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JENNSYLVANIA RAIL ROAD TIME OF LEAVING OF TRAINS. y • A,— r-11.5[1 , rze:7-7.71 WESTWARD. WA RD. I I EASTWARD. ,-. -, --. ,- :.-- ~.. 1 tt. r I '4 s - r4l. ~., 7. c 0 . . ,i- .. rkv E . ; STATIONS.,... 0 %?.. ‘,',.-', ...I tn '.. '''''' V.: EA '44 Cl 7 " tt P. M. I P. X. A. M. I I A. M.l A. M. l P. M. 4 44' 6 44 5 49 Newton Hamilton, 110 15 3 OS 932 4 52 6 50 5 56 Mt. Union, 10 09 302 9 2-1 5 07 703 609 Mill Creek, 9 56 249 909 6 21 715 622 Huntingdon, 946 239 867 5 37 7 26 636 Petersburg, 9 Si 2 26 8 43 5 45i 7 32 643 Barree 9 24 2 191 8 35 . 5 32 737 649 Spruce Creek, 9 19 2 1318 28 608 753 705 Birmingham, 901 1 56 811 6 17 S 00 7 10 Tyrone, 8 54 1 4S 8 03 627 807 7 19 Tipton, 545 1 40 7 53 6 32 S 11 7 2.3 Fostoria, 8 41 1 36 7 48 6 36 814 7 27 Bell's Mills, 8 38 1 33 7 44 6 55 8 25 7 40 Altoona, 8 10 1 15 7 15 P. M. P. M. A. M. P. M. A. M. A. M. 11 C:7INGI9N&preAD TOP RAlloo.cnoolcimLE. On and after Wednesday, Sep. 3d, Passenger Trains will arrive and depart as follows: UP TRAINS, Leave Huntingdon at 7.40 A. M. 0 4.00 P. M. " Saxton " 9.40 A. M. Arrive at Hopewell " 10.15 A. M. DOWN TRAINS, Leave Hopewell at 10.45 P. 51. Saxton " 11.20 P. N. k 0.30 P. 111. Arrive at Huntingdon 1.20 P. N. a 8.30 P. ON SHOUP'S RUN BRANCH, a passenger car will con nect with Morning train from Huntingdon for Coalmont, Crawford, Barnet and Station, connecting at the latter place with Hack to Broad Top City : where hrstclass hotel accommodations will be found. J. J. LAWRENCE, Sep. 5, ISOO. Sept. DON'T FORGET, 'WALLACE Sc CLEMENT, Have just received another stock of new goods, such as DRY GOODS, GROCERIES, QUI; ENSW A ItE, in the store room at the south-east corner of the Dilmond in the borough of Huntingdon, lately occupied as a Jew elry Store. Their Stock has been carefully selected, and will he sold low for cash or country produce. FLOUR, }um", HAMS, SIDES, SHOULDERS. SALT, LARD, and provisions generally, kept constantly on hand on reasonable terms. Huntingdon, Sept. 24, 18(10. t(--J z\i:\\"...,„----,, ~T.... a - . i; _ s .N.Elt - 64 4. ,* , a \.4\ ~. V : DEALER IN , , ..,, % 1 W 1 114 . 4 i., . 1 . \ 'i un ,AND r. 1 ;;:lr c " re, up / \ c\.........._ ) ET.Ulltillg:Ci.oll, 'al : * - - e - it/ %,- - - 1.(,,r,iV," \ _ - r 0, .--, . _..., SELLING OF I? k'utt CASH!! BARGAINS IN HARDWARE As "the nimble penny isbetter than the slow sixpence," nod small profits in cash, are better than vexiny eye-sore book accounts, JAMES A. BROWN is now determined to sell off the large and splendid stock of Hardware, Paints, &c., which lie has just brought from the east, at bnch low prices, as will induce everybody to crowd in for a share of the bargains. His stock includes a complete variety of DU I ',DECO -HARD WARE, MEC" I ANTOS' TOOLS, CUTLERY, HOLDOW-WARE, OILS. PAINTS, SADDLERY. TARNISHES, GLASS, CARRIAGE IntIMMINGS, STEEL, IRON, CHAIN PUMPS, LEAD PIPE, MOROCCO, LINING SKINS, COAL OIL LAMPS and COAL OI L, Sc.. &c., Together with ti full ii-sortinent of everything pertaining to his line of business. .4;y-All orders receive prompt attention. JAS. A. BROWN Tluntingdon, Sept. 24. 1860_ 2 g ®oo *.i/CUSTOMERS 11T_AJ.NTED ! NEW GOODS JAC':•I3S Has received a fine assortment of DRY GOODS for the Spring and Summer season, comprising a very extensh a assortment of LADLES DRESS GOODS, DRY GOODS in general, READY-MADE CLOTHING, For Men and Boys GROCERIES, HATS S: CAPS, BOOTS AND SHOES, Sc. S:c. The public generally are requested to call and examine my goods—and his prices. As I am determined to sell my Goods, all who call may expect bargains. Country Produce taken in Exchange for Goods. BENJ. JACOBS, atthe Cheap Corner. Huntingdon, Sept. 24. 1860. :71 00 Pv E. on ;; W 0 70 on 0-4 rm .4 = CZ CZ 4gt CD CD CD El HAINES C B c rS . ' OVERSTRUNG PIANO FORTES, Celebrated for superior quality of ToNE and elegance and beauty of finish. These Pianos have always taken the FIRST PRE:11177.31 when placed in competition with oth er makers. Cnkursos ALL cOmPrimos. A splendid as sortment of LOUIS XIV and plainer styles always on band. Also Second-band Pianos and PIIINC.E'S 111- 'I3.OVED MELODEONS from $45 to $350. Every Instrument warranted. GEO. L. WALIZER'S Piano and Melodeon Depot, S. E. Cor. 7th lz Arch Sts., Philadelphia. July 25, 1860.-6 m. $1 50 MEM ME . it . TILE NEW STORE FOR FALL and WINTER -;\ (CE) 05 0 1 9 1:;t52, f }'ci =ME EVE ;tl.) 1 OJ BM WILLIAM LEWIS, VOL XVL Ratiu. WHAT XS LIFE 0, what's life? 'tis one beset With many days of doubt and fear, Of which we all our share shall get, As rolls around each passing year. 0, what is life? 'tie one of pain, Of vain regrets said tearful eyes; Of constant toil for ill or gain,— So pass away our fleeting lives. 0, what is life? 'tie one of care, Of trouble much, and sorrow too: With now and then a day that's fair, Which often ends at night in woe. 0, what is life? 'tis one for ayo Of dark forebodings ever near, That ever drive our joys away, While we live on in constant fear Yes, such is life's true picture drawn, E'en from the cradle to the grave; And but for hope that cheers us on, The ills of life we ne'er could brave linteresting MY PENNY DIP What was it ? A tallow candle, to be sure. The gas wouldn't burn, the kerosene stran gled me with its noxious odor, the fluid sput tered, burned blue, and went out. I am afraid of the dark ; that ghostly blackness which makes one's eyes ache with its want of light; that palpable gloom which seems to beat like a roomful of palpitations of the heart around you, above you, about you, every where ; that visible nothing, which holds the tables, the chairs, the portraits you are fa miliar with, yet hides them in its black veil from your view ; that empty fulness through which you thrust out your groping arms, then shrink back, oppressed with a presence you can neither, hear, see, nor feel. "hilly," I said to my little maid, "run somewhere and get me a light." She ran to the grocer's wife, and came back with a penny dip in a brass candlestick. As she placed it on my table, went out and closed the door, the little boy in bronze, on my mantle, raised his hammer and struck the figure of time, twelve ringing blows upon the heart. It was midnight. The candle burned clearly. I resumed the old volume of German legends I was reading, and as I laid my finger on a paragraph, and paused to ponder on the possibility. of spirits returning to earth to wreak vengeance on foes, or work weal to friends, I . heard a deep sigh at my elbow. I turned and beheld the ghost of my grand mother. I knew her from her resemblance to her portrait. She wore the same white cap with its wide border plaited round her face—the same prim dress with which I bad grown fa miliar in tho picture. She died twenty years ago. I was named for her. I drew up the rocking-chair for the ghost. She sat down in it. A pillow could not have sank there more noiselessly than she did.— She kept her hands in the same position on her breast, that somebody tied them twenty years ago. She fixed her keen black eyes upon me— beautiful eyes, which I had always admired in the portrait. None of her descendents had such eyes. " I could not come," she said in deep sep ulchral tones, " in gas-light. Ghosts and gas light are at war always. As for kerosene oil, we groan in spirit at its use. How mor tal noses, can, night after nigh, inhale the odor it emits, is a wonder. It is worse than brimstone. We have put our cold lips under your chimneys, and blown our ghostly breaths into the flame. We have seen the chimneys blacken with smoke, and apartments fill with disgusting fragrance. People only said the lamp is in a draught. They moved it and bore with it. We shall have to yield. Ker osene is a modern discovery. Ghosts are old fashioned. To be out of date is to be out of mind. Your tallow candle pleases me. We ghosts like the light of other days around us. We always, in the body, burned tallow can dles." The fine eyes of my grand-mother gazed at my penny dip steadfastly for a moment. She seemed to see visions and dream dreams. " My dear," she said, " you are the first of the family that has returned to candles since the innovation of gas. You are indebted to your dip for my presence. how hollow I would have looked under a chandelier—how bloodless, how white As it is, I think lam looking very natural, am I not ?" She glanced up at her portrait and waited my reply. " A little pale, grand-mother," I said ; "but tell me, dear madam, if your pursuits in the other world are of such a- nature that they admit of your returning to this at any time !" "By no means. lam permitted to appear in this sphere but seldom. •Dly influence I can make felt oftener. I have not been seen before, since my Coffin lid was closed. lam come to tell you there arose a yell in Pande monium. I looked in to see whence it came. I found the great chamber assigned to little children, and which is always full of little ones of all sizes and ages, the scene of great commotion. Infants were crawling into cor ners, three-year-old toddlers were tottering out of the way. Older ones were hastily find ing seats, and all faces wore a listening ex pression. A small voice was saying : " It was no fault of mine that brought me here. I, who am now but five years old, might have lived to be fifty. Nature, unfor tunately, gave me fine physical development. My chest was round and full, my skin clear, my limbs finely moulded. My birthplace was in a cold climate. My tender mother; proud of her offspring, bared my neck and arms in thech ill winters, when her rose-bushes and vines were packed in warm straw and thoroughly protected from every blast. I was 33Y IV. 11. DAVIS brought down to be viewed by company, and exposed to different temperatures - as I went from room to room. My mother, wrapped in soft velvet and comfortable silks, did not suf fer. I did, but could not tell her so. I took cold. I became a great trouble in the house. My beauty faded. I lingered on from month to month, and died at last, at five years, of consumption. My mother cried over my little corm. I knew, but I could not tell her then, that her own vanity had placed me there— would send me here.' " I was trotted to death,' cried a more piping voice, as the first speaker sat down.— ' A woman was hired expressly to take care of me, and she took care that I should not want for exercise. Her days and nights were spent in keeping me going " up, up, upy," and " down, down, downy." That unknown wonder, perpetual motion was to be found in my nurse's knees. Every bone in my poor little body was racked, every ounce of flesh was sore. My food went down milk, and came up cheese. If I cried, I was trotted, if I screamed, I was trotted ; if I was still, I was trotted—l became little better than a human churn, from which the butter had been taken and the sour milk left standing. My brains turned to bruises, my blood to whey, my bones grew so sharp they almost pierced the knees which trotted them. As I began to cut teeth, my tongue was constantly jolted be tween my - jaws, and in danger of being bit off. I dared not whine, for I knew the pen alty; I began at last to calculate how long the torture could possibly continue. Warm weather was coming on, and I thought one or the other of us must soon give up the ghost; and as my nurse's exertions were almost su perhuman, I imagined that perhaps I might outlast her. One unlucky day, however, my mother, entering the room unexpectedly, I smiled at her. I had never done so before. "The darling," cried my parent, "see, it knows me." " Poor thing, rather," said the nurse, "it has wind on its stomach !" " Forthwith she proceeded to trot it out. Every thump of her foot on the floor was, I knew, a nail in my coffin. I felt I should never smile again. My faithful nurse con tinued her efforts, and I was trotted out of existence upon the poor old woman's knee.' " As the speaker ceased, one of the older occupants of the room descried me," said my brand-mother. "He at once made room for me to enter, and begged me to remain awhile and hear the remarks. I consented, and took a seat near the entrance." " I,' said a little fellow, rising from his seat, with his blue eyes all bloodshot,. and his curls matted together, died of delirium tre menn, --At the age of sim month; I was a confirmed drunkard. I had not been a very quiet baby, and every time I was uneasy a little liquor was administered to do me good. I did not want wine, but water. I was nat urally a very thirsty child, and everything that was put between my speechless lips in creased my thirst. My mother's milk was sweet, the panada given me was sweet, and if now and then I was blessed with a draught of goat or cow's milk, it was warmed and sweetened first, to make it as much like my mother's as possible. I used to cry. No other way do we poor babies have of expressing our feelings, and the chances are ten to one that we will be misunderstood. To stop my cry ing, I was put to the breast; this, at such times, I would indignantly refuse. Then there would be a commotion. " Nurse," my mother would say, " what shall we do with him ?" The nurse was a stout, hearty old woman, who always made a practice of tast ing whatever was provided for her charge.— Her sovereign remedy was liquor. It *as taken, and a spoonful administered at a time. At first I rebelled—l strangled, kicked, and coughed. The firm hand held the spoon to my little tongue, and down went its contents in spite of me. Little by little the dose was increased. I soon liked it. In my thirsty moments I cried for it. It was given me readily, for after a few moments of wild glee, I fell into a drunken stupor, which gave my attendants many opportunities of enjoying themselves, as my sleep was sure to be long and sound. " At length mania a-polo assailed me, during my whole life no one had ever thought of . giving me a single spoonful of the water I had craved—the cooling, cheering, refreshing drop of water Now, Ino longer cared for it. In my wildest frenzies I was accused of having the colic; down, as usual went the fiery drink, until finally I was literally burnt out. I am nothing but a cinder within,' a shell without. My stomach was cooked to a crisp, my intestines were shrivelled—my lungs no longer filled with pure air, belched forth only the fiery fumes that had consumed me. I died. I was good for nothing. I hope whatever from my dust is destined to take on earth, it will not be water, as when I inhabited it, with alcohol.' "'As this speaker ceased, there arose a wail of sympathy, such as bad first, attracted me to the pandemoniac chamber; tis it subsided, another little figure had taken the stand— " My logs,' he said, brought me out of the world. My mother labored under the strange delusion that her child was born a Highland laddie of American parents and in America. I was dressed, or left undressed rather, in short plaid stockings, reaching to the calf of my leg, and an elegant kilt reach ing just to the knee. My limbs were moulded in cherubic forms, and when exposed in the nursery were pretty. But the nursery was too narrow a field in which to display my beauty. On bitter cold days I was walked out over the icy streets, the keen wind chap ping my flesh and chilling my blood till my knees looked like twin nutmeg graters painted purple. I used to look at my mother's long comfortable skirts and thick leggins drawn up over warm hose, and wondered if she could survive a fashion such as I wore if adopted by herself. I became afflicted with inflam matory rheumatism, and unable to endure the pain, gave up the ghost." " I felt," said my grandmother, " that this victim was a sacrifice to a fashion started since my day. I know that your father was never dressed in such a ridiculous style when a little boy; for with my own hands I knit his -PERSEI7ERE.- HUNTINGDON, PA., NOVEMBER 28 t 1860. warm woolen stockings, and saw that his comfortable little trousers came well over the instep of his little calf-skin shoes." " The next speaker was a dream faced little girl, who trembled as she rose and said : " I am an opium -eater. My death-war rant was written on the label of the first bot tle of Godfrey's Cordial brought into my mother's house. A few drops at first sufficed to huh my feeble cries. Then Godfrey's Cordial would not do. A few drops of pure laudanum was administered. Soon I could not go to sleep without it. Then my nurse would give me a small opium pill in my pa nada. Of course I was but little trouble. I was a deep sleeper, but my digestion became impaired ; too much sleep weakened me, and I knew no natural slumber. My eyes became like those of a sleep-walker, full of dreams when wide awake. I lost my appetite ; my head grew full of pain ; my baby-heart was always aching. I closed my eyes one day forever on the home where I felt I could be little loved, when my low wails were never permitted to appeal to those around me, but were hushed at once; where my .blue eyes were scarcely ever permitted to look around in the world in which they had been opened and where, instead of proper care and food and exercise, the baleful pill and enervating sleep were all that was offered me. There are many parents who seem to think children must pass their childhood ' out of the way,' and only get in the way when they have be come, in spite of all sorts of ill-treatment use ful or ornamental members of society." " This child was still speaking," said my grandmother, " when I rushed out. I had been a mother once, and I could not listen to these innocents in that fearful waiting cham ber, recapitulating the woes that had sent them there, -any longer. "I felt impelled to revisit the earth. I came. In no light could I make myself visi ble to you, until your tallow candle was brought in. "My dear, remember what I have told you. Some of these days you may be a mother. Be more than careful of the sacred charge of little children. Think for them—feel for them. Do not, tnease your cares, sink them into unnatural slumbers, or give them over to selfish nurses. Upon you hangs their lives—in a great measure their happiness, both here and hereafter, I beg you will give— Just at this moment the cock crew loudly. The voice at my elbow was still. I looked around—the rocking chair was empty, the ghost had vanished. Rlhrtliantong. EXPOUNDING THE BIBLE A learned pedagogue at Nantucket used every morning to read passages in the Bible, and expound the same as he proceeded in or der that by asking questions as to how much they remembered of his comments, he might ascertain who were the bright boys of the school. On one occasion he read from the book of Job thus: " There was a man in the land of Us, and his name was Job, who reared God and es chewed evil. Eschewed evil, that is, he es chewed evil as I do tobacco, he would have nothing to do with it." With this very clear and forcible elucida tion of the word " eschew" he proceeded, and a number of verses were read and com mented on in a similar clear and intelligible manner. After along interval, when the young mind bad time to digest its food the pedagogue called upon one of the youngest boys, and the following dialogue ensued : " Who was the man that lived in Us ?" "Job." " Was he good man ?" ,t Yes." " 'What did he do ?" "He chewed tobacco when nobody else would have anything to with it," was Bob Holmes' answer. The boy was permitted to take his seat. SLANDER Against slander there is no defence. Hell cannot boast so foul a fiend ; nor man deplore so fell a foe ; it stamps with a word—with a nod—with a shrug—with a look—with a smile. It is the pestilence walking in dark ness, spreading contagion far and wide,which the most wary traveller can't avoid ; it is the heart searching dagger of the dark assassin ; it is the poisoned arrow whose wound is in curable; it is the mortal sting of the deadly adder; murder is its employment; innocence its prey—and ruin its sport. Its foundation is in envy, jealousy, and disappointed ambi tion. Its heralds are found in all sects, in every community. The slanderer is vindic tive,malicious, a cowardly insinuating demon —worse than a murderer. Imo' A. boy of thirteen,.in Memphis, Tenn., had _been in the habit of stealing from his father's pockets, by slipping into his room at night. The servants wore suspcted, charged with the offence, and one after another sold off, yet the young rascal continued his crimes. His sister at length detected him, and he si lenced her, threatening to stab her if she told his father. She promised silence if he would quit stealing, but he continued his habits, and finally, on the morning of the 2d, the sister, finding that she herself wal at last sus pected, told the whole story. The boy in stantly drew a large knife, and rushed on his sister, exclaiming, " I told you if you told father I'd stick you." The girl ran from him ; the father caught his son, who kicked and hit at him, and was only mastered by main force. He was at last accounts locked in a room, in which his chief pastime was swearing vengeance on his sister. Draw up a particular account of your time, and see what a fine bill you have ! Time is what we want most, but what we use worst. ro A person being asked how old he was, answered he was in health ; and how rich he was ; observed, he was not in debt. It is pleasant to look upon those whom Old Age has furrowed with many years. .They tell us of lives well spent, when in addition to years the ruddiness of health still lingers, loth to depart, upon the shrunken cheeks. Old age is the Alpine height of life, from which the soul looks down through the long vista of the past upon deeds that have added to the happiness of the race. The good man who has seen the sun rise and set upon his generations, and who is ready with patriarch hand to bless the world, and smiling, bid it good night forever, is a noble monument to look at. Rarely do men of turbulent soula live to that period when they can say we hare em braced Old Age; and are thence prepared to go willingly to the silent chambers of the dead, there to prepare themselves for that journey into the unknown regions of eternity which all must take. Only the good grow old. It is only they who, loving truth—who, having rested con fidingly upon lofty assurances and holy pur poses, gradually pass from stage to stage in Life's great journey—enjoy what may be tru ly called a " sweet old age"--an age that is full of honor and glory. We all involuntarily respect the aged. No one, however uncouth his nature, but feels in the presence of the snow-crowned patriarch as if there were something of Heaven near unto him. Such a one knows that one life at least has been well spent—that a soldier, full of honor, has retired from the battle of the world, and is now camly awaiting the hour when he shall be summoned to his reward; and, that when lie does depart, there are those who will not soon forget his place even in the narrow circle in which for the last time he saw the sun, so typical of his career, go down forever. Remarking upon sweet old age, a writer has well said, " God sometimes gives to man guiltless and holy second childhood, in which the soul becomes child-like,not childish—and the faculties, in full fruit and ripeness, are mellow, without sign of decay. This is that fought-for land of :Beulah, where they who have travelled manfully the Christian way abide awhile, to show the world a perfect manhood. Life, with its battles and its sor rows, lies far - behind them; the soul has thrown off its armor, and sits in an -evening undress of calm and holy leisure. Thrice blessed the family that numbers among it one of those not yet ascended saints l Gentle are they and tolerant, and apt to play with little children, easy to be pleased with little pleasures." TEM CAPITALS OF THE WORLD. We subjoin some . " information relative to the chief cities of the world, commencing with the numbers of their inhabitants: London, 3,470,000 Paris, - 2,000,000 Dayton, 40,000 Washington, 61,400 Providence, 49,000 Rochester, 48,000 There are 57 cities in the world which con tains from 100,000 to 200,000 inhabitants, 23 from 200,000 to 500,000, and 12 which contain above 500,000. The force of habit is perceived and ac knowledged by every person of discernment. It is allowed to have a more steady control over our actions than any other principle or propensity whatever. Such being its influ ence, too much pains cannot be taken to con tract habits that have a useful tendency. Our happiness and usefulness depend on making no material mistakes in this respect. Habit bath so vast a prevalence over the human mind, that there is scarce anything too strange, or too strong can be asserted of it.— The story of the miser, who, from long ac customing to cheat others, came at last to cheat himself, and with great delight and triumph picked his own pocket of a guinea to convey to his hoard, is not impossible or improbable. The principal part of the task in educating youth, consists in preventing the growth of bad habits. It is more difficult to guard the mind against error, than to cre ate a desire to gain knowledge ; and if wrong principles and actions are carefully suppress ed, learning and virtue will grow up and flourish almost of their own accord. Keep out evil and good must prevail, for the mind cannot be inactive. Editor and Proprietor OLD AGE New York, 960,000 Philadelphia, 600,000 Constantinople, ' 840,000 St. Petersburg, 600,000 Vienna, 500,000 Berlin, 480,000 Rome, 198,000 Dublin, 308,000 Mexico, 218,000 Palermo, 193,000 Cincinnati, 158,000 Leeds, 158.000 Hamburg, 150,000 Turin, 160,000 Genoa, . 125,000 Frankfort, 163,000 Naples, 510,000 Liverpool, 400,000 Glasgow, 380,000 Boston, 178,000 Moscow, 370,000 Manchester, 304,000 Madrid, 286,000 Lyons, 300,000 Lisbon, 254,000 Amsterdam, 225,000 Havana, 240,000 Marseilles, 206,000 Milan, 153,000 Brussels, 132,000 Copenhagen, 136,000 Bristol, 120,000 Florence, 107,000 Second Class American Cities. St. Louis, 161,000 Milwaukee, 46,000 Detroit, 47,000 Cleveland, 43,550 Zanesville, 9,212 Columbus, 18,628 _ THE FORCE OF HABIT. There is a gradual change going on in so ciety now-a-days, so that it is really fashion able to dress conveniently. The " dress "or swallow-tail coat is perhaps the most inconve nient and unsuitable article of dress to be worn out of doors that can be, and yet how many men go to church in this ball costume, and think they are well dressed. Our atten tion is called to this garment at this time by seeing from our office window a charcoal dealer, standing in the rain, dressed in black pantaloons and a dress coat. A red shirt and overalls would be appropriate, and with a blue frock be would look like a man of sense. Clothing should always be appropriate and convenient. In farm labors the body has to undergo as many peculiar bendings and take as many attitudes as in the sailor's, but not as constantly. We go aloft in the barn, we climb fences, spring upon horseback, dig in narrow ditches, and go through all sorts of movements in using the axe and flail, the hoe and pick, the scythe and shovel, ; and our clo thing, like the sailor's, should be loose and easy, warm, not in the way, and many-pock eted, A Dutchman's frock is a good dress to go to market in ; and, depend upon it, a far mer in a frock will be - better attended to in market, whe.ther he is purchaser or seller, than if he comes in an old-fashioned rusty broadcloth suit, like a poor gentleman, or de cayed professional man. By his very dress he shows that he is not above his business, and buys and sells as a farmer. NO. 23. A sailor's dress is after all not exactly the best dress for a farmer. The farmer should wear boots—thick, water-proof boots for much of his work. The sailor wears shoes. The pantaloons of the farmer should tuck in to his boots, hence, as little cloth as possible should be in the legs. For our own part we like the style worn by the old countrymen, whose breeches button moderately tight about the ankle and half way up the calf. Like the sailor's, the farmer's pantaloons should be supported by the waist-band and not by suspenders,unless indeed the man be grown corpulent, and like a barrel his waist is the thickest part of him,—and should be loose and full about the hips. It is most important that persons who are liable to profuse perspiration--and all men who labor are—should wear woolen garments next the skin. Red flannel shirts are to be recommended for both summer and winter. They are cool in summer and warm in win ter, absorb the perspiration, and permit its evaporation without chilling the wearer. The color is bright and agreeable, and it prevents a soiled appearance before the shirt is really dirty. A knit shirt, particularly for winter wear as an outer garment while at work, tucked inside the waistband, is exceedingly comfortable ; and when the regular sailor's pea-jacket, made of good stout pilot cloth, just long enough to cover the hips, with liberal side-pockets, double-breasted,and with a good collar to turn up to keep snow out of the neck, is.worn outside, a man needs no better clo thing for ordinary cold weather. There are no coat-tails or skirts in the way, no difficul ty about getting one's hands into his pockets, nothing superfluous and everything conveni ent; loose enough for every action, and close enough for warmth. The throat ought, never to be protected, (except when affected by a cold or cough; then keep it thoroughly warm,) except in cases of extreme exposure, like driving in a storm or great cold. Nothing makes the person more susceptible to lung and throat complaints than this bundling up with furs, or tippets, or comforters—good in their time, but greatly abused by our people by being used at all times. Finally—hats. A farmer is not exposed to falling ropes, or spars, or tackle—hence, does not need t stiff tarpaulin, like a sailor or a fireman. His hat should he cool and airy in the summer, and should give shade to his head and face. A light straw, palm•leaf, or chip hat, with a moderately broad brim and low crown, is the thing fur the hot sea son. Fur the winter we need something which is warmer, which will not blow off ea sily, which will shade the eyes from the great glare of the sueon the snow, which will in a measure protect us from the rain, and which will not be in the way nor become ea sily injured. A cloth cap with good liberal front-piece, or a medium or low-crowed soft felt hat, answers these requirements perfect ly. As to color of garments—the farmer should avoid black, unless he is in the habit of ma king and attending fashionable parties, and then he must, of course, conform to the mode. All the greys, pepper-and-salts, and a great variety of browns commend themselves. Blue we avoid, because it is a color that has been adopted by the military, and has a sort of "U.S.A. " or "U. S. M. " look. Poor stock is oftener made up into black goods than in to cloth of other colorse—an additional reason why it is not profitable. It shows every speck of dirt, and wlen threadbare looks pov erty-stricken enough. As to texture. Other things being equal, those goods which either possess a full nap or felty surface besides the thread, and thus are, though loosely woven, quite thick, and enclose considerable air, are warm in propor tion to the quantity of air, enclosed in their structure. A shaggy cloth, if not made of too coarse wool, though coarsely woven and loose in texture, will be found warmer than an equally heavy cloth which is woven com pactly, and which has been sheared, carded and te.azled till on every part the close short nap is laid in an even silky surface. Our clothes keep us warm not by keeping the air off, that is, from contact with the skin, but by surrounding us with a mass of air which is warm and by its adhesion to the fabrics with which we are clothed is not readily dis placed, at least not before it imparts a por tion of its warmth to the air which displaces it, and so prevents our feeling the chill. Out er garments with a long nap shed rain also much more readily than those with a fine-fin ished surfaace. The long and short of this matter is that we should have a regular working dress, which should be made with a view to conve nience and decency only, and for other times clothing that can be worn and worn out with out its appearing ridiculous. We are said to be the worst-dressed class of the population, and distinguished from others by being inap propriately and inconveniently dressed, and it is because we cannot say it is not so, that we have written the abave. Let us make a change.—Condensed from 211 e Homestead. The Vermont Legislature has passed a law against prize fighting—principals, ten years imprisonment or $5OOO fine; aids,, seconds or surgeons, five years imprisonment or $lOOO fine ; and citizens of the State who attend a prize fight in either capacity, out of the State, to receive the same punishment. Ara'Envy is like a sore eye—offended by whatever is bright. The gay world, so called, is general ly the least happy. Hearts may agree, though heads may FARMERS' CLOTHES.