SI BSPRIPTION TERMS, kC. The I.FGT iBFn is published E ery FRIDAY morn ing at the following rate* : ONE V EAR. tin advance,) $2.00 (if not paid within six inos.)... s2.co (ft not paid within the yesr.)... $d.(M All paper* outlide of the county discontinued without notice, at the exp ration of the time for which the subscription ha* been paid. Hnglccopiesof the paper furnished; in wrappers, at five cents each. r , oinmonicati>tii! on subjects of local or general interest, are resptMrtfully solicited. To ensure at tention favor* <*f this kind must invariably be accompanied by the name of the author, not for publication, but as a guaranty against imposition. All letters pertaining to business f the office h"uldlc addressed to 1 JL t U HOKROW ter is required to give notice £y !>*n who takes a paper from the Post office, irlmthsr directed to his name or another, or w bother he has subscribed or not is responsible fur the pay. If a person orders his paper discontinued, he ! must pay all arrearages, or the publisher may continue to s-nd it until payment is made, ar.d collect the whole amount, c. The law prq. on Juliana street, three doors south of the Mengel House. May 24:1y ( IN SPY M. ALBIP, _J ATTORNEY AT LAW, Bruporo, PA., Will faithfnlly and promptly attend to all busi- j nes6 entrusted to his care in Bedford and adjoin ug counties. Military claims, Pensions, back pay. Bounty, Ac. speedily collected. Office with j Mann A Spang, on Juliana street, 2 doors south j of the Mengol House. apl 1, 1864.—tf. a. F. MKYKRS J. W. DICKKRSOH j M4.YERS A DICKEKSOX. ATTORNEYS AT LAW, BEDFORD, Penn'A., j Office nearly opposite the Mengel House, will ; practice in th e several Courts of Bedford county. J Pensions, bounties and hack pay obtained and the pwrchaeeof Real Ksitate attended to. [mayll/66-ly i L 1 15. STUCK EY, A 1 TORNKY AND COHNSKLLOR AT LAW, and REAL ESTATE AGENT, Office on Main Street, between Fourth and Fifth, opposite the Court House, KANSAS CITY. MISSOURI. Will practice in the adjoining Counties of Mis siHiri and Kanaa?. July 12:tf j -. L. RISSKLI J. H. LO3GKSEUKER ; Y> ÜBSELL A LONGENECKEK. I K VrioßtiTS A Counsellor* AT LAW, j Bedford, Pa., M ill attend promptly and faithfully to all busi ness en trusted to their eare. Special attention j givm to collections and the prosecution of claims i for Pack Pay, Bounty, Pensions, Ac. Office on Juliana street, south of the Court House. Apri!s:lyr. J* M'P. SHARP* K. r. KERR Cl HARPE A KERB, 0 A TTORXE YS-A T-LA W. Will practice in the Courts of Bedford and ad joining counties. All business entrusted to their cr- will receive careful and prompt attention. Pensions, Bounty, Back Pay, dr., speedily col lected from the Government. Office on Juliana street, opposite the banking house of Reed A Schell, Bedford, Pa. mar2:tf J. P. DUBBORROW JOH! LUTt. DUR BORROW A LUTZ, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, BEBPORD, PA., Will attend promptly to all business intrusted to their care. Collections made on the shortest no tice. They arc, also, regularly licensed Claim Agents and will give special attention to the prosecution of claims against the Government for Pensions, Back Pay, Bounty, Bounty Lands, Ac. Office on Juliana street, one door South of the Inquirer office, and nearly opposite the ' Mengel House" April 28, 1865:t iII rs iCi AN s. rrr M. W. JAMISON, M. I>.. BLOODr Rp, PA., Rc*pcctfally tenders his professional services to (he people of that place snd vicinity. [decSrlyr Respectfully lenders his professional ser vices to the ritiiens of Bedford and vicinity. Office and residence on I'itt street, in the bnilding formerly occupied hy Dr. J. 11. Hofius. [ApT 1,64. INK. hi. G. STATLEK, near Schellsburg, and J Br. .). J. CLARKE, formerly of Cumberland county, h.n iug a.- ociutcd themselves ia the prac ti ■ of Med.ine, respect fully offer their profes sional -crvices to the citizens of Sehellsburg and vicinity. |) r . Clarke's office and residence same as ionnerly icupicd by J. White, Esq., dee'd. „ . , S. G. STATLER, &chell,'"" g , ApriU2:ly. J. J. CLARKE. M 1 8C KLL AN EOUS. E. SHANNON, BANKER, ' BanroaD, FA. BANK OF DISCOUNT AND DEPOSIT. Collection- made for the Last, West. North and South, and the general business of Exchange transacted. Notes and Accounts Collected and Remittances promptly made. REAL ESTATE bought and sold. feb22 DANIEL border. PII I -i I i I RUN IFINKT VSJT or M I*D roBD ttoTtt. Ry,rvp. PA. WATCXIMAKKI: NT) DKAhKR IN JEWEL RY. rPECTACI.I S. AC. He keeps on hand a slock ' f line Bold and Sil ver Watches, Spectacles of Brilliant Double Refin. Ed (Basses, also Scotch PeLlne (Basse*. Gold ' Watch Chains. Breast Pins, Finger Rings, best ; quality of Gold Pens. lie will supply *tn order 1 any thing in his line not on hand. Travelling Dealers in NOTIONS. In the county once every two months. I SELL GOODS AT CITT PRICES. ' gents for the Chamhersburg Woolen Mannfac- ( tunng Company. Apl Itly 1 k W. CROLSE 1 '• WHOLESALE TOBACCONIST, , On I'iU street two doors weat of B. F. Harry s Drug Store, Bedford, Pa., is now prepared to sell by wholesale all kinds of CIGARS. All orders promptly tiled. Persons desiring anything in his line will do well to give him a oaU. Bedford Oat 36. '66., ■—' • - DU It BORROW & JLUTZ. r+oprtjT jjnetnj. A UAi'H LIFE. A tremuloud shudder invaded the air i A- the stirs jnler gru at the dawning, j Whilst .-olemnly waited the far-away hills For the birth of a new summer morning: Their falthftil sM 'j, were patiently hep" For the motherless ray-Night was loavipr The murmuring ocean its cradle had sot And the air-mist its garment was weal^' The sky's starry watchmen trooped iwa y' Whilst the deed Night was ]>Ainlea§ ,r ® vcr ' j And the hill* kfrsed the babe asf * u arm.". Wrapped about in the mist of tb river. At the door of the forest white /lowers were hung, White caps on the waves told tbc story t As tho' solemn Ocean In festival garb Would cover his locks dull and hoary: Fair Flora her chalice all dewy upheld At the chrism, and gave it her blcs.-ingt And the birds warbled welcome so merry and clear, Their faithful allegiance confessing. So the Day stronger grew—went wandering wide— , Peered in through the forest aisles tender, Till faiut-hearted blossoms went down out of J ! Unaccustomed to Day's goldeu splendor. He flung iu his glory wherever he trod, Set his seal over window and portal, j And bid his attendants, the Hours, by the way. Leave gifts with each earthly immortal. ! There were radiant crowns, shining jewels as well, But each crown bad a thoru somewhere fretting, i And the daintiest jewel the Day could bestow j Had a flaw or a fault in tho setting | There was crosses hung over poor pilgrims awhile, I Underneath looming dark to their vision, j While the heavenward side, whieh pilgrims saw i not, • ! Burned brightly with glory Klysian. ; Far over the meadow and mountain and sea t At noon went the wide proclamation, ; That sickle and hammer should rest them an hour ! For the honor of Day's coronation. | Again she went shining, his face to the West, • Again would he fain leave no sorrow, No heart that should bid him in haste begone And give place to the hopeful to-morrow. But tears were still tears, tho' they glittered so bright. On clouds still the ralri was painted, And the turt was uprooted to cover the forms Of the earth-loved, and early translated. Tired Day lower drooped as he lenged for his rest, Till he crept to the hills western lying, And crimson-tipped shadows in liVery stood j Obsequious, while he was dying. Pale Twilight drew nigh, held his head on her j breast, 1 Till he fainted and vanished forever, And the shroud laid about him, unstirred by a breath I Or a sound, saare the sigh of the river. THE BEAUTIFUL. m JOHN G. RAX E. : All things of beauty are not their*a alone Who hold the fee; but unto him no lees j Who e.an enjoy, than unto them who own, Are sweetest usee given to possess. ii'or Heaven is bountiful; and sutler's none To make monopoly of aught that's fair The breath of violets is not for one, Nor loveliness of women: all may share j Who can discern: and He who gave the law, "Thou shalt not covet!" gave the subtle power By whieh, unsinniug, I may freely draw Beauty and fragrance from each perfect flower IThat still in maiden pride adorns the lea. Or in my neighbor's garden blooms for me! ADVICE TO YOUNG MEN. Hints to Business Men on Mental A ullurc. BY M. B. ANDERSON, hU D., PRESIDENT OF THE UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER. It is clear that the number of young men who enter a business life, afler having re ceived a liberal education, is constantly in creasing. It is clear also that our best and ablest merchants desire on the part of their employees a higher rangeof intelligence and a greater degree of mental discipline, than was thought requisite in former years. The evidence for both of the above statements is abundant. But my design is not to make an argument in favor of giving candidates for mercantile or mechanical life a college education (though I believe it to be de sirable), but to point out some practical methods by which those who have already passed the period of elementary training and are already engaged in business can se cure growth, power and breadth of intellect. There is a common and somewhat vague distinction drawn between a trade and a liberal profession on the ground that the one requires little beyond manual skill for suc cess, while the other requires a disciplined and well-furnished intellect. Now it is evi dent that this distinction fails in its applica tion to individuals. For there are great numbers of mechanics, farmers and mer chants who bring to their pursuits abroad and comprehensive mind, and so refer all their thinking to great universal laws that they bcoamo representatives of the philo sophical tendency and habit. Such men in vent new processes in the mechanical arts, contrive and improve labor saving machines, strike out new channels of trade, foresee* and evade financial crisis, anticipate the result of increased Bafety, cheapness and rapidity in the transmission of goods and intelligence, make successful experiments in stock- breed ing, fruit-raising, drainage and manures. On the other hand, every careful observer knows that the learned professions furnish manifold examples of men who preach, teach, practise medicine and law on princi ples as mechanical as those of the organ grinder. It is evident that the relative dignity of different pursuits among men is not to be sought in the pursuits themselves, but rather in the amount of intelligence which is brought to bear upon them. All growth, progress, improvement in every de partment of human activity is due to those who bring to ordinary processes of labor the action of a clear and thoughtful mind—to those who think while they work. Here we have an illustration of what gives dig nity to labor. The commonest handicraft may by the intelligence and culture of him who exercises it be elevated to the rank of a kurn.-d profession. Every learned pro feseimi. if practiced with a blind deference to ready furnished rules, precedents, and decisions, without any apprehension of their ultimate ground in the nature of tLings, bo comes a n.cre mechanical trade. From these general considerations, we see the value of education founded in general principles for every calling in life. A man becomes a better merchant, a better mechanic, abetter farmer in the pr.t sis, generalization, and verification, if gone through with in the light of common sense and practical judgment, will furnish a body of truths relative to the business pursued which may justly be called scientific. In ! these processes of thought, which become to the business man a matter of daily duty and necessity, he acquires intellectual dis cipline of a character not inferior in thor- ; ougbness to that obtained by tbe study of : those scientific treatises which are made the basis of education in schools for liberal cul- j ture. The power to think clearly and : sharply on one class of subjects assists us in thinking upon all others. Thus the very processes of thought necessary to carry on a business at all complicated will secure a good degree of mental discipline. Thus a few years of experience may place the energetic business man on a level in this respect with the regularly trained scholar. But our practical man is liable to be defective in that large knowledge of the experience and thinking of the past which is comprised in ! history and literature. This universal ex perience analyzed and condensed in the various forms of literary art is requisite in order to make mental discipline largely available. Without it the mind is narrow in its range of vision and comparatively barren in its products. Hence the business man needs to form habits of reading. This is difficult. A few hints on this subject may not be inappropriate. He should learn the art of labor saving. This may be done by the accumulation and use of books of reference, such as dictionaries, cyclopedias, and thorough systematic treatises on science j and art. He should also gradually form a collection of the masters in elegant litera ture and history. The little time which such a man can command for the purposes of study forbids the idea of any very ex- j tended courses of reading. Let him use his 1 books of reference in searching out such historical facts and allusions, and such questions in science and literature as from time to time arrest his attention. He will thus fall into the habit of investigating subjects rather than reading many books con tinuously. So doing, he will assist his memory, and avoid that loose and desultory reading which burdens the mind of the ' partially educated man with disconnected and insignificant facts and ideas. In so doing, he should learn to make good use of the headings of chapters and the indexes of books. While searching for a specific factor discussion in a large treatise, he will often fix more truth in his mind than by reading a whole book without a specific and definite object. He will learn to set aside the reg ular idea that the books in his library arc useless unless they can all be read through and digested. Books are now so numerous , that the most diligent scholar must consult the mass of books on specific topics while |he reads through comparatively few. It is ( fashionable to ridicule index and title-page I knowledge; but it must be remembered that I he who knows where knowledge is, and how i to obtain it, is in a position nearly equal to ! | the man who has it already. Let a business | man, then collect his books slowly; look < ; carefully over their tables of contents and • ; prefaces; aDd read occasional paragraphs until be ascertains the topics which are treated of. By so doing he will know where i to look for discussion or information upon , any subject that excites his attention. He , may thus follow one subject and its collat -1 eral illustrations through several books — j compare views and settle his o>vn opinions ' j with the expenditure of comparatively little | time. A few hours of leisure thus occupied j j during each week will enable a man, in a j series of years, to acquire a large amount of i exact and well-digested knowledge. I The remaining element in education to which I will call attention is power of expres sion. Every business man must write many letters which, from the nature of the case, must have the binding force of contracts. Pecuniary consideration require that these , be simple, exact, and unambiguous. If he , writes and rewrites these with care, and is patient of the requisite labor, he will not only save himself from many lawsuitis, but will acquire ease, elegance, and force of expres s-ion. These elements which go to make up a good business letter judged from the mer cantile point of view alone, arc fundament al in the formation of a correct and vigor ous literary style. Clearness is the begin ning, and almost the end, of literary excel lence. It is by seeking after this excel lence alone that so many comparatively un educated business men furnish in their cor respondence models of clear, compact and vigorous writing. Let the young clerk re member that in business correspondence words stand for money. That looseness and incoherency of expression, or careless selection of words, may eDtail the gravest mercantile disaster. It is as necessary for a merchant to write well as it is for an edi tor or a clergyman. This remark applies in an almost equal degree to the mechanic and the farmer. In the process of buying and: selling business m< n acquire great facility in I vocal utterance. If he is as careful in his' conversation with his customers as he should | be in writing to them, he may readily ae | quire the power of expressing himself with ! the tongue as correctly as with the pen. i When the power of addressing one man [ with clearness and vigiw has been acquired, : he may use that power upon a dozen or a thousand. There is no reason, in the na- I' ture of things, why a merchant should not cultivate expression in complicated and ob- =^DFOB^^t it,DAYI 19, 1868. stinato negotiations as successfully as the lawyer in his intercourse with comts and juries. Thegreat trouble with men in learn ing to write or speak well is in the attempt to compass something better than p 410 good sense expressed in plain and words. Welington was oace persuading an able member of Parliament to enter a cabi net which he was forming. The gentleman excused himself on the ground that he could not speak in the House of Commons. "Pshaw 1" said the Iron Duke, "do as I do; say what you think and don t quote Latin. We believe that with well directed dih gence in the use of means within his reach, a merchant, a mechanic, or a farmer, nia> acquire knowledge, discipline and power 1 expression sufficient for all the best purposes of public life. The great want of our poli tics is the presence of able and honest busi ness-men in our legislative bodies, who can give to our laws the impress of that sound, practical good sense, which is the natural outgrowth of experience in affairs. We need men of this sort to aid the peo ple in adjusting to tlieir shoulders the enor mous burden of taxation left to Us by the Rebellion. Other things being equal, the business man is likely to make a better legis r inn" it .*. • ;.^,treniU-nJL . 100 ....c,.., ncre also duil and lower; lator than a lawyer, i aKfcgs ... knowledge and facility of expression, 'Lev have abstained from public life, or when elected to office have had little influence be yond the committee-room. If what has been here written shall assist one young busi ness-man in personal improvement, by giv ing him confidence and guidance, its object will have been accomplished.— Nino York Ledger. NASIIY. Tlio Democratic Candidate for the Presi dency--W r. \as Ivy Hoists the .Name ota Democrat ot llls Ar June 1, 1868. J The matter uv a Presidcnshal candidate hez opprest me, and hez also exercised the gigantic iutellex who congregate at the Cor ners. We hev desided that Cheef Justis Chase won't do. We kin support him cheerfully, for his method uv conduktin the ; impeachment trial hez satisfied us uv his hankerin for a standin in our party. Be sides this bavin made a start, we consider him safe anyhow. The man wich kin take a nominasheD at our hands, or identify his self with us, may alluz be counted onto. The Ablishnist never forgive sicb, and there ain't no other place to go. When Johnson and Doolittle and that crowd left the Ab lishnists, I knew wher they would land bet ter than they did. Fucilis deensus averni, wich beiD translated into the vulgartongue, means, the road to hell is macadamized. Hancock won't do, becoz our Southern brethren hev a prejoodis agin the flag he drawd his swprd under. Pendleton wood anser the West, but the East is opposed to . him; Seymour wood do the East, but the | West is opposed to him. I therefore, after givinthe matter matoor consideraslien, hev decided to propose fur the posisben, the name uv Selhro L. Kippins, uv Alexander 1 county, Illinoy I hev the follerin reasons for insistin m his nomina.-.hen. 1. He's geographically level. By loolin on the map, it will be seen that that count' in Illinoy is the extreme sulheasterly pal uv the State. It is a Northern county witi Southern ideas. Across the river is Ke tucky, west is southeastern Missoury, ail east is lower Injeany. They grow tobaco there, and yearn after slave labor ez intenc ly ez we do across the river. 2. Nobody knows him. The name of Jethro L. Kippins hez never filled he soundin trump uv lame. With him on ur tikkit several pints would be gained, 'tn i all the questions on wich there is a doubtin ; the minds uv the Democracy, .Jethro Kippins is uncommitted. He is unembr rassed with views, and on trouhlesoie questions hez nary an opinyun. Thetroui le Pendleton hez with the grcenbax wod not effect him, neither would any uv thai other questions wich are rutlier embarrastn than otherwise. He hez but one politkl principle, which he holds is enuff for ny one man, and that is Democracy, ez it iez | bin, ez it is, ez it may be. He bclcoes firmly in the cuss uv Canan, he holds eke to Onesimus and Hagtr. and hez swor a solemn oath that no nigger shall ever mr ry a daughter of hizzen. This noble seti ment, wich alluz strikes a responsive cortin every* Democratic buzzum, wood be enda zoned on the Kippins banner, j 3. Jethro L. Kippins' f> posishen on ic war question is happy. He opposed allqe steps wich led to it, and when it findy broke out, he proposed the only troo l)ei okratic way uv stoppin it. It wuz his opi yun that we hed no right to coerce le i South—that there wuz no warrant in te I Constitooshen for any sich proceedin. "jf Boregard firesonto Major Anderson," ad he, "let Major Anderson go afore the ner est Justis uv tbd I'eece and hov him boud over to keep the peece. If he won't key, the peece. the Justis can't go beyond the Constitooshen." After hostilities actually begun his posishen wuz eminently satisfac tory to both sides. He wuz in favor uv the war, but oppossed to its prosekooshen, He remarkt that the Sontli had committed a indiscreashen, but were he in Congris, he shoodent vote for nary man nor dollar for carryin on a war agin em. Ilis two sons | served in the war—one in the Confedrit ser vis and one in the Federal—both ez sutlers. The war bore heavy on him—he made great sacrifices. Three other sons he supported in Canada dooring the continyooance uvthe unnachral strife. 4. Jethro L. Kippins hez all the element! uv popularity. He wuz born in a log cabif —he studied Daboll's arithmetic by the iitt uv a pine knot, held for the purpose hy hit mother —he drove boss on the canal, was t salt boiler in Southern Ohio, a wagon boj on the Nashnel Road, wuz left an orphai when six weeks old, swept a store in hi early vooth, went down the Mississippi oi a flat boat, was in the Mexikin war, am j hez a consoomin pashen for horses, jl : hez, in this, the advantage uv Grant, ez lit pashen was so consoomin that it got lni ! into a temporary difficulty, which required twelve men, ajudge and two lawyers to set tle. one uv the lawyers bein the State's „tt torney uv the county. These facts in .is biography i got from his own lips. tfT there's any discrepancies, uv course m committee on byogmpby w;l! reconcile ca. It may be that he may hev done too much wich is to say, ef all he says is troo, Its would be two or three hundred years oil. Ef so, it will have to bo pared down, He KZ bin justis uv the peece for ten years in lis native township, wieh gives him a splen iid knowledge uv constitoosheoel law. 5. He's trooly nashnel in h'l9 views. lie cnows no north, no south, no east, no west, 10 nothing. That last qualification mite irejudis some agin him, but to me its his ■hint holt. For with sieh a man in the I'resi lenshel chair I wood be safe We bev an ibundancc uv sieh meD as A\ ood, Seymour, t'allandygum, et Fcttry, who can- manage a I'resident, but are too odorous to be electid tery much to that posishen themselves. L'berefore its necessary that precisely sieh a nan ez I hev described be electid; and the 'act that Chase knows too much is the b --ection 1 hev to him. Polkwas managea. j jlc. Pierce eminently so, and poor old Bookannon was wonderfully pliable. tfich is the candidate wieh I present. There are many pints in his favor. Hur u ople would to wunst exclaim, "\V ho n :'nunder is Kippins?" and before they cood find out the day uv election wood bo on em, md they'd vote him. His hevin no record is also in his favor. Wat wood Pendleton, Yallandygum, Seymour and Wood give d they bed no record ? A record is like atm kittle to a dog's tail—it's a noisy append age wieh makes the dog conspicuous, ant " ' rr ■* •- r ell (•; \ i' CARPETS, "'i- CLOTg., WfVnnw .invites every body to shy a brick at him. ~ I hevent menshened in this, nor shel I who wood be a proper man for the secom place on the ticket. I hev my opinion Kentucky is deservin uv reeognisben tbat s all I shel say. The modesty wieh i characteristic uv me prevents me from se gestin the partiekeier citizen uv Kentuck; who ought to he thus honored. We she see whether or not republics is ongrateful. PF.ntoi.Kl M V. NASBT, P. M., (wieh is Postmaster.) P. !?. The fact that Jethro L. Kippin holds my note for §lB 63, with interest fo two years, hez no iuflooence in my segestinj his name. lam infloocnccd by no merccn ary con.-idorashuns. PENCIL-LEAI) MINES AND LEAD PENCILS. Every one knows what a black lead pen cil is, but it is not generally known tha there is not a particle of lead in the pencil The material variously known as biaek lead graphite or plumbago, is almost wholl; composed of carbon. It probably owes it niisnc.raer to the fact that previous to tin employment of graphite for making pencils common lead was used, and this within tin present, century. For a long time the bes graphite was obtained, not in very largi quantities, at l'orrowdale. in the Engiisl county of Combcrland, where it was dis covered in 1564. early in the reign of Queet Elizabeth, and pencils much like those stil in general use, were produced in the yea following. As the supply of the grapbiti (known in Cumberland, while in the mine by the title of wad), was not large, tin British government, from the first, tool great pains to prevent to exportation of th< article, and even to limit its home sale to i supply lust sufficeut to meet the trade, and • even in the North America, but of verj inferior quality. The Cumberland mines were worked only a few weeks in each year, yet the yield of wad was estimated at £40,- 000 a year. While the graphite lasted. England had a monopoly in supplying the best pencils to the world. Year after year, for a century' past the graphite deposit in Cumberland became "fine by degrees and gradually less." The result was that gra phite powder had to be compressed into a solid cake from which pencils could be sup. plied. A French variation, said to be an improvement, was to mix the powdered and purified graphite with clay, which is largely done still Nearly one hundred and fifty years ago, the pencil manufaeturccommenced in EeDg land, and improved in France, was trans planted to the village of Steinncar Nurem berg, in Bavaria, and, little more than a century since, Casper Faber there began to make the pencils which oontinue to be made by his descendants, and bear the family name though the world. The present John Lothair Faber, great grandson of Casper, has been head of the firm since 1839, and is not only very wealthy, but has recently been ennobled by the king of Bavaria. One of his brothers is associated with birn at Stein, in the processes of manufacture; the youngest of the three, Eberhard Faber, represents, the firm, for the Western World, at New York. Steiu is literally a town of pencil factories, of which Baron Faber is the ruler, taking care of the health, government, . education, industry, thrift, amusements of the inhabitants, and always living in their midst. It may be asked — how do the Fabers make lead pencils with out the famous graphite from Cumberland? It appears that twenty years ago John I'eter Alibert, a Frenchman, resident in Asiatic Siberia, having heard of the gold discoveries in California, began to examine the sandy beds of various rivers flowing into the Arctic Ocean. He found samples ol pure graphite, evidently brought a consid erable distance by force of the stream, in oue of the mountain gorees near Irkurtsk, and pursuing his di>eovery, tracked back to a branch of the Salan Mountain range, on the very summit of Mount Bafougol, 275 miles west of the town of Irkutsk, near the Chinese frontier, iu the midst of the rocky desert, and found pure graphite. Afler years of costly labor .Alibert found an ex baustless deposit of graphite equal to the best ever taken front Cumberland. Beside decorating and rewarding him, the Russian government changed the name of Mount Batougol to that of Mount Alibert. Nearly every crowned head iu Europe has honored him. With the consent of the Russian government, Alibert now supplies Faber's house exclusively with graphite from the mine in Asiatic Siberia. Pencils of this materia! were first made by Baron Faber in 1861, and were not introduced into the American market until 1865, from which time artists and others perceived and ac knowledged their superiority. If the world were to endure a thousand years more, there is sufficient graphite in Mount Alibert to supply its population with good black-lead pencils.— tific America*. IRISH WIT. —Sir Walter Scott, on one occa sion, having no small coin, flung a shilling u the lad who was holding his horse. "There Pat, that's too much; you'll owe me sixpence out of ii!" "May your honor live till I paj you!" iti.-iaully exclaimed the delightec recipient—Chaa. Mathews, father of the preseut distinguished comedian, used to tel a story of his landing in Ireland, and bcitq immediately accosted by a porter. "Sure it 1 glad we are to see you among us, Mr. Math ewe. It's myself I'll be proud to carry yont tenor's luggage. "Why, what can you know about me?" "Och, havn't we all heard of your honor, and an honor yonr coming is to ould Ireland, Mr. Mathews." Immensely gratified to find that hia reputation wa3 so widely spread, Mathews gave the porter double his tee. "And now, my friend," said he, on arriving at the hotel, "tell me truly where you happened to hear of me before?" Faith, your honor," said the man, pocketing his well-earned gratuity with a grin, "I'll not desave you. I read your honor's name on your portmanteau." about women and home. We heartily commend the sentiments of the following article from the New York Mail. Every husband and every wife should read it. It will prove beneficial: How dull and devoid of conversation is many a fireside ! If all the women in the family had duties which developed their powers i and strengthened their judgments, there would be enough to talk of at the close of the day. Had women such healthy inter ests, were they capable of a vigorous uuder ; standing of real affairs, expensive entertain ments, extravagant recreations which now empty many a purse, would cease to offer any fascinations. If life were intense, ' — u mnnM tn sectn so, except so far 1 CHEAP .-TOOK OF UOOD6, JfU6T AX .. as the best would respond to and develop life. If taste were disciplined by labor, the fancy gewgaws which now load down the persons of women would look as hideous as they are now known to be unfit. Luxury might then take refuge in that exquisite cleanliness and pure color which are still the rarest things in America. The curtains and dusty drapery which now repress God's providence and shut out the sun He at least thinks fit for shining, would be relin quished in half of the fine pictures and good bronzes. In those better days hard-work ing men would not open social entertain ments at ten in the evening, and dance all night, because others do, who have liberty of fortune (or misfortune) to lie in bed all day. In those days mothers of young chil dren will not condemn them to bare limbs, uncomfortable fancy clothing and unhealthy six o'clock dinners, because, everybody else does it who lives on the same street! But before such days can come, women must be what they are not now; and men must help them to become so. In France, all avocations are open to wo men. N\ e have heard the story of Kosa Bonheur, and could match its independence in a thousand lower as well as many higher positions. Our women wear French ribbons and Alexander's gloves; but what would tbey think, if asked to imitate the wife and daughter of Alexander, who pecuniarily in dependent, still sew and sell those gloves? In a private letter to a friend, Sir James Macintosh wrote ofhis wife: She was a women who, by tender man agement of my ncaknesses, gradually correc ted the most pernicious cf them. She be came prudent from affection. Though of the most generous nature, she was taught economy by her love of me. During the most critical period of my lite, she relieved me from the care of my affairs, and preser ved order in them. She gently reclaimed me from dissipation, she propped my weak and irresolute nature, she urged my indo lence to useful and creditable exertion, and was perpetually at hand to admonish my heedlessness and improvidence. To her I owe whatever I am, to her whatever I shall be. In her solicitude for my interest, she never for a moment forgot my character. Her feelings were warm and impetuous, but she was placable, tender, and constant. Such was she whom 1 lost, when a knowl edge of her worth had refined an ardent love to a sincere friendship." NVill not American women find inspiration in such a picture? Here it is plainly shown that if women worked more, men might work less, and time for culture could be afforded to all. To effect it. men must cease to admire white hands, draggling skirts, and a general airofuselessness. They must give point to such opinions as they have, by seeking something better in mar riage than money or fashion. Do these speeches encourage a woman to labor? And who is it that complains again, when no one sees after the servants; when the child's dress costs too much; when the cooking does not taste like his moth er's? In one one of her lectures, Lucy Stone once mentioned a family of girls, who, after their father's death, continued his business —the manufacture of some portion of a lo comotive. "How much do you make?" asked Lucy. "In the worst of times, fifty dollars a week," they answered. "In the best, five hundred dollars." These women are full of shrewdness and good sense; but in a New York parlor, how many men would dare to show their respect for labor by unusual courtesy to them? • A Boston merchant has an ingenious daughter who'wishes to take out patents. Is he proud of her? No. On condition that she will never Kork before anybody, he has fitted up a costly workshop for her. How many men feel the force of his tempta tion! Is is not clear why we should all plead for the elevation of woman? Her present position is the practical desecration of our homes. A handsome house is not a home. In the days of our early history, when men and women worked together for the same end, a barn might become one; now it seems the impossible thing. NVhen a woman marries, she ought to look up to her husband. When a man mar ries, he ought to look up to his wife. As she is his joy, he should be her strength. Both are defrauded when this is not so. If men are never then thoughts to employ, Take care to provide them a life fuli of joy; But if to some profit and use thou wouldst bend them, Take care to shear them, and then defend them. These lines, written by Goethe, might serve as the epitaph of the past relations of the sexes. He has written four others, fit to inaugurate the new era, towards which our hopes are tending: As from the smoke is freed the blaze, So let man's faith burn bright; And if we crush his oldtn rcays, Say, who can crush God's light. SOMEBODY has given utterance to the following scrap of philosophy, which, if not good, is at least cool: "The poor man's purse may be empty, but he has as much gold in the sunshine and silver in the moon I as anybody." i • A STt'VID correspondent wants to know ; how this can be the land of the free with i ' it ioo-hnond coi't' ate! uount.Uu chain.-, VOL. 41: XO. 23. UP IN THE MOUNTAINS. Every summer vacation, I ask myself. wkj people who have no relish for country lift doom themselves to yawn through six or eight wee'ia of it? People who never move from a certain chair on the piazza save to migrate to their beds, or to the dining-table; who have neither eyes to see earths glory, or heart to be greatful for it, or ears npen to its myriad musical voices—living discords amid all its harmony. If invalids, I can under stand and pity their misfortune; but your fat, well-to-do, buxom men and women, who have no earthly impediment to their locomo tion, and yet who live weeks iu the vicinity of grand natural objects, and are just as dead to them as the ox in the meadow—why do they travel thousands or dusty miles to get to them ? People who look pityingly at you, as you return exhilarated from your delicious rambles, as if to Bay, "Poor lunatics!" One turns from them to the children, to whom every daisy and blade of grass is a bright heaven, and counts sadly over their lost years. Also I would like to ask, is there anything in the climate of Vermont which turns out such huge trees, mountains, and men, that dwarfs nearly all its woman-kind? ! Again: Do preserves and pills, flap-jacks 1 and ipecac, plum cake and castor-oil, jelly : and jalap have a natural affinity, that they 1 are so often found in each other's company? irfcCTm* ratue or (he Hurler , ,J,T, / ■" { position in England