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111 I..IV or ! tr mts. p. k. matt. "Oh, w..r!d o beautiful. cuM wo I1W0 N,weirhre in jour fl..wer rrera death A wr.d-rinr in a palc ieIiI, Where the llit-niM ilrawa Ua tnatli. "Ah, jweliliae paed ilirou;li Jon fires ol wine, U'irtb IVri tn time . And the ei-wnee that maU.uriait.iin Ji tier fo tin- cup ofzdd.M And tbe Slisfcr knelt with a l-oard that rushed To bit feet like a, ftorm of mow; But youth in his bosum carnal an4 flashed. And vouth fa hi. voice ?pale low. Vet the queen lay darlr on the reou-floor. With her e en hid In Lcr hair. "Should ehe lilt her lace from the duit any more. They moaned, it will not telalr . AU night, with the moon, she w at chef awl wter. Nonr in her ear is sweet. All day, like the de-id Vin2'Bhadow,l,c keep Jler place at the dead km;' IeeUn "Your hcaut i worth all other thio-s The insolent -rods hate wt-n. It fhould not fade for a thousand kin- You shall he fore or the queen." And eloper the JI after hM the charm " Jttf life.Oqueen' that 1 hnnr." bbe reached the cup with a vanderho: arm "Is it Me lor my lord the Un?" Ny. the kin- will not drink wine, to day. There le ono drop here, for j ou. Oh. listen, and Veep jour 1-eauty, I pray. While the sweet world keeps thodew. "For you new loversEhall always rh' And the lords and the prior"! near, With 1 he f unrife-lidit in their Terrian ej btood, jewelled and rtill, to hear. '0h, what were Le to the lonelj- wbat It U Lore I would havejou brins. And Love in this widowed world la not. Let me o to my lord the king.' My I-o- Aunt EV MIB HI LOCK. S-rftoT rotooand light of hand A- the- fklreat in the land Who can rijhtly uoderutand ily lor Arum ' Staple in her though asd way. True m ry word idie i-ay. Who shall even dare to prai? My loie Annie MMat a nausbty world, and rude. ex Id uii'zenti Mood ; lier tired of twins 2od iiy lore Annie. Hundred uf the wt and jtreat Mixbt o'erloo her iuea. estate . nt ce Iwr od ansa 1m wait. iiy lore Annie Many or few the love that may Shlae aiHta her alien! way, (d Hill loir ber nizbt and day. My lore Anuie. Krminhrmcts of Lord L)l!on IiOt& at bun a he slopes along witii the ca-yanterui air of a man uf fashion, who ha. nothing todi hat lounge altout, holding hi- itory-hended cane in his apparently ncrvdov prap ; yet wliat works las that laifl accomplished 'two of the Ijcst acting plvy that hold their place m tlic stage, ti sav nothing of the novcU. talcs and Jtctcho hi full rf" tli1 hright rtcationtd" hi" gcniiw. The low el this great man, onitnr. pKt. statesman, ntnelist, is .still, I think, t re cent to cnahlc us Ut realize the lull extent uf our national calamity. Although I know too well he -Ux-jfr. in tliat pbec win re king and Kjct lie, et I can hardly tiring mj velt to lieliee i shall not meet liiin again m Mmieof his aei'ustu!iiel haunts-; 1 have s, often known iiim altscnt for a longer -riMl, and turn up again as liright. cordiaJ and kindly as-ce- lie had taken his scat, of eoun-e; hut it is a curious thing that lie iieter once spoke in the 1 1 oust of Iinl-. That gtdden ehanilicr never once htird tin Miund oftlie new icr's oiee, any more than it did that of his illustrious rnal, Maulay. tlie picked litterateur of the wigs. They were anxious to gee Itrd l-yt-ton "'up," on the question of the di-est;t)-li-h merit of the Irish church: hut he con trived to cale tbe scent of the "whip,"" iho sought him in vain, both at Knehaorth awJ in irorcir Hjuarc. The hoi jHilloi were not wry htiih.tr aith Lord I Alton's proencc. lie a.s not ultvn Mtii in lle jrksor other places of public roort: but in tliat part of Oxford t-trivt loundel on one end by Marble arch and the other Iy the llcgcnt circus, be was !! known, and many a bat went off in silent greetings as lie joshed on his way, hi lintughaut generally following him, to the 1'ortland club ; there he spent a couple of hours every afternoon, in the season. It was in this locality met him, two day-, I think, after his name appeared in the tiazrltr. In later life he was generally deaf; but 1 said, "(uot morning, my lord." lie heard me, and, laughing, replied I the tirst ierson who had called him by hi new title. The last time I met thi distinguished man wa-at St. IjConards where I bad gone for a short holiday. I came quite sudden ly npnn hhn, one wet, stormy Nocuiber evening, and not far fnm the archway of the South Saxuii hotel. It was blowing a gale of wind, and his slender figure water til and reeled almost as lie tried to make head against the blast. He had no oer nutrnnd that which he did wear looked, I thought, faded and shabby. I was trying to slip pa-t him unobscned, for be neer met me w ithout stopping U siy a few wonU . hut be recognised meat a glance, taught hold of my arm. and asked me to come home with him to the fjueen's hotel at Hastings, where he was vtaying, and dine, lie wa. without any unbrclla, the rain fell in tor rent ; and" I coered him as well as I could with mine. 1 found lie had occupied apart ments on the ground floor at tlic hotel. Tricv sccnied in a sad state of conliwnn. The'lloor wa strewn with a litter of biiks and jaitcrs, and copiously sprinkled with Turkish to'aeeo, an odor of which penaded the air. Tins table was laid with oners fnr three, hot only myself and host "-at down, lie ate, I oWncd, butsjtaringly, and drank nothing but water, with a tlah of .sherry in it. In the evening as 1 was taksng my de jKtrtdre, I came ujion the (iennan waiter who had attended at table, and hinted that thr rooms might t kept in a little letter order. "Ules- you. -ir, .said the waiter, "tlic place lias 'not 1een swcjt or dusted for a fortnight; that gent i outrageous like if a 1 look or a peris touched. The manager want to get him away, but be has taken the rooms lor a month, and won't go: and he is su li good toy that our governor don't like to disoblige him." "Waiter,'' 1 said, sternly, "do you know who 1 that 'ere gent,' as you call him i V 'Viz, sir no, sir, replied the waiter in a breath, puxxlcd by the solemnity ol my tone. "That isljnrd lytton," I said, "the great est man in all llngland. Ifyou see much of him and note down carefully what he does and what be says, you may lieeome a sreond Unwell. lr, sir," said the waiter, "ou don't say -o! Our manager thinks thi geut is cracked , hegiesout in all weathers with out any gre.itvoat, and won't even take an umbrella . then he never examines his bill., but scriM'les off a chit k on any scrap of jei iter tliat i oiin s to hand. It wa only the dav lieforc Merday, a por woman i"imi with one ol tin m Iul- of ajrr lie s.nl the outlandii-looking gent who Imtl in our bouse had gien it to her, and she did not know what to do with it lie h.id come in to her cabin to light his pq? while Iter Ill iquid, a jHtor fi-henna n who w.i- dmwtxd iti th' last gale, lay there dead, lie wr.te n on the Imck of an old letter, and s,ud In-hoj-ed it would .do her gnMl. an't think of the "ir voiiian"s Mirj-riH- when 1 r brought Ikt biek ten sovereign- vthieh i!k manager gave me when he saw the r. "Surely, sir. the gent cannot Ik all mrht here:" and the waiter significantly touched his forehead. lie promised to prcMTve a faithful diary of hi- lord shipVJprHrcd nigs . but vhen 1 rtturnel to the hotel a! tout two weeks afterward-, I found tliat he, like the oor fihcrman, had lecn drownetl in a storm, and left nothing lichind him but a small loy, his son, who bail 1-een sent to school at the exticn-c of the hotel ominy, vith a view of educating him for thconrroits situation or J "age. Omsidering 1trd I.vtton only occupied him-elf in eomjtositiou for four hours ctery day, it is surprising the amount of work lie cout rived to get through, lie never had any time during my actuaintanec with him anything like god health; he was always placing liiai-ell under the wire of some phv sieian, and if lie heanl of any new remedy wli'ieh he thought might be applicable to hi own case he was sore to avail himself of it. Like his brother, the distinguished diplo matist, lie liecauie in later life nearly a con tinued Kypochondriac, although his intellec tual power did not seem in any way di minished. 1 was on a visit to Sudbrook trk, near llichuruid, alt Kit twenty years ago. It was then a hvdmpathic establi-liment, i're-idel over by a physician of eminence. To my surpri-e 1 met Iird Lyttf.n strolling up the aienuc, one moniing, mrrying his pijc in .ne hanl and a small travelling-bag in the other. The Ijondon season was at its height and Parliament sitting; but he remained for at least a month, tilting his meal at the public table, walking much in llicbmond park, and occupying hhn-elf with his papers and bis pi, ihc tobacco he smoked was not very strong, but the incessant use of it must have Ieen highly injurious to nerves so finely strung as his. lie seemed to me to have scarcely any apfetitc for food ; at breakfast he seldom ate more than a mouth ful of toa-t, and, having swallowed a cup of tea flew off to the solace ol his Wloved pine. There was, I rcmemlicr, a space of Wangled brushwood immediately behind the house, where I have seen him sit and saunter about for hours together, apparently absorbed in thought; ani no one, although the house ww full ol people, ever thought of inter rupting his mmude. He armed without nny tenant, acd aerer bad a visitor daring ihc whole period of his wjouro. At KscV . ...... t i:. .-a ,S fltn worm, Willed is lite l.yttons, his mother's family, the novelist did not, in his later life, reside mnch. A fricrnl of mine, the late I-idy Murray, lived at Andclhurr, onlv a few milo distant, and while on a visit there I liad frequent optkjr tunitleK of hearing of her famous neighbor. He was extremely opu1ar and tieloTed y the lower order- in nil that art of the muntrv, and his hospitality wa aprarently without a limit. 1 'conic came from ail inrts of the world, csnccially from America, to sec him. The house at Kncbworthwas often full, but I don't think the host always knew who his guests were. tendon Iil- The nroukljD Sfandal. COMMENTS OF THE I'RESS. From the N. Y.Tnhune. If .Mr. Jlecchcr falls it will be through his own letters, and not through anyvords ot His accuser. He is the only personage on the scene worth considering. We have therefore declined, hitherto, to publish tho revelations crowding in ujon us in regard to the licentious and foolish life of Theo derc Tilton. Those who run may read enough of him in his own published state ments. His sentimental gos-ip, dribbled through three years into every ear open to him, his ostentation of dishonor, rtal or fancied, paraded everywhere likcabadgo of merit, in Ftreet-, fcrry-b.iat, newspaper office, and at the tea-tables of social reformers-, sparing neither sex nor ace in hi hunt for conlldant-, the Grange mixture of maudlin magnanimity and currish malice which his account of himself displavs.Jhavo scciusd more than enough to enable the public to take his just measure, without en tering into objectionable narratives of his jimate life. His chosen familiars arc like unto him. It is irreparably disastrous to Mr. lleceher, and might serve as a warning tixneu like him, il there were any such, that he has admitted the intimates ol Tilton In too great familiarity with himself. Think of entrusting delicate, matters, involving the peace of families and the fair fame ot women, to a dull blunderer like Moulton, or an emptv-hcad d Iwibhlcr like Carpenter' Mouhi n. who had no more conception of the gratit of hi-ofhceot go-between than a ttlegrah-lMv has of the secret place of the thundr ; m.d Carpenter, devoured by a prurient lust of goswjp vvhh h makes it pny sicaliy impossihle for him to stay in his own shop at work when there i-a chance for him t t be meddim in the affairs of his neighbor-- How can any ne think ot peo ple like these w hile I My mouth pulpit is in danger"' lr.wt!.e . Her.ud. We cannot regird tin- - andal in any other light than th.it ol a scrituis calamity, not alone to all tlic partie- concerned in it, but to the entire community. A popular and powerful prc-ic!nr has been stricken down before the tl t k by whom he wis re vered, and hi- u-elum- i- not only im paired, but utterly du-tro.d. unit he can explain the aecu".itiMn- wim li are really based on his wn h it l - A w if and moth er is publicly di-Ii in. t- 1 the husband who had cum! nr. t d !nr l,i.n i lie husband has shown that he ouM h,i- torgive, and tfn-n. more ba-c i -ti,!, turn un and sek to de-troy tho-c wt.-'in I - had h.rmvcn Ladies and gcntleun n Lili - teial -tand-inff and prole cd mor.u worth have bu-ied tlicmsclvc- fr years ,i- muunn M'andal mongers, all the time di- ti- if.r tlic shame if thc-e three a- a phase ot - . i u life. Ihc Kiiuts seem to hae been t'iriud into very-devil-and to have been birelt at once of everything like moral und r-t mding ami all sense ot social decency, in a certain sense the community has sh.tn d in thi shaiuc, and it i- no wonder iu -ralit and religion suffer. Itut it i- now t'jo late to sit down and grieve tiver the wronir- uf the past. They have Iwcouie matter- ot impar tial investigation, and in tho end thty must become matters of solemn judgment. I n fortunaUdy the inquiry so far has been with out good results. Fnuii tin. N.tt.'-n. Thou satt I- on thou-and- gloit over the story simply hi cause it is sandalou- , thousand- more lieeatise the -tandard set up by such a man as ltccchcr seem- a constant condemnation of their own wa-nnd aims. The overthrow ot a yr.-t morali-t i- always a triumph for those h. diny that there i any molality hut w ha; nun m inufai ture tor hini-clt. It acts t'i ,is a ju-tilieati m ana encouragement t 5 li ' A bad ctr lor the righteous," .i- Kmler -aid, is a good vcar for those ia).o m.'ke no pretense to righlcousiKs- ; r;ti-e- them in their own estimation, put- an ei.d to -oine prick ings of eon-cieuee. ainl open up new fields ot activity. Th ie i- no ra-eal in the coun try to-day whi imt openly or -cerctly hoping that lie- Wi. r mav not -tieceed in ex tricating him- li from the net in which he is now entangled. And then mere are th iu-aiids of men w h are really not rascal-, and pas-, as viry respectable, to whom the downfall of anv thing great or respecta ble iu human -i'icty i - uuehow a satisfac tion, tti-uuh ti.ty ti t not wtll know why, and are olttn a-!tami.d to confe it to them selvi s. The souri e ol t!n feeling i- tine of tho- mysteries ( hum in nature on which neither the naturali-i- n r t! e theologians bale thrown iuiicIi luht, and it i- one w hioi. nobody who wishes to thiiilc well of his kind likes to explore. To -ay that iti-a torm of envy i- -imply to name without ex plaining it. Of it- d.llu-ion. of it-powerful influence iu our s.M ril lite, one knows comparatively little until one witne'- the progre ( a scandal such a- tliat vhich i to-day the talk of the country. It i- inten sified toward religiou- people by the nece sary o-tcntation of their profc ion-, and by tin ir tendency to treat a- mere tempora ry lap-e-i from virtue, wlncr cm In1 atone 1 for and reformed l.v the technical pmce-s of repentance, things which men of the world, -ometime rightly and sometimes wrongly, -et d wn a-irremediable defects of charai ter There i-, however, a far wor-e source f interest iu the Tilton-Hceeher N'andal" than we have enumerated, and one which more clearly reveals the barbarian stain in our blood. Trial by new-paper ha- certain spectacular attractions to which no other process can lay, hum. In proceedings how ever tragic, before court-ol law, the parties arc represented by professional advocate-, who, even if they lay aside the conventional decorum of tin ir calling-, and attempt a display of pathos can hardly rouse the feel ings ot the audier.ee. The retainer takes the point from their weapons, andghesa grccn-ro m air to their tear- and supplication- Ihe real play of pa ion nowhere appear- Il-e plaintiff and defendant are silent spectators of the game id -ki and ingenuity mi which their fame or fortune is staked- hen they appeal t the public, hovviver, e specially in what may be called capit il i .w the controversy has all the horrible n.ure-t of a conflict in the arena. Surelv. n i -rene in the amphitheatre was ever more -hoiking than the aault on earh nther m whit li Tilton and his wife have bun n gaged in the new-papcr- dur ing the pa-t week. His production of her letter-, written in moments of happy and confiding it somewhat ttfu-ivc tenaerncs-, to justify hi- desperate attack on her repu tation, and her hitter and incoherent impu tation to turn of ill hast and malignant pa -ions, of im aim, fai-ehood, treaehTy, of envy, hatnd. anl malice and all tin- un der the eye- ol millions of spectators, to whom the mutual rant1 and destruction oj th:s unhappy couple L'avc but a keener re'li-h 1 ir th ir breakia-t vhat i- there m horribh a- thi- in the " . M or the bull lights? 1- it not siiiueuhit disgraceful to our civi'i? ition tliat such quarrels should have to be fought out in tin- way, that we should have to protect domestic happines and purity by inviting the whole world to Mr the Tunc- tearing a household to piece? ni!i theSn Franc. -Cm Iiullctin. I alrlilns and ( .inning Turtle-. Turtles which supply the soup of alder luunic lea-Is arc found in immense numlcrs on the northern coast of Mexico, in the neighborhood ofMatizan, and the particu lar .species known as the green turtle, the most highly prized ot the whole, is found nowhere else than on this coast. With the immense wealth that could le derived from the catehing and canning of them, it might lie deemed surprising that such an enter prise was not started long since ; but the easy going disposition of the neighbor ing people, and the difficulty of putting that turtle up in such a manner as would ensure its preservation in all climates and under all conditions has proved a bar to it. The attempt has been made several times, but it has invariably resulted in failure, until undertaken by 1. M. Scoofy, who b at pres ent in this city trying to organize a com pany to carry on the business on a proper scale. Aliout four years ago Mr. Scoofy fir-t be gan his series of experiments, and twoyears ago succeeded. Since then he has been car rying on the industry in a small and unsa tishtetory style, being crippled by want of capital (he navmg lost 10,000 in the ex periments), and by want ofcomptent hands. Some w horn be had engaged in this city, and who represented themselves as experts, he lor a long tiuio paid 100 per month.but they proved themselves incompetent not even saving a single can. Kut Mr. iScoofy himself has put up about 00 cans, most of which he has sold ot Fort Yuma, Tucson and (iuaymas. Some which were exposed for eight months to the sun, rain, etc., in Lower California, when opened, appeared as fresh as the "(Jay when they were first canned. Tho turtles are caught in the vicinity of Ciuavmas, and each weighs about one hun dred and seventy-five pounds. They can be caught day and night, and every month in the year ; but the best time is from May to September. They are therein millions. From twenty-five to seventy-five cents each 13 paid for catching them, and from filtcen to twenty a day can be caught, in a canoe. Ir. Scoofy, ljbwever, never required so many in his experiments, using but ten or twelve a day. Tbe mode of catching them is by using a email harpoon, which pene trates Jthe -hell, but docs not injure tbe flesh. The method of canning followed is more in conformity with the English than wiih tbo Arscricaa etylo, Only about pne- THE BURLINGTON, third ol tho meat is used. The green, the eggs and the flippers arc put up. Tho rest of the meat is used only for btock. When caught the head and the flippers arc first cut off, the main bone taken out, and the entrails. The meat is removed from the shell and then put into hot water to boil for awhile, after which the bones are taken out. Having been assorted into quali ties, the flesh is then put up in can-, which arc soldered. These cans arc steamed m a steam-bath for three hour?, and arc vented by melting tho sol der on the vent-hole, ana allowing the air to c-cape, when the cooling of the same solder closes the hole again, and tho cans arc hermetically sealed. Mr. Scoofy has an order from liartly t Co. of London for two thousand cases. One hundred men could put up from one hundred and twenty-five to one hundred and thirty dozen per day. Ihis particular kind of turtle being con fined exclusively to the Mexican coa-t, the canncrs would be without a rival in the markets of the world. And the enterprise need not be narrowed dow n exclusively to tbe canning of turtle, for oysters and lob sters m unlimited quantities arc a!-o found there. iti:i.iiii s. i.Mi:i,i,iia;vci;. Itcv .1. Hamilton, of Cavendish, has been engaged bv the Uaptist society of North Tmy.to preach lor one year. He graduated at Hamilton I nivcHty, this summer, at the head of his clas. The Sutton Hapti-t Sabbath School is said to be one of the most prosperous in Caledonia county The church sustains four schools, one in the Whipple district, numbering 7j, one in tLe North di-trict, of 75 scholar-, and one on Notth Kidffc. of -10 scholars. The home school numbers about 00, the average at tendance for July heing lJi All of the sehools have earne-t workers and tho inter est was never more lively than at the pres ent time. A teachers' meeting U held at the church on Saturday evenings regularly, which is generally attended by all the teachers. .Mr. Spurgeon celebrated his arrival at the age oi in years, at ms i;uiw nacle, the other day, in the prcsenco of a congregation of nearly o.ouu ucvotcu au mircrs. CONCSfcCATIGNAL. It is the nrcsent intention of the society at Jlarton Landing to purchase tho present Methodist Ljuscopal Church, as soon as tho new one cm lie completed, and continne service in the same. ine nav. ionn i . Taj lor, a son of Professor Taylor of the The .iioVifn Seminary at Andovor. Mass., but who has been the pastor of a liouri-hing church at Middlctown, Conn., was installed as pastor over the Lnited Congregational Church of Newport. IL L. on the 5tb. Her Mr Tiixhurv. of ran don. has gone to the -ca ide w it (i hi- family for the month of August lie exchanges pulpits witn Jev. I: r Flnirrr. ot North Andover. Mass.. for that month. The Congregationalists of Lngland have just rai-ea a luno oi nana uiillimi of dollar- for retiring pastors, and are -till mgaged in rai-ing a fund for tbe widow- d deceased ministers, which iitiiuiiiit- t i o cr cut htv thousand dollars 'lliiM- arc .-even Conerce lioaal Chun-lii- in Tex..-. The ol.let, in Corpus i'hn-ti. . t- it -iimzclm Mil :iit lias nhout lort iiiemlu-r-, with a jriHid church edifice iin.l :i line l.e . Hie .National LonertKa- ti.mal I'.iunnl will meet at Now Ilnvcn, l.uin , cm Wcdnc-day, Septcrnlwr Mth. KI-lSi oi-al. A i-..rriMindontof tlic Cliunh Journal, writHis Irom JIanchc-tcr, Vt., says: In the lai-ant-y ot the two paribc in this toun, tlic rector of St Jaoics', Arlington, held mornin-r -criec in ion church. Manches ter, on Nmduy. July l!Uh, hi place being Mi-.hlied at Arlington liv Jlr. K. L. Wy- i nun, l.i-rcaUcr at Manehc-ter. The Holy i tiuiiuuni'di wa-. ccleriratcu, one cnua oap tied, ni.d the Communion given thrice in pri.ite to the nek. Manchester afford a line tield h.r pastoral work and missionary cnterpri-c, and it-, people long for regular Mmei- onee more conducted by a rector. May the Lord -oon -end a faithlul man to tin- intere-tin? and he.iutiful hut much nc:lceud portion of the vineyard. The llc . Edward XI. U'elics, Iti-hop-clect ot Wwon-in. ha" written a letter of ac ceptance, in which he -as- Should f!od permit rue to su-tain anil eontine tbe work of tho-e rwloved and stainle-s rcen whohftTe occupied thi- Sec, it will be a vlight t'jinc to have eon-ecratod to such a -eryice all that I have and all that I am. As tbo years pa on - lie thev many or few wherein we -hall he fellow-laborer if intere-t and zeal in mi ion work shall lie dee, ened in our heart-, und manife-tcd in our Jives; if free churchc- shall multiulv. and ilailv service and frtouent communions increase; if pjn-h schools and homes for Cli rist's pixir, and brotherhoods for C'hri-tian ork, shall inerca-inly minister to sound Christian culture and genuine Christian charities, and in sl:ch bleed service all hearts be muted in love for our dear Lord, ind in love one toward another, we may reg rd it as a roken that ods Messing has cro w ned our labor-, l'ray for me that the (ireat Shep herd and Ki-hop of our gouls may help me to he a iaithiul l'astorin His Church; and a true and loving co-worker with every one who labors lor the extension of Christ's work upou earth. I.IUEBAL ( UR15TIAN. The I nhcrsalists joined in the strand s-unJay N hool celebration held at Cleveland, Ohio. The report in the .'far or llu Wt't -ays "flic Church of the Redeemer was repre-cntcd by its Sunday School, the first time that a L'nivcrsali-t Sunday school w'as ever reeogrired by Evangelical denomina tions m this city. The whole numbe r of children who participated in it must h ve liecn about ten thousand." A call has been i uid lor an annual session of t he State Convention of I'niversalists, to .w held at Auburn, X. Y.. commencing the 1 t of S -ptcmber. The Vermont State Asso ciation of L'pivcrsalt-tsarc to hold ther an nual Mate convention at Ilcthcl, on Tues day. Vednc-day and Thursday, Aug. 20 and 30. MtTUODlST. At the juartcrly meeting at Johnson, on thn-.'liih ult., three receiveil the right hand ot fellow -hip alter six months probation and two were baptized and are on probation. The ne'v church at lJarton Landing, w ith the exception of a part of the spire, is entirely rai-ed and the body hoarded. It is said to be a line structure, and a great or nament to the villaae. A correspondent -ay- licv. J I). Ileetnan, pastor of the church at Swanton. is giving the best of sati-laetion. Jlr. lieeman is very popular with all classes, and has gained the confi dence ot our entire community. ROUAN CATIIOUC. The l'rinccssdo la Tour d'Auvergnc lias purchased the Mount of Olives iurthe Cath olics, tor .SIW.IKX), ceding it to the French government. She is now erecting a convent there.- Fourteen young ladies took tbe white veil at St. .Io-eph's Catholic chapel, at ilartlnrd. Conn., recently, and the next day eight who had worn the white veil the rcijuind trio:, took the black veil. Ulhi tLLANKOlS. It is under contemplation to hold the next scnernl conference of the Evangelical Alliance at Jerusalem, for the -ako of pro moting Christian interests in the Ea-t, and ol concluding the sc-sion at Koine Tlicllltt l'ar-on. Most of u- who go to church to-morrow, if wo arc where we can have the chance of choice as during the winter months, will choose to hear tho man in our sect who ranks highc-t as a preacher ; the strongest logician or tiie master of the emotional na ture, or tho eager pleadc for Christ w ho has entered deepe-t into the joy and pain, the signs and temptition of men about him in his everyday lite, and who can -o bring tbcm clo-c.st to that Elder Krothcr and Helper. Nowadays in towns tho crowd fullows, and the high salary is given to learning and cloq lence, sustained, as is taken tor granted, by .corre-ponding piety. Tho dull young fellow- who goes to tho mini-try, no matter trom what carnc-t motive, and betrays his dullness, soon drops quietly into some obscure pulpit where the congre gation is small and the struggle again-t starvation hard, and there wears out the rest of his days, uncertain whether he in deed ever heard a heavenly voice calling him to thiswork, so doubtful arc his lellow men about it, and so meager aro the fruits of his labor. Yet in bis devotion to that work, in tho ardor, the- pain, and passion of his love for his (iod, be is akin perhaps to some uf those famcc1. old fathers of tho church to whom the world was not held to bo worthy. He may have, too, what they had not, a strange noarne-s to all other men, kindred blood, magnetism, call it what you plea sc,but a something of strength and tenderness which they laok and which fits him raoro than any other to stand at their Lcd-idc in death, to bring their innocent children into the church ol Chri-t, to carry (iod's blessing into the best hour- of their lives. Kut he has no knack at turning a period readily, and in city congregations the pa-tor is not expected to become even a personal ac quaintance of his llock. it being a sheer impossibility for him to visit or return vi-its with the great ma-.s of human beings to whom he deals out vital truths Sundiiy after Sunday. Yet some ncaring middle age canremcm bcr old-fashioned pastors whoso duties were as onerous and important as those oftbo Sunday adviser of any city congregation, yet whoso placo the dull young man might well have filled. Going slowly through the dusty streets to-morrow in tho glare of tho August sunshine, the sound ol the bells for church-going bellsaro all alike carrying a Sunday greeting all through our lives may bring back to us the, littlo villages and queer old towns where these old men lived and worked. There is a Spanish bell overa little chapel down in the city which has the precise tone of one which swung oyer a cool old church in a'manufacturing town whjebweonce knew. With tbe fir tt Ting EEEE of it come back tho rows of faded green ' scats tho rows of wooden pillars, gray ior want of paint; the trees on the hill with out ; the bald old warden chanting the Uloriam a cracked voice, mat ura" choir and organ.and the old preacher in the pulpit. A man of mo-t weak and insigni ficant presence there, short, finical in bis gesture-, wim a l"iuiis . - - the mannerisms in accent ofa great r.ngli-n college, retained since boyhood. There was the samo weakness in tno matter as m ui manner of his sermons, too, the same piti lul con-ciou-ncss of weakness and straining for effect. Tho older members ol the con gregation do-cd composedly until the ser mon was over; the young men and women smiled with complacent superiority at tho poor little metaphors, or looked stealthily at each other. iut outside of the pulpit tho oW man took upon him-clt a new character. As ho went up and down the streets of the smoky town Ins tat, nc.it little nguro aiureu spotless black, his gold-headed cane carried behind him, the white hair and black eve a framing lor his lulhl. round face, under its broad-rimuied hat tho coar-est and most brutal; as well as tbo wisest, stood aside respectfully to make way for ' tho old Parson." he had christened and married the oldest members of his flock, so that it was natural they and their children should regard him lovingly as a father; hut out-idcr-, the men who never go to church, the women thrust with out the camp by other women, knew him for their be-t Iricn.l. Tt was be who was the only vi-itor at thcjii! and the alms house; every day his boyish, gentle face was seen at the door of some ruui-hop or house of worso infamy; it was" I'ar-on" who took Kill Horn home, they said, in one of his tits of delirium tremens, nur-ed, tended, kept him in his own houso for months, and sent him out a sobered man for life. " Weak ns water," Hill, who was a shrewd fellow, aid - but the Lord goes with him steady." The little plump, cheery -.ml had the pluck, too, without which Kill and his class arc not easily held. When the great Whte murder took place, and the hanging lollovtcd, at which it was known arc-cue would be attempted by the lriend- of the pri-oncr, tho 1'ar-un was the only clergyman v. ho would go with himfo the gallows , and Kit on the cart be-ide him unmoved, whilo the bullets dew thick around, comforting the terror-stricken wretch. Altcrward the cholera came ; one-hall the inhabitants of the town were dying or dead, and all w ho were able to leave it lied for their lues; but when nota priest ofany church was found.tho littlo man wcntiiuiet ly and cheerfully from one plague-stnekcn house to another, at once doctor and nur-e sometimes, it was said, hurrying the dead with his o n hand. Men do not lorgct such sermons. 1 he old church, with is laded scats and tarni-heJ pillars, years since was razed to the ground; the bell, like manyan eloquent, loud-sounding word, is hushed and forgotten ; the gray-haired l'ar-on long ago dropped into silence; but bis memory lingers in the old town still, a Ining presence, hclpiul.tcndcr, Christliko. Not a great while -ince. an Engli-h lord and his wile were invited to dinner by Cy rus W. Field. A numlier of prominent citizens were also invited, and the meal lie gan in silence. The lady had seareely tastcd her soup (-he sat near Field, and her husband opposite the host) when she screamed out, the full length of the table, to her spouse: " Atcrly (1 omit the real name), my dear boy, 1 say now, you won't like this soup. It's got tomato in it." "In deed, my dear? Ah, why docs any one use tomatoes Keally, now, they're horrid stuff, you know, Mr. Field." A. Utlir. The accounts of the health of Mr. Wil liam S. Kubinson (" Warrington,") now in Europe, arc not so favorable as w ere hoped for. He issomcwhat improving, it i-said, but is not yet vigorous enough to warrant his return to work, the present year. Kaga-no-Kami, a Japane-c prince, who-c income once amounted to j,OtH,000, died, recently, at the age of li. When he wa buried, over 1,600 per-ons, mo-tly nobles and retainers, followed the remain- to the grave, on foot. A Dakota jeorrespondent write- the fol lowing: " This -pnng t'en Cu-tcr'-golden curb, have been sacritiicd . he looks younger, more soldierly, although le-s poetical, and the rcconnoi-ancc w ill prove if he is shorn of hi strength, lien. Custer is thirty-four years old a scnder, lair haired, blue-eyed man." The Philadelphia llulhtin, which i- rai--in(, a fund for Hans Christian Ander-en, acknowledges the receipt thus far of more than three hundred dollars. A statement which was recently made, that Garibaldi is in such utter bodily pros tration as to be unable even to bring lood to his lips by his own hand-, is utterly contra dicted in a letter he has addre-wd Irom Ca- firera to his old friend. Count Giorgio Pal avicino. The general savs he only wishes he could preserve to hi" lite s end the -awe good health he now enjoys ; and hedcclare bitnseli ready to join in a campaign should Italy require his services. The Astors own 11,500 hou-es in New York city. William K. A-tor. the senior of the firm, is worth 15,000,000. Some of the American papers state that Professor Huxley is likely to be the suc cessor of Profe-sor Agassiz, at Harvard. We hope there is no truth in this. Arc the English universities so rich in really emi nent professors, and so poor in money, that they can or must allow Profe or Huxley to go to America in order to hod leisure for work? It would require nothing but the will for either Oxford or Cambridge to offer Huxley two or three thou-and a year, with out anybody suffering for it. There arc hundreds ot non-re-dent Fellows, doing no good to the university, doing harm to them selves in resting on their oars, when they ought to be pulling with all their might. Why not give five or ten such fellowships to men like Huxley, and make the universities again what they were in the Middle Ages, the very centres of intellectual force and light in the country'.' The unncr-itics arc so rich that they could beggar the whole world. Will they allow them-elve- to lie beggared by Harvard'.' Lowon Aiailnn;;. A foreign correspondent has recently shown such efficiency in the American art of intcrviewins as to apply it to Prince Amadeus, ex-King of Spain. The latter detailed hi- own bitter experience with lithles-partisan leaders while hewason theSpani-h throne. What frightened him, he said, was the criminal disunion among the famous saviors of Spain, and the -.-tcm adopted by the Generals, who accompanied every decrco and every di-cus-ion or their demand- by the threat of a pronunciamcn to. Thi- increasing recklts-ness ur jiartie compelled him to leave Spain. His opinion of the leading men is thus curtly expressed " Serrano i- incapable of leading cither the army or tho Administration ; Siga-ta is quite impossible; Zornlla, if he returned, would find deadly enemies ; F.-partero has become a mummy ; Pavia has no traditions to sunport him , Concha is dead perhaps the victim oranti-Alphnn-i-t jcalou-y rather than the balls ot the Koyali-t- : Moriine-. Campos. Klanco-, Lama, arc inexperienced youtos." It is no wonder, then-lore, that he thinks the Carli-ts in about two years will get control ol Spain perhaps hi-own bard treatment somewhat ali'ecting bis opinions in the matter. Mr. Muster-, whose liberal expenditures for tho c-tabli-hment of schools on hi- es tate have marked him a- one or the mo-t progrcs-iic of Engli-h landlords, has yet anothcrclaim to mention, w hich the recent completion of a church at his expen-c, for the benefit of his tenmts, lias revived, lor Jlr. Mu-tcrs is the grand-on of the Jack m.,'-. whnm liirarv hi-torv cinbalmsas the succes-fiil rival ol Lord for the hand nf tho ict's lir-t love, Mary Ch.iworth. If 'hawortli. bv her rejection of her titled suitor, escaped the posthumous horrors ol an Am.-riean biographer, it may, perhaps, bo doub'cd whether hcrchoiceol the rough, un-cntlc and hard-riding esquire proved any" more favorable to her happiness Her health gav e nay under the melancholy in tlucncoof tier di-appointment, and the ex posure of a night of terror, in which a mob attacked her husband's bou-e, ha-tened her death Her -on inherited a morbid tempera ment, and put an end to bis own life; but now the grand-on of Mary Chaw orth has revived the fox-hunting reputation ol l.y ron's rival and added to it that ol a gene rous proprietor, under whose management Anne-ley Park, the shrine or poetic pil Tims, is enjoying a new and beneficent ex istence. Nowstcad Abbey, which Kyrou sou-lit to joiu with Anne-ley, is reviving from tho neglect in which the poet round and left it, but under alien bands, tho pres ent proprietor being Capt. Webb, the cele brated traveller, while the Lordl.yronot to-day is a landless infant. New YorkStatk.-A brutal prize fight took place at West Troy, Wednesday morn-in- between a white man and a negro. The latter was tho victim. Con-iderable money changed hands among the Trojan .-ports. Quite a sensation was cau-cd at Albany, la-t Tuesday, by n levy on all the stone of one of tho companies lurnisjinr granite for the new- capitol building. The trouble grew out ofa sale of thoquarry Irom which tho stone were taken, a large amount being duo the previous owner, which the present owners refused to pay. It is .said that the matter will be so adju-ted that the work on the new capitol will not be delayed. The shipping along the Hudson river is suffering from river pirates. in. .,,. u;litnn nrTr,ip urn to be friven a picnic and excursion Saturday. The funds to cetray the cxpen-es are raiseu ?u scriptions of the citizens. The great Lake Champlain Sea Serpent ; explanation ol the mystery : The other day as the Kcv. Dr. Cutting and son, of New fi.hlni, nlT UWnnrt Ra7. thev saw just ahead of them what they took to De a tog out on a near ouuroaeu .ucj -uncovered it to bo a seal. The bead was as largo as a good fixed dog's bead, and they VT. . KliiliJH JiCJliSCs, i'"1"'1-1 ' J - 1 v. t.T saw about a Toot of its neck. They were within twenty or thirty feet or it, and being acquainted with seals, they are sure that it was nothing but a -seal. Heavv Pav run Doing Notihmi. There are times when it seems almost impossible to imagine how the Kritish peoplo can sub mit to thcontra'renus imposition upon tbcm ol burdens which they ought not to bo ex pected to carry. The bovine nation has all the patience and endurance of tho ox. and according to indications willlie down under its burdens and die with its heavy yoko on rather than to makca vigorous kick against tbe abu-cs put upon it by its system of nririlpcfxl n rstnernCV. TllCTO is SOUie shOW of an excuse for the lavish expenditure of wealth upon the ruling lamiiy, ana in toe conferring of perpetual legislative power upon a class born to wealth and supposed tn hf. trainp.1 f.ir (.nrprninf and legislating. But there are some things m the polity of Great Kntain, involving expenditures ol the money rai-ed from the people by taxa tion, that have no excuse whatever. Such, for instance, i- the case of a clergyman named Thurlow. now livinir. who in the Of. years of his life has received from the taxes impo-ed upon his countrymen the sum, to put it in round figures, ol 3.300,0110. lor w hich ho has rendered absolutely no service in return, bis wholo claim to it being that hi. hannened tn have a bishoD. a rich one at that, for his father, and a Lord Chancellor for an uncle. The pretexts under which this vast sum lias been paid to the reverend ulle-bnnes are. as follows Ho was the bold er of three sinecure offices, to which he was appointed in his boyhood, one ot the offices in deed having been con ferred upon him before ho had got through with his cradle. In 1S32 his sinecure office as " Patentee of llankrupts" was abolished, and ho was given a pen-ion of $30,000 per year. Another sinecure, that of " llanaper Keeper" (keeper of tho waste-paper bas ket ') was abolished in lj-2,and a pen-ion of about S'JO.000 per vcar made tho loss of it good. The third sinecure, which was that of " l'rothonotary ol tho County Palatine of llurhaui." abolished in lSIJ. was replaced by a pen-iun of about -.000 per year. So a sum very nearly approxi mating sW.OOO a year have for over a score of years been paid by that patient ox, the Kritish people, to a man who for more than a score of years has not made even a pre tence of earning it, while in fees and emolu ments, together with tho pensions named, they have paid him, as lieforc stated, the sum ot 3.300,0011 and over in t!G year-. There is something in this that compel- in dignation. It is none of our businc-s, to bo sure, as we pay no taxes over there. Kut we can t help feeling, w hen seeing a fool impo-ed upon, that it would bo a good thing to kick the knave for imposing upon him, and then to blow up the lool lor being such a fool as to bo so thoroughly imioscd upon. 5tr gldcfi;tlscm?nis. in:tu: n r.v i::: tir.ii:::: ALL illnlElt liOOlW ATA CKHAT DISCOUNT! LADIES' LIXKX SUITS ! LADIKS Wll ITU SUITS! AT REDUCED PRICES. MiMir.it iitis ;ooiis at ni:i.rci:i riticr.- PARASOLS AT r.EDlCEH PRICES, j-uisted p i:i:va L i:s. Only Fifteen CobU. libtog to r 61 nee mr itoct. uf Summer O.t- m ali department as much as putttbte, wt will nuk it fur tliesthautaceofaU in nted U hay. m:it: 1 1 1 : tt : : iii:h::: Koiniiants ot Carpotins I In Prutl an.! Ingrains at tost ami les. tifl theJS out. Tiie lii'tumnti- vary in length fri.tu U twenty ar.i- v.n-ti. " 15 uu 11 1 vu." COLLEGE STREET. Farllastoo. July 1874 uA.tl BUSINESS Bom,-vtrj .lull in tho cit, se have taken ad vani.i;e of tho JIarkct and purchased lir.-ely of olesant and nuxinaMo gixls, and are now pre pare.1 U ORKAT lNDCcfeMKNTS ,.r New and I- it-.nal-!o Stiles in all our departments. Hew MENS' ASH ROVS,' SLITS, elegant and .trlnli. Windsor 8fARF AND T1FA new tlides la KID (iLOVKsTnew Styles of HATS, all of w!.:ch w.- offer at KXTRKMF.LV LOW rillCKg. Our Cu.-tom Peiartment has also reeeive.1 very large additions la elegant stj les of NKW CLOTHS ASD CASSIMF.RF-S. nh.ch we CUT AMI MAKK UP to order In the most aiiprorcsl stles. Atnl- U Hie llmr l.i Hoy iir .-mmU AT it. tukk & r.no's. Burlington, July M, l5M.-dl.wtf A Ttl'.W I.l'.Ml.l'.llATI'-'" For the roanufaetore of II AIR WORK. A LO.NGI NEEDED INVENTION FOUND AT LAST. Ladles will l.e gratified to learn that Sirs. BURNS has a nice little machino for turnlns HAiit cojrjujyGs, And plaein; the roou together, gtvtnj It Lustre, ISeauty.and natural appearance, and making It equal In every respect to hair cut from tbe head. People wlshlni to make up their own hair' have others do It, can hive it turned for WcenU . ounce. We make up hair In all the latest style! Switches, CurH, Puffs, Braids, and Crciic Bands. We hare now on hand a large supply or natural hair which was purchased at a sreat discount, and will he sold at eitraordluary low prices. KOTICE BELOW. Coronet Bands natural Ilitr 19lnchoi Ions, J .93 ,, . 22 " I .GO Back .. 21 " " I. DO orSwltchei, " 3) " " 3JJ0 1IAIR JEWELRY Made to order In every ityle, oomprliins HAIR CHAINS, FINGER RINGS. PINS, EAR RINUS. BRACELETS. CHARMS. DEVICES. ETC. Win and Front-Pieces made to order. rumamlier the clae to hand your orders and hare your work done 11 a. UBS. BTJBHS, Over M. L K1W1 Btort, corner Chareh Bank BU. Will buy U tbdo of tIr. A "Jftjg OEMJIXK HAVANA CICAKS. COIIJiX & LOPEZ, MONTT.l-L, iti;i:f iv stock mil IIOLHKN EAHLK. AMlltMUAI. 'FLUIt 1)KL ITMAR. iWAItO, Aal other thole, taadi. well as a Cno rtocV of 3ii::ksciiav.m "iooi.s. ST. JAMES ST.. nearly oprs!t """ IMeU; alo come.- tt. JaniM fct., "' "aee I-Armes. , Hnlfl IMIies ri.arsril t "" lMl,ll.l....eul.. Jtt)y ,..,.J.J1M TUT IlKST OI.l AS ! Till: KENT m:w FRUIT JARS o K.hM .v". . f..r 'Ui Uio l ""A t.f new China, (llaxstravc, J'tiftcr llanijiiujs. Window Sliiides, av. - AT ' () U I ' A 11 A li li," CHURCH STRUCT. T, Kisll I'll A. CO., isr i. ALLKX a- STOXli NOW OFFtll FOR TIIE SI'KINO TRADK A LAIU'K ASSORTMENT OF FURNITURE! ,- i: v .. : it i is ! 'i' v s ' Jn)t:rluiiiiiit;.i antl M'imloir Mimics, liisliuniU iohI Tusnels. MAM5FACTI KKIUs Al.l-NTS OR TIIE Woven Wire Mattress! w. user t" tlio Wlii-le.ile ami Retail Trade (Miri-UKKNS' OAK ill AO KS! at mvii ii ri iti:i:s- rttici:-.. Wo can iurn -11 a e.inplet Carr..;e as low as $1 jo f.n-1 at a.l .oterren ni jincw up to $73.tM. For St Ie aod Beauty of Finish tbey can not lie ex. celled. I'm nitill i' ill Wliol.iilc A tti-laii. i.!.r.: i stum:. t'ark Vloek. Bqrlinirt.n. Jl I'J-dlwt: i tcitiA i:itv. B. S. NICHOLS & CO., U4KCrACTVBRRt Of Board Planer. Bha.1 n;, Witer Wheels. Plan.o; tun- f d r.e-idt l ?. f!.rt.U Milln.Siafs I MilaS.PAuer M IK Ilea . y Ki.r.nis and Rolls for C-.atd and Br itiew.l'Atent Sttn IHs ' sera, Ptent Hand baw. H-rse Pow- I ers, 8team Kn.' net. Boilers and f Pumps,Irn Feneeand Rail- tncs, iron aou uraw Cutins. sn:ui mii:s ixtti; OF ALL KINl. l.rHtlirr hikI ttnbtirr. HrltliikC ami :i-. AGINTH FOB Patent Steam Packing Uorso'i Tw ts Pnlls.eoiTts Hnrine aa Wvrtfa in Eton's Pump. PIONEER BUlLDWa, BUHUNOT0N, T. B. 8. NICHOLS. f. it. Hm;tN frn. A-ttU"! L-WOODBURY. JOJ5 ri5tTI.-G. JIAVINU REPAIRED AND REMODELLED l'l thoFRre Pars Buiid-nr. aad much increased oar tacihtiM lor do work. Tin: ntr.i: i'itii JOlt J'JUXTfXC OFFICII It prepared to extent ail orders 'or PiaiN AND FAKrY PRINTING, with ceatoefi and despatch THE LATENT ANI BEST S1ACI1INERY. NEW AN It IIANBWIME HTYLKS Or TYIE, ANI W0RK1IEN OF EXPERI ENCE AND TASTE. enanle uu to guarantee iatiefact;on. AU Ind or Print a;, from a Card to a Book, and from a llandHll to a duulde-maatniuth )'nnlr, dono at the FREE PRESS OFFU'i:. V.ee St.. Burlmttun, Vt. .XO('i;.MAi 'iI1h on i.itit. printed er riiOMp. to onier. at ct r Vvada'p i'iU re. An . V V 1'r ttin; Inks fr sale. Schools. intvAM' &. sti:att. nuHi, BOSTON. MASS. CUCRSE OF STCnV, rHEPAltlTUKV TO m ilSES. The studies emhraoel in tlie plan of the School, and de?ine"l Ur thi e pupil" who luve acquired a jfMnl kimvf lele l the EU-uitiiUiry EnlUu Branclies, are IEoo.;-l''p.i!-. fur (sISCI.F AM) IV'TBLC ENTHV.) Cominrrrial Aiiiliiurlir, (DESIGN FDP0H PRAlTli 1. ril ICAT10X IX BrliH.) Coiiiiiiri ri;il Writing (WITH SPECUL RFKPRrM K TO LFCIBILITV AXO KAI'tl'ltT ) :oiiiiukr-i:tl Law, (REL1TIVG TO iFBi-TI HI It P PKH. IMITKAl IS. PART NI.KoiiP. kTi.) AU of which are pspec'ally necessary for ami adapted ti Couituerc:l purpose. Pupfls deyirinT idhrr .tu He? than aim re may t lt any or all of the t'uMMut Kh.limi Stcdie;. and i-urue them in (isnnrctum with or separate from I'OMKERLlAL bTTMEs. Pupils rtsreited at an) time if there are aeaneio". ProtipectU'i and Cirrulai of tlie SW'in.l pout free. Th Si-hwl is Tto-T hatel st Ho a-btnton trelt tttcatum prut nu" ti- the tire id Ia .id, 1 -7 t. IIorR, y to 2. t'liwed Saturdijfl. VArtTIltl M'RltO JTI.Y AND ACiitr. Application for adm -iun, S-pr. lit, iniyl-emade In person till July t-t irom July lFttoAurut lth hv letter 'ii'y. 1-u Id n' . l.wtii. Auju-t 17th till Sept. li"t, the prine pil will lu in attendance dally from y till - II ;' illUBAIlD-rrmcipal. 3Iarch 23 wtf STATU Olt SII()ll.t JOHfSO. VlRMOST. V A I. L T E K M . I s 7 I . First (Jujrter bei-ins Auut Second Quarter tiej-ins Nov. 3. For lurther infiinu ition a.ldr"S II. S. I'tltlU .11. 1'rlndpal. July 3l-r.w tlll.lilTi: ACtl.l'.MV. HAMILTON, N. V. JASIEj B. COLGATE. Esq.. I'residcntof the Board of Trustees. FRANCIS V. T0WLE, A. M., Prine'pal. Tbe Acadeny prepares youn men tor the lest Colle-es, and also furnishes a thorough and ex tended English course. Tuition, fsi per year. Fait Term Uzins Sept loth. For catalogues or information a'p!y tn tbe Prin. cipal. July 1, 1-; I 5ww3w. STATE KOltMAI. SCHIIOI. KAND0LPII, " . VEUM0NT. Fall Term legins the Fourth Tuesday in August. COURSE OF STUDY" EXTENDED BOARD OF INSTRUCTION ENLARGED. QT NUMBER OF STUDENTS INCREASED. JH Mora than 23) Graduate!. TUITIOX S34.0O A TEAM. EDWARD C0NANT, PriBcipaL Rudolpb, Mir 13. ISTWitowtirtf l a Trn-TTfiT 14r, 1874. ---r gflisct-nant-ons. I.. It. PVHfS Great Closing Out Sale! (iREAT ISnCOBtENW, I,EXT GOODS' AT COST ISO LESS tiia cost: y., i, ll.c limMo II..J- ,o..rl.-..l.rorn Vt-rj- I.ltlle Mocj. A Cno assortment of llrf-ooiN,Colloiis. Piiiil.Ac., Crnrn. Those Will 1 Ottered at mo niwee. I""-"'" -r 7, .1,.,. "lut to pureh . such g.l i, f"r """r interests 10 examine our -.;..-.... j . - Also a lar: and v.ell-sclecto.1 astortment or Hosiery, cnls riii-iiNIiins fiooN- Hoots mill Sliocs, Ac, Will actually I oI.l at a satriflce, as these luU"tl-ecIo-edout .itllin a lew lajs. Ja,JMr-'"1 AtlensJrViv,. TIM! TIM 1 1 Ju-t recolve.1, a new lot of tMt Japan Teaat s. cts .. r r..und.or.-. l.sinds for Focr Imllaks. It is Letter than tho la-t, and is sellmi fast, trj it WESTON. JON ES A BROS., VllltV MI'll fOFI'lli: C.M'ISAII, at9e. uin i t: i:tha '. M':vit AT1II-Je At -, COLLEGE ST. in ruin t-orri'.i:: : i.BM. fre.li ro.vte.1 an.1 very niee.an-1 .ellinjat inouiu low iw .v . . At WESTON. JONli. i BR0 3 Ki.orit : ri.ontti Another decline, down it soes. Beet Winter and Spring ivneai iwui4i t...-"-. stl.MO.V. -.M.-IIIIA' TltlllT. JI.U1I. 1:1:1:1., coi.s-isn, m ., Cheap for Cash, At WESTON, J0SE3 A EROS. Special attention to the C.nin.-rs and Farmers Chios Burlington, Vt. June t lywtf VVIAOI.SKI Custom :tiid Flouring Mill. ri'HE above Mill havn recently changed hands, 1 the present proprietors havio; refittod and Te'urnl.he.1 tlie iu 11, prope to make a specialty ot liRlsTI.MI.d. in-CUaTOJI WORK intbeshort et ume and in the oe?t uijnm-r. Also beeping a supply of .-i.uri:. .-ih:ai., n:i:i ai mioiits. For sale at all t-mes at tho lowest market pnees. Cjf Cash paid at all times for all kinds of l.ram. llo. A. IllTCHIM.o. J. W. Col-sos. Rosi ot H.TCUISOS. May IJ-w'-ul v.-A I . Il" A i"i:u. itocii r.nv. ss. w.viti:, F.t.M-V lllllll'S. Persons deairons of purchas any tt the atve naiutsl will plead, call and exam.ne my st.s-k. A specialty made of TIM AM) TOII.nT 5si:TS, Ot whu-li we hive a verv larxe and line asaortnent. Re.p-tful!y. cE() nARR0.Vt. : Bank Block, College Street. Juno i!e.Uwt' Next to Savmu Bnk. II. A t. II. WlI.IilA. Stonujei md l'ortvtirdiiuj, Dliun is Lt'Itigli, I.ackiiwuuia, Cuiiiltcrlanil, and other COALS, .Scoti li mid Aiiu-iicaii I'ic Iron. IiinUlinz aml. A.i:, soi tii vrmi: June dlw3m IirHI.I.MSTo:V, VT. A liooli srsTEJI ' SEWERAGE I -nt al to the preserrationorthe public health. ki;m.i:v m:ns., ManaUcture the mt perfect article fur puM.c or pr.tate Dra-nae. to it Hydraulic Cement Pipe. All sues, t fh-m 3 t2S inches diameter,) with all Connect inns, constantly on hand at our Manufactory ami Yard, on TC!Mski Avenue, near Arch. bald St. PON A. WILKINSON. AfiCT. June t. lUwCm Burlington. Vt. W 1 1 1 TT I Jt Co 31 1 A ." , MANUFACTURERS OF Tie Ontf Grnmime) AVIittton Gloves and 3Iitteiis. Also Dealers ia PLM01TII DUCK CLOYni. We are nlso prepared tn furnish at the I.ou rl .llaiturai'lurrrs Ki irr, til. ervitle and Johnstown's Bnek. K'ul. lo-and Fleslier t.luves. Mittens and lia outlets of every variety. ttf lea!ers will find it for the r 3iantaeto exam'm) our stock Wfore puithasin. Wo will nut tw undersold. W11ITTEN Jt CO . Strongs Build nj, Church Street, July diwtf Burlinstoo, Vt. ricr;. 11 a tin; port hajd the interest of E. A. Killkk, m tbe fir in or W. A. TYLER i. CO.. I shall contmue the business of rui'iKirt Work, t'limilihi. Mram X rilling In all its department. Al tho manutadure and sale of Tin, SItfft Iron ami Copper Ware, 'c9 At the Old StaM, Chareh Street. Thankful for the liberal patrooaro in the pat, ami soticittn,; a contmuanco of the same. I remain Jurs. W. A. TYLER. BoV.in-tfon, Jane 11, IS'-I. lUwtf tllLMtV II. Vis LIST OF X-E-W B-O-O-K-S-! CROPE-By F. B. Perkins. flit. U. Uv Jules Verne. .NKW KNtiLAM. HAND 1 O0K OF TRAVFL. SI-LV AM SHORE. TIIK PEHFI-CT LIFlBv Channmj. lIREr HARTE-S POEMS." BADDKCK-Bv Warner. PRUDENCE PALI'RhV By AMrich. I.KsSIMi-.s IAOfOll.N V.v K. rr..thinsli.im. I.K(iKNI) OF JUBAL-By Goo. Kliot. IN 1II3 NAME By K. E Hale. Ac, 4c, Ac, c, Ac, Ac. for Bonks or all Kind., Writm; Paper. Blank Books, (.allies, tlold Pens, Picture Frames, and a tlou saod ono articles iM-rtini-iu theMAtmnery trade. Please call at 48 Chorcu Strkxt. July M.1S7J dAwf T.L U 1 MATHEVS S DAWS. W EUnUIWTCN VftfOXT. Feb. 2 dAwly IIAlIt WOltll, IIAIIt WOItlt. Tin: .-nssi:s iniAiu.r.Y, BANK STREET, DXALKKS t ItEAL II A IK and HAIR GOODS, Keep constantly on hand or make to ordor all kinds or IIAIIt WoltK. ClIAJU-Ool.Mi AMI ITAIK I.ItliMI.M;, firORDERSTAKEN FOR HAIR JEWELRT.g . . J, . MISSES BRADLEY, JuneJ-diwtf Bank street ATWOOD, rUOTOGRAPIIER. Bacon's Block, Church Street, BCKLIttjliTOSl, VT. Julr 13-dawt! cJTieairai. DR. FLINT'S QUAKER BITTER riesr celcbratnl Hitters at erom- berries, ami tiroit prepared it l retain nit flieir medieinal 'util ities. Tlieif inrariabti rttre or areatttl reli'ere the folloirimj eoiu ptainis: Dysix-p-iii. .JjiuiuIh-c, I.ivcr Complaint. I.os ol Api tite, Hmiiliiclii', Hilioiis Attack-, ironiittriit anil Intermittent !-cr-i, Arih-. Colli CliilK Itlit'iima-ti-m, SunimiT Complaints, I ilis rnndition of Stoniaeh. J.irer, oi JCidnei. The aijed Jiud in the Onal.er Hitters a gentle, soothinij .stimulant, desirable in their declining ieitrs. Xoone ean re viain long un n clH unless ajltirteil irilh an 'ineitrable disease) ajler taking a few bottles of the Ottal.er Hitters. Prepared by Dr. IL S. Flint & Co. At their Great Medical Depot, PROVIDENCE, R.I. ron sali: livxitvwinati- March 20 wSni ihc. koi:ki:v Vegetable Worm Syrup. A hrare nun mny suffer pa n, when nil cteU np iQ himself, hen-.talli lit Lo caaaot st:t; ins rifii.o Tliero !s no other malady, incident tu childhood, that is aeeonipanied with more indt'scr hable ureu-liedne.- of tho l.ttlo Baflerers than tliat ji:oircj;i uv woums i And when the parent fully comprehend- the tua tion he will not delay a moment -n wor.n.' the most prompt and t-Oc cut reneflies to ini-ure ihe expalsion ot tho intruder.-. TTi s remtd nujr found in inc. ltoiiiius' vi:i:tiki.i: uotcu sYisn. I!ejt ltear inmnlt it Rogers' Worin Sjrup is the rebalde prei .ir n. Rogers' Worm Bj rup is a palataMe in p irat ' Roere' Worm Srup is like! by children. Ri'eri Worm Syrup p'5.tnel detrny- w..r.u-. lexers' Worm trui- leave ii" bad effifts. Rosw' Worm Sjru,.is h 'i!y ret -mmeniett I-j phyians. and an-.ttemonsil'lj the bt-t w.rtn medicine m tbe wrld. Price c. au F. r -1 ! a'l dni-i st.. JOHN F. HENRY. CURRAN A CO.. -aal' t iiee I'Ijcc. New York. June wi i. Iron in the Blood MAKES THE WEAK STRONG, Thcrcrux-ian Sgrttp. a Protect ed Solution of the l'rotoxidr of Iron, is so combined to hare the character of an aliment, as casilg digested and assimilated vith the'lilood as the simplest food. It inrrenirs tlie quantity of Xuturc's Oirn Vitalizing Agent. Iron in the blood, anil cures "a thousand ill." simply btlTonlng up.Inrigoratingaml Vitalizing the System. The en riched and vitalized blood per meates ercry part of the body, repairing damage and xeaste, searching out morbid secre tions, and leafing nothing for disease to feed upon. This is the secret of the iron dcrful success of this remedy in curing Dyspepsia, T.ivcr Com plaint, Dropsy, Chronic Diar rIion,DoiN,Xcrvoii Affections, Cliills and revers, Humors, T.oss of Constitutional Yijror. Diseases of tho Kidneys and Illaddcr, I"emale Complaints, and all diseases originating in a bad state of the h'tood, or ac companied by debility or a lour state of the system. Hcing free from Alcohol, in any form, its energizing effects arc not fol lowed by corresponding reac tion, but are permanent, infu sing strength, rigor, and new life into all arts of the system, and building ir; an Iron Con stitution. Thousaudsliarc been changed by the use of this remedy, from ircah, sickly, suffering crea tures, to strong, healthy, and happy jiiru and icomen: ami in ralids cannot rca sonablyli cs itate to girc it a trial. See that each bottle has PERU VIAN SYRUP olown inthcglass. ramplilets Free. SETH W. FOWLE k SONS, Proprietors. A.. 1 Mlltoti Vlnce, Ito.ton. tJOLI &T DRCCCISTS UCSCKALLT TIIE GltnAT i:l-.MKI)Y VOll CONSUMPTION which can lie cured by :i timely resort to tliist btii'inl ard preparation,;!-, has been proved by the hundreds of testimonials received by the proprietors. It is acknowl edged by many prominent, physicians to be the tuot reliable preparation ever in troduced for the relief and cure of all Lung complaints, and is offered to the public, sanctioned by the experience Df over forty years. Wlien csorted to in season it sel dom fails to efl'eei ti speedy cure in the most severe cases of Coughs, Bronchitis, Croup, Whooping Cough, Influenza, Asthma, Colds, Soro Throat, Pains or Sore ness in the Chest and Side, Liver Complaint, Weeding at the Lungs, &c. "Wistar's Balsam does not dry up a Cough, and leave the cause behind, as is the casp with most preparations, but it loosens and cleanses the lungs, and allays irritation, thus removing the cause o the complaint. raEranr.i. tit BETH . FOWLE it SOUS, Eoitoa, Hass., And aoU by Vrugtfrt ssj Ileal, r. g-eoeraHy. Oct 20 dexxUwIr mkm. i!. ic. ;kki:.-vi:, i.ur.ss3i.ui-,u. 91 ST. PAUL STREET, One door north of the Episcopal (JLurch. Ladlei from out of town can haio stylish tails fitted here after 8. T. Taylor' yitem, on short Botlot aod it rmuonable prlcw. June as-wtt JSiirku, imt'l ivliirh are Ceit-timi.Sar.-iiiHtrillii. Wild Cherry ..,;;,,!, .liniiiiei: null oilier Ividney IJi-cascs. j-i-inan. citltics, I.assitiulc, I.ou t-pirits. General Dcliility. and. in lael. ereritliini eansed by an impure -,'. of ilir lUooil or deranged irrati rait InKr ill IE! tier i ITp"i-i:i I"dis--i. II' 3'lJf 1,1, - i. t IT"- I " ' ' ' I n. r i ruf iii"ii- t " it 1 - in M,,t!i. I.lil"'l- T Ji kJ 1 1 t;,. il .r' I il.ilii'ii.itli'll of Ihi- I n i.- I i r, i. -i . i i I... I and a hun ti I ' -r . mi .-'iti-" .it- ttM"'oir-pn:iir 'f M ).. will p" - a l'it.-r yoarauti . .i- lliinal' ii'.'M il "li-1 ni'-nr. E ar I'rtwlr Comidiiiiit". In T i n .rn .1 or .-in. - lit' ,f V , t irti f !!' : 1' f' IhttiT ill-, I i,!-laiiii.:Uiii . i .it mi piowmcui i- I i iti1 ii lor InflammnterynnJ Clirrtiiic i:iirn. mali-mJU ' f" ii ,:n ni i-Wr-r-". ''i-i i-th of Tii'' iti-i r.;4 -nd l.ui i-i'-r. t'.r-t. :ittiT- h i a h in, i i-f- .ir - n rv n.tr. .i i TJirr irr :i smile I'ursxilavr n n n Tunic. t-' tip m.-rit -,l i ttt-r. a .i ni ri r- .n-Miitr inff"'-" ii nof Hi.- Im r -ud t?ttrjl o-. I i li-i- a- torottiin lira,w. Fm-i'liT.J . - - m . -i it. r. ot 'i '"i" t-. Putt,'!' j i t irt.iini b . rt'iff wirnt. N j 1 li f r-.i 1 . I' i. ,,rr'- M' ' ' "''' li.,-I nf, I'ld l't-'-1" -f i!nt.it" or ii'i.n-.jr- 'r "i i'iil' nj' J't 1' ' M-nm in a -i ' - tl''l, ' ' (Jralrfilt TliM-iinN Pr'" ' ti , tin' nio-' " " rtl1 Invt.tr. ' ' I n- 1 til" M' vl'H-' -.-T'"l. K. IS. TJrI,S ll.W A. i . im-irirh- ji . i-ri r. i- i if Ma.-liiti.rt "i nd ti ir't n s Mtl.l 1-1 Al.l. IIUIM-IM A 1" 1 -Wi-t-Iiwly i t ' WIIIoKV .t IlIlA'HSltT. S". EANS t CO.. Hart's Falls. V fdJw4w WOltUlAi; XTOI'I.i: Mj.e i p'ovnient at home, $ " p r w- n. capital requirwl. Part rui.tn anl i p.t nt frif Add'i--". w th - x cirir C. Rttf, VS. II Jiu-hur, N. Y.-Ju. iiavi: v tuii:i JUKUJ5EI5A V a::k toc febAK. NEIUolS, OR DEBIUTATt. Are oa 'nr d t'nt inv erertf-n rju - o! an ell-rt t'ian v u :e.. capabli- m. . TVn fy JlIU IiKI'.A, the wonde- ul t inv jurat' r. wh eh at- K'-min il ' ' eret.ve i.r.ina a In .'ill-irt -' r to ail t e It - ni a'-' & v . rt-r. w i i - i a "hurt t im-. on'y t- . tne -uife rer i : i dfpth of m - rv . but t - a vejtfta''.-' t n.ir a d rectH ' n fie i ti rand -pleen. U rt'ju.att-i the h-wtl-, iu et- the-erie-. i 'f ve "U'-'i a hea.th t ne t' ie wh. Le ? -lein rHHin ii. ifee t il n ii d Tt-el 1-ke intw i r-.o. It- tr-i n - :i -t .,ent, l.ut . . a ir- it it I'V irt'-it jtntun'--' t1 par'-nt eoe.-tii-- t -uddi-n '' m;e, ii" ui .rin. ; rc-u.t-. t-u jri'm . h s tr- u"- F I-I th-- r ter.:, . V" the A:al -And - ienti -te.l i .' Th - - n't r.i-w an 1 unf rt 1 - r . ' u tet'D lon' u-ed w h W"ri-ler r an 't r--. and n pr-in"uni"i-'t tn t j'.t-r m ! i aui t eJ. "t'lC ii--t p wtr al t n n I t.ter- . kn'wn " A?k v. ti- !-n.- " t. tt r -ale U ULO. C. oiA)DWIN a C 1 -i ' Ju. -t a - nviA(;vroM: is ii:vd. F. r t1. rtv ear ni .'. unshae nte-' w hi.iper. u v. ; lien -trnjicle aid 'a 'i v ments. inn ii.. ej ' v de r t!i C. mi r r u HistoRi . tl. - w. -..1 reni'Wned iur- i t.,r. wh ci. u.i'..i :- u- the cu- - - t t- i. ' w a wild ant niler'ul country. It -j mi a rent- want-.-1 i u ckiy.O - i nt - ther 1 out- wt W. r -r p irt l.ARI BRitS- . t t.,cr i'h.li.. B- r i New-ird en ! hind, of first-s? a-" v iV--- v -r 1 .it 1. we- p' ' - 1. r ea--h, r i n : . . - r n t.t. n ' tv r itui.tr. . dur ii; t -1 llo!it V. WATKRri bN. " " t tr t'"Tc !r.-d in rw r. , i n. - m-1 i'TZAi - ' ' -et unt 1 tf"- r i.t u r i ! j ' k i tnu I n-t rniui'Dt I.-U-" i't'1 t' i t,i t-i. A Ur.c - oxunt t" it i -'.r. I -S. I.- .sL-de-.Jt . Ju i'.t-i KOlt corcHii, COMIS, iioai:scms And all Throat Pleases, tue Wells' Carbolic Tablets. rut up only In BLUE Biles. a tiiiei axu vi:i: ki:mi:iy. SoldhyUDra.--irt. July 22 fdlwlw isictcu roil mm:. t'F :ir n w i1 . -uppl etri. t htrr c-1 , i N . I ' n Urck A'- ii' -Cifr u i -,t't, ,n -.i-.rt ii t . The cm lf nt t jn -tit n n tin- . in i tie C"nril Vermotit W' Wi nt X t aui la. a. I Rut'. i .r i'- ' ' t ir 11. CiRCl l.AKS a.- pr ce asd frt: -er: . apil tilt i ii. J. K. UIU'RV SON K--i'X Junct .'Ti. r., July -'. I 1. dlwjin j. i:. i:uioiiiiN oi.i mim. CAMEO. Coral. Ai.H-ti -t. and Roman (mM 1 - i. Tin and button-. Elegant L. k. t, u I be i of Ciril miCiineo, et n R-m in t seal i:it;s Of Cameo, ABK't . -t, On x. lilf-d St -o .i i varety f thi and ta -t : r, st) lc of ; ju-t hr u. r -i New York. j. r i;:-.isMMi S3IITII & St), Jui ' - -di wf JI. w. o nuihler and Slate ltoojtr, ALS.- Th - Y n z . u ti' .rf j IK-.r Step .tuetoth on one - do n ! ti erae th.cine8 one inch, an i a ,.i. ! We hiTe an extenfire Slate V ird ifw , r-n all tti rmr u Ojn! t c-. C l r- i I Ilin.fin.j Slate, a- well ns on K.-" fir i C t anddiflerenr -.irt o th M itc ti te in?teeti' n -pe- men : .r v, i and material. j We rnaV-e it n ni to emj',"i r j men. ive on- T-.'pal i:in" - n ' . cintractel hj u-. ird warrant th- cne. 1 Repa.nntf letij don at -h " p i reaonaMo p- .-e- , Order or iiniu ne- by mt -i Co-1 our pro'.i ji r tt"atj.ii. t" I' i " I Office an.1 Van- mer V r ' n I Burhntirti.Yt. 'i ) Vt UFFICZ, PECK'S P.LOCK. ('(ll.I.Kf.K -sr llii, Asciiry rcirs-.,., l'nl l:iss VIKK, I.in:. stml Al'l'l nCM'AI. Iiisiiram-i" Coinpanii" Careful atK-nlio" will he sivrn l all liii-iiir It'll In-rr. !" nolit'R or filralion of imlicli". always. Ivou. OT I.osp cqiiltaMy ailjiil'J ami proiuplly ,nlI.J5 T. S. PECK, Amoral In. Agent. julr i-Mwti