V CAPITOI. Hind.ei'v, IOOK MANITFACTOHV. *Bt , UarrUbari/!' J> a w ohieflv dcvoW itfpmk Book. for mßneed Com panics. JjglMgi* and bound t u i/to md ruled to orde£ TrtwJS afed «bd bound lo inkr, do,'? Wtlinen paper. ™ ,lt J is, desiring to have their Book* se, . fpcieea, should give us a call «jQ:" Harper’s Weekly, oJZ*. , H LOndo . l»«tylen<|>iii«d. Harper’aMoutlo ucdwr, Blackwood's and <3tab*n>". dyVßpok, HepoeitoryTPeter" Musk. Ac., bound in extra styuT ™ “•‘•“‘bd half binding. Selert t, Pamphlet laws, bound in good I i noderate prices. Person* harinr * Mid, wilt receive aliberaldiscoui.i peat to ns from a distance by «£, . entrusted to oor care will be >p«L| packed and returned by Fxnre,, Address F. L. MUTTER/ *. ' Tbsrriebury, ft. IN, St the Tribune Office, are «„ steittity. They will give iw.'snd receive and return bool, .tor ail who ent.net their work to [March 21, 1§63-1 j W *«5 * Mg * *** C qc 7 Bs.gl i BN m 5 ' R W wS c ■S' . e 54 I S §*§; V S 5 If 5 u ;s ||i I s **l? I! »s |?r I’ C 5 2 55 a. f- « ”*SrS-5 |» m*3§ f-g | .CO■< =© 2 I I *H wS’S a S/ jß'gfc an 5 o £■< e,« , 8 Q S 2ss * R na sE.SS ? ,l3Zß<.»‘ S -f5 J w l_a Q **2 © JJ ***~ ;-*• .M S 3 3&* ©O'* ■ . K e i’ & AND BAKERY ! BRSIGN KD ANNOUN ‘ns at Altoona and vicinity that fa* trge invoice* of CTIONAIUBSI. NUTS, SPICKS n Ait- expmaly for (be Holiday,. •»y». on bond a good itock of plain i owh manufacture. - tUNES, RAISINS, &C. *eaMon* of tbe ; ye&r. Sircar, Molasses, Build. WHITE WHEATFLUVH. I FLOUR. COHN MEAL, AC„ r sale in large or email qnantitiei. yrice ray stock und yon 'jvill fin-i is any in.town. jJACOB wm: RGTIONERY SEEK SALOON, i«.'HIRER WOULD IX of Altoona and vicinity that hi* MIT and FUIUT STORE, is always y best article* to bo had. and In groat >j»n ER SALOON in whichha will nerve up OYSTERS the season. IREAD d PlES tzJtpgy* on hand. epared to aupply cakee, candles. ie.. Mirtfecl He invitee a chare of public ms he can render full aatb&ction to sand saloon is on Virglniaetteet,tvt> Ball. OTTOEOS3I n-«* . STTINGER’S A r ews Agendy, No. 7, -MAIN STREET >OKS, BLANK BOOKS, r, CONFECTIONARIES 5 &. TOBACCO, lONS IN GREAT VARIETY limr ox band. & CO.. ALTOONA, PA.. N, JACK & CO.. BOZUda rsauxe, pj- Eees, i johuton, Jack $ Co.") ON THE PRINCIPAL T«r and Gold for Ml*. CoUwtioui red on depoelte,pnyeble on de«M J ' t»n time, ertib Interest if Wf 3SLER— PRACTICAL respectful? nanonncee maaad dv public gen^Hp^B ti»»«sth«Dnijbuslnoes,^^^^r ete -fte keeps constantly reels end Retail, WfOOe, ■! 3AM, OILS, TAKMBH- iSSSBS!3aS?*V POLICE GAZETTK-7, a*ar#Ssss-"- msssfer- BAB totiw oU *jle, eua» tt»r* «• loft« twcome «!*»«“•“*; -s»oi»' Oflfe* In ll»»oBfeTM»P l< > 135nSs^uu ) m S' ■■^.ssssSSssfc-- LAKJD QJXiS, 51 ndd,C*H*» S AT McGORMICrSSw r f e UMKIDtwWt of ... —A tAJ Mnt «f 6Wji!l - ' • W'd , TOOTS^S^' >8 OP F^Sf^.u.. jIcCRUM & DERM, VOL- 7 THE ALTOONA TRIBUNE. . - H. C. DKKN '• PUBLISH*** AND PROPRIETORS. j, ..-unpayable inT»ri»W> iu rtdrance.J *l^o. ilfpip"” ~isco“ t inUed at tU * ex P u ’* tion ‘he time ~A f" rnnWS of ADVERTISING I insertion 2 do. 3 do. „r » » •* W« $ *0 ; (jir njl ro < s line*) ■— '*> 1 00; .. j 1 00 1 60 , 2 00. I<» ; J4 .. , 1 50 i 00 2 50; IfW H>»n 26 cent. I!l,r , lf . for eacli inw»rtion. . ‘ r *l u * r 6 mouth., 0 months. 1 year. .$ 1 60 $ S 00 t 6 00 . 2 60 1 00 7 00 . 400 «00 10 00 6 00 8 00 12 00 ' 6 -00 10 00 U 00 f"; ip oo woo 2000 a ,l( t, colunn M . 2ft 00 40 00 'tatoSri «ad itawirtof. IMiMk.., 1 15 !»r t,ie y« r - three 10 00 # 00 iVwaiteror Indiwidual in a will <-liHr;c(l according to-the abowe rates. ' H,.rti«emen .1 not marked with the number of inter- ™»ill he continued till forbid and chargedac * S per line for ewer, insertion. "ililHlrv notice, exceeding ten fifty cents a aqua e ~j Hue* I*** ,ue «4U»rf. BALTIMORE LOCK HOSPITAL J“IED ASA UKFUQE FROM QUACKERY The Only Where a Uure Can ba Obtained. D(i JOHNSON has discovered the ' iVitniM Speedy and oulv Effectual Remedy in T, ,V 11 "ri«teDiseases. Weakncs of the Back, •'£? MnotuVe,, Affections of the Kidney, and Bind .L uvjiaalarv Discharges, Impotemy.Oem-rall Debility,. DV»pop»y. Languor. Low spirit., Confusion ' ill l-aipiwtiou of the Heart. Timidity .-Tremblings,• ' ■ ‘ Sight or Giddiness. Disease of tlie He.id. ' :JI 7\„- O' Skill, Affections of the Liver,_Lunga,Stom , R,«eiAbo« Terrible disorders arising from the ‘ „|i,|,it. Of Youth—those secret Mid solitary prac nl'. ‘fatal to theii victims than the song of Syrens to: 'll,finer- ..f Ulysses, blighting their most brilliant: or anticipations, rendering marriage .Ac.. Impossi young .men 11v «li' have become tin- victims ol Solitary Vice, \ 'in-i’jful 01(1 destnctive habit w hich annually sweep* untimclvgiavc thousands of Young Men of the most ■.“ l talent- and brilliant intellect, who might other / rue entranced listening Senates with the thunders .1-ioqueiic-, or waked to ectasy the living lyre, may call n.ili full roufi'lence. marriage. Mim-.! IVrwna. or Young Men cotemplating marriage, awafv of physical weakness, organic debility, defor ■/iT ic- cured. . „ , 11. alii) places iiim*ell under the care of Dr. J. may re .. .nHh ciiofid" in hi* honor as a gentleman. and confi . itlv relv upon hie skill as a physician. ' ORGANIC WEAKNESS M ns.luUiv Cured, and fill! Viaor Hectored. I i. UielrVeeiug Affection—which renders Lllo miserable I liurtia -e impossible— ls the penalty pan! by the ■11;,,. ~f improper indulgences. Young persons are to ~ 1,, c exces PS from not being awaie ~f the dread* ,i ...nncineneos that may ensue. Now. who that under*. • is'i the subject will pretend to deny that the power of i rcatieii is lost sooner by those falling into improper ■rl. Ilian bv the prudent? Besides being deprived the •soiree of healthy offspring, the most serious and de-, ,■.nautoms to both My and mind arise. The ,„t ia becomei Deranged, tin- Physical and Mental Func ,!ss Weakened, he.* of Procreative Power. Nervous Irn ability. Dispetisia, Palpitation of the. Heart. Indigestion institutional Debility, a Wasting of the Frame. Cough, Cteinnption, Decay and Death. - _ OFFICE, NO. 7 SOUTH FREpERICK STREET. ~-ii I, m l Side going from Baltimore street. «■ few doors f,.ni ill* ...irner. Fail not to/ibserve name and number. . Ut-ts must be paid and contain n stamp. The Doc*, o’, Dii lonla* Pang in his office A CURE WARRANTED IN TWO DAYS. Vo Mercury or Xusf.on s Drugs. OR. JOHNSON, ; . . l->uti*r of Hi? Royal College of Surgeons. Loudon, Urad ...it** from ou? of the most wuluent Colleges in the United '•atr*. and lUf greater part of whose lift* has been spent in ■tie hospitals of London, Paris, Philadelphia and else* ha. effected some of the most astonishing cures :: ; at wer? ever known; many troubled with ringing in the Vesl and ears when asleep, great nervousness, being; .lirmM at sudden sounds, bashfulness, with frequent, ■lushing, attended sometimes with derangement of mlno.i ore cared immediately. TAKE PARTICULAR NOTICE; . Dr..[.addresses all those who have injured themselves y improper indulgence and solitary- habits, which ruin., 'inh hody and mind, unfitting them for either business,; •tady, society or marriage. These are some of the sad and melancholy effects pro*, ‘•wed by early habits of youth, viz: Weakness of the aud Limbs, Pains In the Head. Dimness of Sight, • of Muscular Power, Palpitation of the Heart, Dys*; TO t Nervous Irritability, Derangement of the Dlges- Functions, General Debility, Symptoms of Consump • a. tc. —The ieaxfal effects of the mind are much to • dreaded—Loss of Memory, Confusion of Ideas. De •r>.‘««i(>n of spirits, Kvil-Forebodings, Aversion to Society, •■•li-Dutrust, Love of Solitude, Timidity, Ac., are some of produced. . , . . . Tb icsands of persons of all ages can now judge what is ■he csose of their declining health, losing their vigor, be* ■ruing weak, pale, nervous and emsclated, having a sin gular appearance about the eyes, cough and symptoms of ■'ammprioo YOUNG MEN ' • ; •fha have ipinred themselves by a certain practice ip ml?e{| la when alone, a habit frequently learned from •vii companions, or at school, the effects of which are U'htly felt, even when asleep, and If not cured render* mrrUg* Imposible, and destroys both mind and body, Mi apply immediately. • , What a pity that a young man, the hope of his country. •'.* darling of hli parents, should *be snatched from all •r.Mp*cu and enjoyments of lift, by the consequence of ■‘■ruling from the path of nature, and indulging In a • •ruin seen*! habit. Such persons KCBT, before contem ning ’ MARRIAQEi *dect that a sound mind and body are the rao»l necessary • '■'julSitei to promote connubial happiness Indeed, with out these, the journey through Ufe becomes ft weary pll tfrimag*; the prospect hourly darken® to the view; the Ainik becomes shadowed with despair and filled with the t» iUncholy reflection that the happlnesa ot another be blighted with oar own. DISEASE OF IMPRUDENCE. When the misguided and Imprudent votary of pleasure • r md« that he has Imbibed the seed* of this painful dia ■-iw.it too often happens that an ill-timed sense ofahame, Mr»d of discovery, deters him from applying to those from education and respectability, can alone pe- him, delaying till the constitutional symptoms pf • horrid disease make their appearance, such as-ulcera '-1 *»ro throat, diseased nose, nocturnal pain sin the head • >1 limbi, dimness of sight, deafness, nodes on the shin > jq*< sad arms, blotches on tlie head, feco and extremi ty progressing with frightful rapidity, till at last the ’al»te of the mouth or the' bones of the nose fall in, and r h« victim of this awful disease becomes a horrid object of •••“ttnlseratlon, till death puts a period to his dreaqfttl y-iSvrlng*, by sending him t> “ that Undiscovered Country lri ® whence no traveller returns.** , n : i It is a melancholy fact that thousands tall victim* to • : *n terrible disease, owing to the nnskillfulness ofigoo ‘■at pretenders, wlio, by the use of that Deadly Jjn&n* /•rcary. rain the constitution and make the residue bf miserable. . . _ - STRANGERS 1 your Uvea, or health to the care of the ninny ! olfaroed and Worthless Pretender#, destitute of knowl nanje or character, wh-> copy Bf • Johnston e adver* or style themselves, In the newspapers, regu '‘H K.incued Physicians, Incapable of Coring, they keep f >n trifling month after month, taking their finny and '■'■>i«)noua compounds, or as long a* the smallest fee can ’’stained, and In despair, leave you with ruined health l over your galling disappointment. Nr- JwhiHton is the only Physician advertising. •1h credential or diplomas always hang in his office, ili« remedies or treatment are unknown to all others, Wpsred from a life spent In the great hospitals of Korop** [r iir«t in the oonntry and a moreextensive Pnrak iVac- ant uthcr Physician in the world. ", indorsement or the press. many thousands cured at this Institution, year after y**r. »od the unmenm* important Surgical operations P^ ,)r »U6d by Johnston, witnessed by the reporters of the •Sun,” Clipper,” and many other papers, notices of *«lch hare appeared again and again before the public, his standing as a gentlemen of character add re sponsibiiity, is * sufficient guarantee to the afflicted. - s - : SKIN DISEASES SPEEDILY CURED. • ’ 0 letters received unless post-pait* ■and containing a. Uiapto be used on the reply Persons writing should state Stand send portion of advertisement describing symptoms u.l! r * oai writing 'should be particular in directing their ♦iters to this Institution, In the following manner: _ JOHN M. JOHNSTON. M. D.« Of the Baltimore Lock Hospital, Maryla ASI» mi An- JLLUSTJIATEP SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN. THU BRUT MECHANICAL PAPtR IN THE VTOELD. EIGHTEENTH YEAR. VOLUME VIII. — NEW' SERIES. A sow volume of this popular ;Joarbal commences on the first of JRi'Oßty* It is published weekly, and ever)' uumbef contains sixteen pages of useful iofotmat>on, and from five to ten original engravings of new' Inventions and discoveries, all of which are';prepared expressly for Its columns. \ TO THE MECHANIC AND MANUFAC TURER. No ptracn engaged in any of the mechanical or manu facturing pursuits should think of “ doing without” the SCUSTIFIC ahkxjcan.. It coats hut six cents per week ; every number contains from six to ten engravings of new machines and inventions, which cannot lie found in any other publication. TO THE INVENTOR- The ScißKTific A Mfi&lCA2i lodiapensgble to every in* ventor. a& it not only contains illustrated descriptions of nearly all the best inventions as they come out, but each number contains an Official List of the .Claims of all the Patents issued from the United StateaJ’ateut office during the Week previous; thus giving a correct history of the progress of inventions in this country.• We are also re ceiving, every week-, the best scientific journal* of Great Britain, France, and Germany; thus placing Id our pos session all that is transpiring in mechanical science and art in these old countries. We shall continue to transfer to our columns copious extracts from tuese journals of whatever.we may deetc of interest to ourreaders. A pamphlet of instruction as to the best mode of ob taining Letters Patent on new furnished free on application. Messrs. Munn A Co. have acted os Patent Solicitors fur more than seventeen years, in connection: with the publi cation of the Scientific American, and they refer to 20.- 000 patentees for whom they have done business - No charge hi made for examining sketches and models 4>f new inventions and for advising inventors as to their patentability. CHEMISTS. ARCHITECTS, MILLWRIGHTS AND FARMERS. The SciSKnric American will be found a most awful journal to them. All the new discoveries.in the science of chemistry are given in its column*, and the interest* of the architect and carpenter are not overlooked; all the new inventions and discoveries appertaining to these pur suits being published from week to week. Useful and practical information pertaining to the interests of mill wrights and mill owners will be found jn the Scientific American, which iafunnation they cannot possibly obtain from any other source. Subjects In which farmers are in terested will be found discussed' in the Scientific Ameri can; most of .(he improvements in agricultural implements being illustrated in its columns. TERMS, To mail subscribers; Three Dollars a year or One Dollar for four months. The volumes commence on the first of January and July.. Specimen copies will be sent gratis to any part of the country. ■ • Western and Canadian money or Post-office stamps taken at par for subscriptions. ' Canadian subscribers will please to remit t •” enty-five cents extra oiieach year's sub scriptions *to prepay' postage. MUNX & CO.. Publishers. 37 Park Row, N. V. ONWARD! EVER ONWARD! STEP BY STEP! riMIE I■ XJ)ERSIG NED DESIRES TO f_ - inform hi* old customer* and the public generally that he ha* this spring gone into the Dry flood business, and lias just received a large and entirely new -dock of Dress Goods For the bodies, embracing all the latest, pivtiiestand most FASHIONABLE PATTERNS, Anu among which may be found every quality of goods, the names of which it would bo too tedious to enumerate. In the line of pure, frcsh and cheap GROCERIES & PROVISIONS I will not •* knock under” to any of my competitors. In tbU department 1 feel sure that X can render satisfaction. All kinds of country produce takeq in exchange for goods, and the highest market price allowed. Store on the' corner, of Annie and lleien sfreeis, East Altoona. THOMAS UESLOP. Altoona, May 22,18t>2. COAL, VTOW L« THE TIME FOR EVERY i i family to get in their supply of'tnal for the Winter, and thesubscribhr would therefore inform the citizens of Altoona and vicinity, that ho Is prepared to supply-them, on short notice, with a superior article of ANTHRACITJS and ALLEGHENY BITUMINOUS COAL. He will sol! U by the Train. Car. or Cart Load,or by the bushel, deliv ered at the door \>f the purchaser, 4S~¥u£d on the North side of the Railroad—upper end of Altopna Yard. U. R. MYERS. July 25.1861,-tf. REFORMED AMERICAN PRACTICE CO AND SEE WE Root and herb doctor, who can be consulted at the Altoona Bouse, one day in each mouth during the year 1863, viz:—January 9lh Feb. 10th and March 10th. At Mrs. Ward's National Ho tel, Tyrone, on the Bth ofJanuary. 9th of Feb. and 9th of March. He treats all diseases that flesh is Heir to. He Invites all females that may be sufferingwitli diseases peculiar to their sexj to call and examine his new mode of treatment, as thousand* have been restored to health who have been abandoned by otheu. He Is Jn . posseilon of perfect in struments for sounding the lungs and Chest, and is there fore able'to determine the exact-condition of the vital or gans—consequently can treat such complaint* with greater safety and certainty than it is possible fpr those who guess at the disease and experiment for its cure. He believes that fur every thalady, there iafohnd in oar soil a sure and aeverdailing remedy. Dr. Levlngston has formed a copartnership with a squaw who ha* spent.all her life as a doclrets, and her wonderful cures-tbronghout the Suited States haws astonished thou sand*. She is a native of the Kocky Mountain* and la called the“Bellerof the Prairie** 49* Patients can receive treatment for $6 per mouth, except in cases of Cancers and Tumors, itbey varying from $lO to $lOO. Examinations free; See handbills. W. LBVINOSTON, M. D. Nov. 26, 1862-tf. Miss BKLL MOON. Glorious ; News! rpHE Subscribers would respectfully announce to the citizen*of Altoona and vicinity, that they bavejost returned from the Snst with their FALL AND WINTER STYLES OF HATS & CAPS, BOOTS Sc SHOES. Their stuck of HATSj & CAPS ''*'" bf “ lected with great care, aim with tnejrlewof suiting all who may favor them with their patronage. Theirllne of Boots and Shoes i« complete.. . , Their LADIES 1 MISSES and CHILDREN'S SHOES are of Citv make, and warranted. Their Balmoral Shoes for Ladies and Mioses, are just the [thing for fell and winter. • ; • .__ Thankful to the public for their very liberal peonage heretofore, thev hope to merit a continuance of the same. Store on MAIN St, next rtobr to Bowman’s Exchange y o tel. ; SMITH A MANN. "V^OTICK.— 1 wouldhereliy notify those X u who are owing me small billii for meat that I have placed their accounts In the Hands of John W. Humes. Esq., for collection, not for the purpose of snelng them oat, but merely for collection. (Ks 1 have not time to go around and see each person,) ahd I wish alt those upon whom he way call to be prepaid to square up old accounts and sta*t anew. In-the meantime 1 will con tinue to keep on hand as fine an article of K*ef, P° , ~* ® r imitlon, a. can be found in this section, and re«p«tfully invite all my customer, tocall a» turaal. , Jiov. 26, X 862 tf. M. RUMEN. ROCERIES AND PROVISIONS.— IT* large and varied rtoct of FEESII GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS, ju.t received, "‘Mortal*ff ch “P " the cheapest, at HORPHV* Me PIK E SS^ir., Y Cor. ofTirglnja and Caroline sts.. Altoona. June 1i6,1802, Great piles of pantaloons, tot Man and Boy., at : i: LADGHMAVB. ALTOONA. PA., TUESDAY, JANUARY 20. 1863 €hsur goettg. THE SOLDIER’S RALLY. lIV KLURIIKSK .1. cnTLEK. Oh, rally round the banner. Ir*y . That flag full blown Upon the walls ami proudly passed away.’* My brother fell on Newborn’s shore; he hared In* ia dlant head. And shouted,” 4 * m j the day is won 1' leapt*! forward and was dead.” “My chosen friend of all the world hears not the bugle calf A bullet pierced his Iv.va) heart by Richmond's fatal wall.*' Bnt seize the hollowed sw.ordu tlr > .hopped, with blo»nl yet inoi*; and ml? 4 Fill up the thinned. Immortal r; nW.-. and tollow where they led! For right is tni>rht. aud truth is-God. and He upholds our causa. The good old cmd-m* cur fathers loved—Freedom and Equal Laws! My mp»lier’e hair is thin and while! -.he looked me in the She clasped nr- ' ' her heartbeat! rain. -Oil lahe ihy broth- er's pin- My lister kiss--.'; ,-r sweet farewell; her maiden cheeks were wet Around my neck her arms she thr m ; 1 feel the pressure My wife sits by the cradle's side and keeps oui nil,- borne. Qr asks the baby on her knee, '• When will thy lather come 1” Oh, woman's faith and man’s so-m arm shall right the ancient a rung 1 So farewell, mother, sister, wile! Ood keep you brave and strong 1 The whizzing shell may burst in fire, the shrieking bullet The heavens and earth may mingle grief: the gallant sol- dier die' But while a haughty rebel stands.no peace I for i -.-. v t- The land that is not worth onr death Is not worth living Then rally round the banner, hoys ! Us triumph draweth nigh! Bee where above !ii.- clouds of win its seamless glories fly i l*eace hovering o'er the bristling van. waves palm and laurels fair. And Victory hinds the rescued stats in Freedom's golden hair! HABITS OF THE BEAVEEB The law of industry among working beavers is well attested to by hunters. Theirdam* or houses are built anew or remodelled every fall, and in a way to suit tin? height of the water during the suc ceeding winter or spring. Tho object of the dam N seems to regulate the height of the water at their bouses where they have two or three berths at dif ferent heights, where they sleep dry. but with their tails in the water, thus being warned of any change in the rise or fall of the water. Some houses stand>ix feet at least above the meadow covered with mud, and in the form of a round coal pit, but so intersected with sticks of wood as to be strong, and the weight of three or four men makes no impression upon it. . A “ full family," as hunters call them, consists of the paternal pair and the males of the next gen eration with mates. When the tribe get large | they colonize Some time in the. fall, all the single ones of both sexes congregate from consid erable distances, at the deepest lake in the vicinity where they chose their mates; how ceremonious the nuptials are we cannot say; then they all go home, the female following lier mate, and all go to work first putting house and dam in order for winter, then laving in their stock of wood, the bark of which is their winter food. They go up stream some three miles for their wood, and float it down to their houses and then in some mysteri ous way make it lie in a pile at the bottom of the pond, outside of the house, where they take it at j any time in the winter for use. It is said that no human hands can disturb that without its rising and remaining' afloat till the beavers have the handling of it. But we do not feel quite sure what is fact and what is conjecture respecting the heaver, whose works are so much in the night and deep under water. The fall of the year is a bnsy time with thepi, and it is interesting to see their ncW dams in process of hitilding, as we sometime's find them across large boating streams; and not unfrequcntly boatmen and river drivers tear away their dams and get a great head of water for their use. .They usually build at the outlet of : natural ponds, and sometimes they flow large lakes and long pieces of dead water, but are always moving and recon structing How they keep their ,tqetb in order for so much catting, when the best steel would wear out, is a mystery. , They cut logs sometimes a foot through, and every stroke of the tooth tells towards the job, and never does a tooth get dull as we can see . Two winters ago some lumbermen encamped near one Of their ponds. One afternoon they felled a tree across a. lumber road, and before morning it was cot up by the beavers and hand somely piled out of the road. —Aroostook Pioneer, Boils.—A Correspondent of the Prairie Farmer gives the following recipe to those suffering from one of Job’s curses. It is intended for “ 6nishing off” the boils, after they have attained their head ing :• Take a glass bottle, fill with water as hot as the skin can bear to have near it, empty the same out, and applv the nose of the bottle to the wound while hot. In'a second or two such a rushing out of the causes of all this trouble will make short work of Mr. Boil. Of course the boil should be ripe. Little to do.—The Cleveland Plaindealer says an athletic speciman of a man from the Em erald Isle, called in to the counting room of one of our River street merchants. He took off 1 his hat to make his best bow. “ The top of the morning-to ye, MUther T , I’ve'been told ye're in want o' help.” “I’ve but little to do," replied Mr. T , with mercantile gravity.” “ I'm the boy for yees. It’§ but little I care about doin’—-sure it’s the money that I'm afther." fIXIU’ITNDENT vk KVKKVTHIN«.] It is said that London is the fur mart of the world, although the climate is such that they are but little nsed. Russia sable is the most valuable of all furs, and fhe skins are exceedingly scarce.— According to the latest statistics but twentv-five thousand cftliem were produced in the Czar’s dominions. The prices paid for them are enor mous. In New York a set—tippet, muff and cuffs —coat from-one thousand to three thousand dol lars. The sable tor lining one Of the Emperor’s cloaks, exhibited at the. World's Fair in 1851, wa« valued at five thousand dollars. One kind of the Russian sable is called silver sable, on account of the long white hairs which are conspicuously mingled with the dark brown, which is its usual color. This commands a very high price, partly from rarity and partly because it cannot be imitated as readily as the brown.— The peculiarity of this is its great softness, and the length and the heaviness of the hair. The Ermine has a value of its own from its delicacy and beauty, although it is not a very expensive fur—not nearly as much so as the Hudson Bay sable, which ranks next to Russian. As the Hudson Bay company take their skins very far north, they are often Very nearly equal in ele gance to the Russian, although they cost rather less that half 1 the amount which is given for their near relation. The American sable is taken south of the do minions of the Hudson Bay company. It stands third in our list of furs. Next are the mink and the stone martin. For the last few years fashion has given a value to the mint which it formerly gave to the stone martin. It has no equal for durability, and in appearance is eminently respect able—sufficiently so for all ordinal y purposes, and has the advantage of never looking too well for the plainest dress. It varies very much in quality. .The most valuable skins have long hair, and are quite soft. In selecting furs of any kind, always look for white hairs, which, in the natural skins, are scattered here and there, as they are your secyrity against dyed fur. French' sable means any inferior fur dyed to imitate a valuable one. It is very poor economy to purchase them. The Fitch and Siberian squir rels are much used, and are just as useful for warmth and fully as durable as any other, and are much less expensive. For sleigh rolxst the black hear is highly val ued. The white fox is very elegant, and so is the black fox, which !s a Canadian fur, and highly valued in Envoi*!. Raccoon skins and muskrat are commonly used, and answer very well, hut arc not as comfortable as those which have longer and heavierfur. Tile old buffalo robe, which formerly so high, has lost its place, and is almost' en tirely discarded ; but it certainly had merits of its own" which its more showy successors have not at tained. Happening to cast my eye upon a printed page of miniature portraits, the personages who oc cupied the four most conspicuous places were Alexander, Hanibal, Ctesar, and Bonaparte. I had seen the same unnumbered times before, but never did the same sensation arise in my bosom as mv mind hastily glanced over their several hisroiies. .Alexander, after having climbed the dizzy heights of his ambition, and with his temples bound in chaplets dipped in the blood of countless nations, looked down upon a conquered world, and wept that there was not another one for him to conquer, set a city on fire, and died in a scene of debauch. Hanibal, after having, to the astonishment and consternation of Rome, passed the Alps; after having put to flight the armies of the mistress of the world, and stripped three bushels of gold rings from the fingers of her slaughtered knights, and made her very foundations quake—fled from his country, being hated by those who once exultingly united'his name to that of their god, and calhal him Hanihal—died at last by poison, adminis tered by his own hands, unlamented and unwept, in a foreign land. Cffisar, after having conquered eight hundred cities, and dyed his garments in the blood of one million of his foes, after having pursued to death the only rival he had on earth, was misera bly assasinated by those he considered his earnest friends, and in that very place, the attainment of which had been his greatest ambition. Bonaparte,- whose mandates kings and popes obeyed, after having filled the earth with the ter ror of his name, after having deluged it with tears and blood, and clothed the world in sack cloth, closed his days,in lonely banishment, almost literally exiled from the world, yet where he could sometimes see his country’s banner waving over the deep, but which could not or would not bring him aid. Thus four men who, from the peculiar situa tion of their portraits, seemed to stand as the rep resentatives of all those whom the world call great; those four, who each in turn, made the earth tremble to its very centre by their simple tread, severally died—one by. intoxication, or, ns some suppose, by poison mingled in his wine—one a suicide—one murdered by his friends—and one in lonely exile. How are the mighty fallen. Ax Aged Couple.—The Girard, Pa., Union gives the following interesting account of a couple of old eagles, their troubles and their constancy. It says : “ Sixty years ago, when the township was first settled, a pair of eagles, the whitcheaded or bald species, had a neat on the farm of Mr. Kelly.— They were not disturbed, and for twenty years they occupied the nest, annually rearing and send ing forth a brood of eagles, when a violent storm overturned the' tree, and of Course destroyed their habitation. Then they built their nest on a lofty and inaccessible sycamore, bn the farm of Richard Pettisbone, adjoining Mr. Kelly’s, and enjoyed happiness fdr forty years longer, raising to eagle hood two or three chicks yearly. . , ' r “A few weeks ago a high wind wrenched off j a limb containing the nest and threw it on the | ground with such energy that it Was torn all to j atoms, and a very young and a very bald eagle I killed. The nest was very large, being made of i i about ten bushels of sticks and leaves.. This aged ] and persevering couple are now making a third ' nest on another sycamore, near the one lately des i troyed. How old these birds are is not known, but that they are the same pair found by the : earliest settlers there can be no doubt. They are : so long familiar with the presence of men, that they can be approached within a few feet; and ; their great age and constancy, and friendli ness, have given them the respect of the neighbors, who would turn out en maw and mob the unlucky ,'• sport wfeo should attempt to shoot or despoil this royal family.” qey An old bachelor geologist was once boast ing that every rock was as familiar to him as the alphabet. A lady who was present declared that she knew a rock of which he was wholly ignorant. “ Name it, madam 1” said Ccelebs in a rage. “It is rock the cradle, sir," replied; the lady. ABOUT FUES END OF GREAT MEN IT IS HONE OF YOUa BUSINESS It takes a down east man to ask questions ; but once in awhile one of them finds his milch.— Jonathan overtook a gentleman who was travel ing on horseback, notwithstanding the disadvan tage of having lost a 1%. His curiosity- was awakened, (as what Yankee hath not a compe tent share.) to know how he chances to meet with such a misfortune. “Been in the army, I guess?" said the in quirer. “ Never was in the army in my life," replied the traveler. “ Fit a duel, p’raps?" “ Never fought a dnel, sir.” “ Horse throw’d you, I guess, or something of that ere sort.” “No, sir, nothing of the kind." Jonathan tried various dodges, but all to no effect; and at last, almost out of patience with himself as well as with the gentleman, whoso pa tience was very commendable, he determined on a direct inquiry as to the nature of the accident by which the gentleman had come to lose his leg. “I will tell you,” replied the traveler, “on condition that you will promise not to ask me another question.” “Agreed, agreed!” exclaimed the eager list ener. “ Well, sir,” remarked the gentlemen, “it was bitoff!” Jonathan was no more inquisitive, and no more taken aback than the inquiring Englishman who had been betrayed into the presumption of asking a gentleman with whom he was once traveling, if he was a single roan ? “No, I am not, sir,” he replied. “Oh, 1 beg your pardon—a married man?” “ No, sir, I am not." “ Pray, sir, excuse me ; I perceive you are a widower.” “No, I am not a widower. The inquisitor was nonplussed. Not a single man—nor a married man—nor a widower: ‘f Fray what may yon be if 1 may be so bpld as to ask ?” “It is none of your d——l business; but if yon are very anxious to know, I am a divorced man, sir!” To Prevent Skippers in Hams. —There is, according to my experience, nothing eosies than to avoid the skipper, and all worms and hugs that usually infest, and often destroy so much bacon. It is simply to keep your smoke house dark, and the moth that dc|