A corresponsien of 2'he Rural ,New -Yorkersends the results of two experiments as fol-lows:

The first aerie of experiments was • niacteat Hummerson it Wiley's dairy, sin` Little -

Valley, in cans 18g- inches in diameter anti20 inches deep, cith 157 Ihd. of milk takenfroze their dairy'of 10.9 644; the rest ofthe milk`was sent to the- f9etsiry. The 44-perimeots' were conducted hy. Mr. B. hit-self, each time producing 6 1b,4. of butterof •superior quality. The . cream was token.from the milk as soon as the change ebegamto showitself, or before touring. This wasmade in July when the thermometer stoodin the room at. 90 deg. and upward, in tlrafternoon' of each day. The milk. wiz*.brought by thel cooler as low as (10 deg. luone hour and ten minutes after, it was put itithe ean,l and kept at that temperature ,the change (the time varying from N To.6qhours,) and the cream was churned at once;'yielding 0 lbs. for each experiment, or near-'ly 1 lb. of butter from WI lbs. of •milk. Mr.

that the surroundings did not givea fair test.

The next experiment was tried at' Cold'Spring, .in 'the dairy of Wm: K. Miller.They have 40 cows, and have ,been using .for the last,two years the Pope 'and Tuttle'pans in their dairy in Cold Spring, also intheir dairy in Alachiees. They are using allthe known facilities for makinglgoOd butterhaving running, water in their." milk-meal,and ice whenever it is needed toR keep thedesired temperature. This trial was' made

IIthe tirs,t tot days et' August, and' designedto tie ath aougit test of the manner ' - e -.

ting milk. Tht: morning's milk .4 used,each tillAq' the ittilk- being divided ill o near-ly equal parts; first experiment, 18; • lbs. inthe deqp:i an 17--i inches, and 141* lbs. inthe pan t!: inches deep. The water wastaken from thtsame tank to keep the tem-perature of th milk standing at about"6Bdeg., it sourin,: in the pan in 40- hems, andnot changing I,s the can till 48 ,hours, .-frite'cream was eh rne:d as soon as taken. fromthe milk, the 4 an producing 6 Ibs. 'of.bitterbefore salting, and the pan 6 lbs. 10 oZ: or1 lb. of butte from 23 lbs. 6 oz; of milk,and the can 1 tb. of butter froth 22,Thif. paoz. .

gtorin' . .harm Implemenia.. . ,

‘warnscot's tool-houSe yeater-,of the rain. His grass iscut,lave no further use for hisorthodox way of doing withnavy farms, is to unhitch it

e where the last hay cuttingleave it in the field, Swam-eretic ! I found his mowern one corner of histool•house,it had been there when thebuilt, and had never cut any

ceci it had been thoroughlythe bearings oiled. I rather

I said so. Swamscot said,

ttle way i make money. I've~,er six summers, and. it'a' at day than Joe Peet's that he

IT•.,As lay in the field untill'. was then put into an open

.1 sheep ran and the herolas a nice looking object thisDTV that he expended fifteen

I went intoday to get-outand he willmover.Thea.mower,' onfrom the pia:wPs done, anscot must bepacked awayas snugly as itool-house wegrass. I notcleaned, andliked the idea" Wiry, that'sused that mobetter mowerbought last y-NOternber,shed whereroosted. It -aspring, and Idollars on it bylThy, sir, he

• lore he could make it run.-ver took the sickle out of ith quit until he wanted toor did he oil it."

from the timeuse it again; r

I thplows, etc., etiby Swamscot.that you may 1tion of bringfsimer. Hehis diaing•rootliterary men. w

his hireand magazinesthings; they refamily, and disdegree of irate

hoes, cultivators, harrows,were all snugly put awayI mention these little things

;now why ho has the •reputi4 -fi thrifty, thorough,' Hindi'.* more current literatures

ti table evenings than ,Auld care for; but you ought

men go through the papersAnd they ,share the good'

Id with each other and theluss the same with no smallligeno.e —Cop. Rural `• New .

T KICK AT D:4011T. The,kicking at night oftener

.q.vow.3ness anti reStlessnesapropensities. It is a forru

he limbs, We have curedby attaching- a round hall of

%vo pounds to the hindlet-most used in kicking, by

1-1014.:3E3 TH.catve of n hornthe resnit ntbhn of viciousof hybterin of tanimals of'wood xceig.,liinglock of the limbmeans of a stralfeet long. Wlnto biin -s,lf n blo

hurls that itWow, and cense!

two and a lief or threea Le kkks he administers

from the Ball. He quick.e . keep,' still hereceives no.to New York-

1,1 izt A 13.E,yo.lll' IWO oVa4.

until htrup•Lly1110: .'ll4l one for

I.KT Aricahr horsit's nodo and lion'off 'lwant4 to go. ;: Jo n#B one'It' has long tlied ttis" ThuIC, al wa) s at linott, and athe beast. Tt•i•

-CtiONv-Oect) tomatot2B ,s;i1; ptipers (Wit)fretllvr.ttlitt 11011 t

I:Vott eider vitos :iy after

iticrep:,-,--Tio 'lone peck Ofold three goodsized Onion4,

) Feeds taken'out); chop to-i ree minutes in three quartsiegar, ff 1/row this vinegar

of nice flowtwo cups‘ocloves, grbuinatuon,tomatoes 3v

OE

NO..' 51.

Eilll

Ell