TERNS OF THE GLOBE Pat abraim In advance Sts months ' • 2'hroO months TERMS Or ADVERTISING 1 Angertion. 2 .do. One 'van", 0.0 lince,jor 1e45.$ .... 25.... Twd square/, 'I 50 2 Three equares,"." • 3 months. 6 months. 12 months, Jne square, or less $4 00 $6 00 $lO 00 Two squares, 6 00 9 00 15 00 Three squares, 8 00, 12 00 20 00 Four squares, 10 00- 15 00 25 00 Ilan' a column, 15 00 20 00 30 00 One column, 20 00 35 00.... ..... .60 00 Professional and Business Cards not exceeding Mx lines, One keit 05 00 Administrators' and Executors' Notices, 32 50 Auditors' Notices 2 00 Betray, or other Short Notices 1 50 -09 - Ten lines of nonpareil make a square. About ei^..ht words constitute a line, so that any person cnu ea sily Calculate &square in manuscript. Advertisements not marked with the riamber of inser tions desired, will be continued till forbid and cbsrged ac cording to these terms. Our prices for the printing of Blanks, Handbills, etc. are also increased. THE GODDESS OF SLANG. I wart courting a beautiful girl one night, Vim.. I worshipped as olmoet divine, ;toil longed to 'rear breathed the sweet little word That told me ehe would he mine; I was praising the wealth of her cheetnilt hair, And her eyes of matchless blue, When ehe laid bar dour cheek on my shoulder and said, "Wahl 1 that's belly for you I". started to terror, but managed to keop ; From eliowing my !Manse surprise, And preesod my lips lightly on brow and on check, And then on her meekly closed eyes. 1 told her my lore was as deep ea the eon, (As I felt her heart go pita•patter, k would worship her always, if eh. would be mina, And she whispered, "Oh, that's what the matter I" I told her her cheek would the rose put to shame, Ifer teeth the famed Orient pearl, And the Xenia's rich coral could never compare ' With the lips of my beautiful girl I 'That her 'voice was like music that comae to the ear In the night time—and sweet was her smile, %As that of an angel, and softly she breathed, "On that you can just bet your pile!" In the hush of the starlight I still whispered on, And pressed her more closely to my breast; 'Talked sweeter than korner, dearer than Claude, And told her hen true love was blest: blisein a cottage, of tinware and birds, ,(lhouih I felt the times strange oat of Joint,) *hen elm; beaked with a smile, and daintily lisped In my ear, Tbran't quite see the point!" I pressed her still closely, I talked still more sweet, Calledthe stars to look down on toy love, Made love rhyme to dove, and kiss rhyme to bliss, And votrad by the heavens above Pd ho constant and true if she'd only be mine; Pressed her lips and caressed her brown locks; When sae Ansvorsd me Lackesith a rich saucy laugh, l•Look 'or . here I ain't yon after the racket" A Yankee Trick. Soma years ago, before railroads wiire,*unted,a_cute Massachusetts Yankee was one day travelling in a •stage in the State of Connecticut. The passengers stopped for breakfast at a :place whore the landlord was noted for .his parsimony; and it was strongly 'suspected that ho paid the driver to laurry off the stage before the passer'. igers could eat half a meal, in order to save his victuals. The Yankee heard this talk, and ho sat down to breakfast with the determination to eat his mon ey's worth whether the stage left him •or not. While, therefore,, the rest of itho passengers were bolting their vic =tuals at the greatest possible haste, the ;Massachusetts man took his time. The ?passengers had scarcely finished a cup coffee, and ate two or three mouth when they heard the sound of the lhorn, and the driver exclaim, "Stage :ready 1" Up rise the grumbling pas. :sengers, pay their fifty cents, and take 'their seats. "All aboard,• gents ?" inquires the lost. "Ono missing," said they Proceeding to the dining room the host finds our Yankee friend very coolly helping himself to an immense piece of steak, the size of a horse's hip. "You'll be left, sir ! Stage is going to start?" "Waal, I hain't got nothing tow Bay main IL" l'Can't wait, air; bettor take your Seat." "I'll ho gaud darned of I dew, nether, till I've got my breakfuss I I've got tow pay my half a dollar, and I'm goin' to get the 'Talkie on't ; and of you cat kalate I ain't, yew air mistaken." So the stage did start, and loft the hungry Now Englander, who contin ued his attack of the eatables. Bis cuits, coffee, steaks, etc., disappeared rapidly before the oyes of the aston- ished landlord. "Say, squire, thorn there cakes is '?bout east; fetch us nuther grist on 'em. You, (to the waiter,) nuther cup uv that ar coffee. Pass them eggs. Raise yewro own pork, squire 2—this is ama :zip' nice ham. Land 'bout year° tol erable cheap, squire, I callate? Don't lay yowre own eggs, do ye ?" and thus :the Yankee kept quizzing the landlord, until he had made a hearty meal. "Say, squire, now I'm about to con `elude payin' 4ny dewours to this table, but if yo'wd jist give me a bowl of bread and ;OE tow sorter top off with, bo much obicoged tew yo." So out goes the landlord and waiter for the bowl, milk and broad, and sot Pom before the Yankee. ."Spoon, tew, if you please !•' But no spoon could be found. Land jord was sure that he had plenty of sil -vor ones lying on the table when the - stage stopped, "Say 1 dew yew think thorn passon• gore is goin' to pay yew for a break.. Piss and not git no compensation ?" "AU what! do you think any of the passengers took them ?" "Dew I think ! No, I don't think; but I'm martin. If they aro all as green as you about here, I'm gob) tew locate immediately and tew oust." Tho landlord rushes out to the sta• ble and starts a man off after the stage, which had gone about three miles. The man overtakes the stage, and says something to the driver in a low tone. He immediately turns back, and on arriving at the hotel our Yankee comes out to take his seat and says : "How air yew gents ? I'm glad tow see yew back." "Can you point out the man you think has the spoons?" asked the land lord. "Pint him out Sartil4l I hen. Say, Squire, I paid you four nine liences for a breakfuss, and I collate I got the vallee on't. You'll find them spoons in .- the coffee pot," Which was found to bo the case.' ...$2 CO ... 1 00 ) 2C 3 do, .$1 50 . 3 00 WILLIAM LEWIS, Editor and Proprietor. VOL, XXI. Colonel Jacob M. Campbell. (From the Johnstown Tribune.] The importance of the pending po litical campaign in this State, and the enthusiasm everywhere created among loyal men by the nomination of two distinguished soldiers for the only offi ces to be filled this year by general ticket, naturally call for more than a brief reference to the antecedents and characteristics of our standard-bearers. In this article we propose to tell what we know of oar friend and fellow•citi sen, Colonel Campbell, the nominee for Surveyor General. Jacob M. Campbell is a native of that old Whig stronghold, Somerset county, where ho was born just forty four years ago. -When a mere youth his parents removed to Allegheny city, where be went to school until 1835. In that year, being fourteen years old, he became an apprentice in the office of the Somerset TiThig,a Democratic news paper, in which ho remained until he bad mastered as much of the printing business as could be learned in a coun try office of that day. In 1840 he left Somerset and worked for . some time "at case in the office of the Literary Examiner, a monthly magazine of con siderable merit published in Pittsburg. From here our "jour printer" found his way to New Orleans and into another printing office. But his active nature was not satisfied. The steamboat trade on the lower Mississippi presented in 1840, as does the oil business in 1865, tempting inducements to enterprising spirits who care less for hard knocks than for the substantial benefits which they sometimesproduco. Laying down his composing stick, the boy of nine teen became a steamboatman, and for several subsequent years filled success ively the positions of clerk, mate and part owner of a vessel, always, how ever, making Pennsylvania his home, which he frequently visited. In 1847 tho iron business of our State attracted his attention, and he embarked in it at Brady's Bend. In the same year he married. In 1851 ho followed the course of empire to California, but did not long remain there, and in 1853 we find him in Johnstown, assisting in the construction of our mammoth rolling mill. With this splendid enterprise ho remained connected up to the break ing out of the war, holding all the timo an important and responsible po sition. He was one of the few men who /new how to build and manage successfully the greatest iron establish ment in the Union. In April, 1861, Port Sumpter was bombarded and the first call appeared for volunteers to "rally round the flag." At the time Mr. Campbell was first lieutenant of a volunteer company in Johnstown, and this company at once tendered its services to the Governor, who promptly accepted them. It was the first company to enter Camp Curtin. Upon tho organization of tho Third regiment of Pennsylvania Volunteers, Lieutenant Campbell was appointed Quartermaster, a position which he filled with groat acceptability until the regiment was discharged. On the 28th of July ho was mustered out of service, and on the 30th was commissioned to recruit a regiment. In duo time the regiment was raised, the companies composing it having boon mainly re cruited through Cal. Campbell's indi vidual exertions. Eight of the com panies were recruited in Cambria and Somerset counties, and two in Lehigh and Northampton counties. The regi ment was designated the Fifty-Fourth. For two years this regiment perfor med the arduous duty of guarding sixty miles of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, and while thus engaged really protected the Maryland and Pennsylvania border from Rebel inva sion and guerilla outrages. It is a fact which may not be generally known to Pennsylvanians that to the Fifty fourth regiment they owe much of the security they enjoyed in their persons and property during 1862 and 1863, the two most critical years of the war. The position of the Fifty fourth was, at all times, an exceedingly trying and dangerous one, requiring the exercise of the utmost vigilance and the sound est discretion. During its guardian , ship of the railroad, it was frequently engaged in skirmishes with the enemy, and upon more than ono occasion gave timely and valuable information of his movements and designs. In addition to his ordinary duties as commander of the regiment, Col. Campbell was al most daily called upon during this pe riod to decide disputes between Rebels and Unionists residing along the lino of the railroad, and it is no exaggera tion to say that in no instance was justice cheated or rascality rewarded. It is not our assertion merely, but the testimony of all who aro' cognizan t of the facts, that the commander of the Fifty-fourth manifested on all occasions HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1865. the possession of judicial talent of a high order. Of his purply executive ability, the successful and always sat isfactory manner in which the regi ment guarded those sixty miles of railroad in a hostile territory is the only proof that we need to cite. We bad almost omitted to mention that from March, 1863, until March, 1861, Col. Campbell was in command of the Fourth brigade, First division, Eighth army corps, in which was his own reg iment. Early in 1861 General Sigel took command of the Department of West Virginia, and moved with all his avail able troops to Martinsburg, prepara tory to a movement up the Shenandoah Valley. In a reorganization of tho troops which took place, Col. Camp bell, at his own request, returned to the command of his regiment. At the battle of Now Market, May 15th, the regiment suffered severely. It occu pied the extreme left of the line, and was the last to leave the field. Under Hunter the regiment took a prominent part in the battle of Piedmont, June sth, again occupying the left of the lino, and this time flanking the ene my's right and attacking him in tbo roar. After the battle Col. Campbell was assigned to the command of a !Hi ! gado, and as a special favor his own regiment was transferred to it, that it might remain under its old comman der. The brigade suffered heavily in the attack upon the entrenchments at Lynchburg, and covered the retreat of Hunter's army when the attack failed. July 24th the brigade participated in the battle of Winchester, and upon the fall•of Col. Mulligan Col. Campbell took command of his division. He contin ued in its command until its consoli dation into a brigade, consequent upon its many losses in killed and wounded, and afterward commanded the brigade. After Sheridan cane to the head of the Department, he participated in the engagements in the Shenandoah under that renowned chieftain until ho was mustered out of service nearly two months after the eipiratiOn of his three years' term of enlistment. His total period of service, including the three months' campaign, it will thus be seen, covered nearly three years and a half. Col. Campbell's record as a politician will bear examination. Reared in the school of Jackson Democracy, he voted in 1844 for Polk and Dallas. 1848, however, -ho abandoned the party which, ho had become convinced, was the champion of slavery extension and the foe to Pennsylvania's best inter• eats, and voted for the Free Soil candi dates, Van Buren and Adams. His residence in the South had shown him the evils of slavery, and he therefore gave his vote against the party which sought its extension. In 1852 he voted again for the Free Soil nominees, Hale and Julian,. and in 1856 was the dole gate from Cambria county to the Fre mont Convention. He took an active part in advocating Republican princi ples in his own county during that year, and at once took rank with the people of the county as a politician of fairness, ability and zeal. His influ ence in county politics continued to be felt during succeeding years. In 1859 he was presented by the Republicans of Cambria for the Senatorial nomina tion in the district then composed of Cambria, Blair and Clearfield, and a little more than one month ago -he was again unanimously selected as the choice of the Union'party of Cambria for Senator• from the district composed of Cambria; Indiana and Jefferson. That ho was not nominated on either occasion by the district conference was not owing to a want of appreciation of his worth and services, but to the sup posed superior claims of the county which was honored with the nominee. Such is, in detail, the private and public record of our candidate for Sur veyor General. If it is not a brilliant one; it is, at least, consistent, manly and patriotic: Of Col. Campbell's mental and moral characteristics it becomes us to say but little. Ho is a shrewd business man, a public spirited citizen, a good work. or, and an honest man. Without hav ing enjoyed the advantages of a liberal education, ho is, nevertheless, ono of the best read, mon in tho State. Ho is a clear thinker, and remarkably cool and cautious in judgment. In a long acquaintance we have rarely known him to err in his estimate of public mon or the wisdom of public measures. Ho is a man of marked sagacity. His social characteristics are of that class which never fails to create the warm est friendships and to command the Toped, of all. That he is worthy of the office, for which he has been nom nated is conceded by those who know the man. That he and his gallant col league, General Hartranft, will be elec ted by overwhelming majorities, is al ready a foregone conclusion. -PERSEVERE.- Major General Hartranft, .101 IN F. 114aTudiNrm, candidate for Auditor• General, is a citizen of Nor ristown, Montgomery county, and is about thirty two years old. He is thoroughly educated, being a gradttato of Union Colleges New York. Re bel gen his career as a civil engineer, and subsequently studied law. He pursued as wo aro informed, his profession for a number of years with honorable dis tinction: When the war• broke out, he did not hesitate to abandon a lucrative and growing business at the bar. Ho immediately entered the service and received the command of ono of the "three months regiments." Our read ers will remember the difficulties with a number• of these regiments, which, claiming that their term of service had expired, refused to move against the enemy while tho battle of Bull Run was in progress, and it was at this time, when Col. Hartranft's regiment took up their march- home Ward, that he himself remained on the field, and was honored for his firmness and bra very by being placed on Gen. Frank lin's staff. His career afterwards throughout the war was in keeping with this act. After the Bull run dis• aster he immediately wont home and raised another regiment—the 51st— for throe years. Tbo regiment was with Burnside at the taking of Roan oke island, and afterwards saw much bard service in North Carolina. On the expiration of their three years term of service the 51st re enlisted.— Col. Hartranft was soon after placed at the head of a brigade, and for his skill and bravery during Grant's mem orable campaign of 1864, he was pro moted to a full brigadier generalship. At Petersburg ho displayed remarka• ble coolness and judgment, when oth ers failed in these qualities, for which ho Was breveted by the President Maj. General of Volunteers. Gen. llai•tranft is a War Democrat. Ho . is ono of those Democrats who loved country, better . than party, lib erty better than slavery. His nomin ation for the important office of Audi tor General, like the placing of Hon. JOHN CESSNA at the head of the State Central Committee, attests how well the Union party keeps its faith with those loyal Democrats who rushed to the support of their country's flag when other Democrats in the North faltered, or espoused the rebel cause. IL.u—An.—Charlottesville is fairly entitled to be called the literary cen tre of the South. Thom is, first, the University of Virginia, with its learn ed professors on all sorts of subjects. Then we have two large, female semi naries, where young ladies learn thir ty or forty things ending in ology.— Then wo have some half dozen first class academies for boys. Then seve ral select schools. Then a number of schools for the English branches. And then the whole colored population of all sexes and ages is repeating from morning to night a-b ab, e b eb, i-b ib, c.a-t pat, d-o-g dog, c-up cup, &c., &c., through all the varieties of the first lessons in orthography. There are some four or five colored schools, and littlo negro chaps darken every door with primers in their hands. It we pass a blacksmith shop, wo hear a.b ab ;if we poop into a shoemaker's shop it is a-b ab ; if we pass by a negro cabin in the suburbs of the town, wo hear the sound a-b ab; if the cook goes out to suckle her What, it is tr-b ab; the dining room servant washes up his dishes and plates ; crying a-b ab; the hostler curries his horse, repeating al) ab; Jerry blacks your boots, saying, with rapid strokes, a-b ab, a-h ab; tho whole air is resonant with a b ab. The little yellow boy who sleeps in our chamber awoke us the other night, muttering in his dreams a-b ab. .Mr. Greet) , has stirred up thunder hero.— If you send a little negro boy on an errand, he is spelling everything ho meets in ono syllable. The littlo white boys look at them wonderingly, and try to cork thorn. In a month or so wo expect to issue an evening edition of the Chronicle in monosyllables, to increase our circulation—perhaps a pictorial, with tubs and spades, and ants and cows, and owls and bats—like the primer.—Charlottesville Chronicle. rierf:To get rid ofyour troubles, says au exchange, stop thinking of thorn. Whether you aro as lively as crickets or dull as rain depends loss on tho size of your pocket book than on the con dition of your mind. Low spirits aro almostalwayS produced by want of exercise and oxygen. brisk walk will kill the blues in less time than you can slaughter a bobtailed fly with a flat iron. Nearly all our troubles owe their size to inactivity. For such trou bles your only remedy is a "sweat," such as yon may obtain by chasing girls in the orchard, or by wrestling with now mown bay in a meadow, .. ..,........ ... ~.,..„ .. . ... . ..•"?'\:',/,'. _, ...._ . ~.......y1,[......5.. -4)/1)-----,—..:*.---.: : ''''qp.:4,.:,,,..1 - '::'-' • . •-; .'_1.7.-:.;::.... -.. . - 4, - ,.' I WIT AND HUMOR. —A peculiarly poetical pen furnish es the following funny fancy sects must : generally lead a jovial life, Think what it must be to lodge in a lily! Imagine a palace of ivory or pearl, with pillars of silver and capitals of gold, all exhaling such a perfume as never arose from a human censer!— Fancy, again, the fun of tucking your self up for the night in the folds of a rose, rocked to sleep by the gentle sighs of a summer air, and nothing to do when you wake but to wash your self in a dew drop and fall to and eat your bedclothes." —An anecdote is told of the Bishop of Exeter, England. The scene is a church in Toriptay; the Bishop is pre sent, but not officiating, and ho sits with the congregation. The officiating clergymen ventures to soften to oars polite the phrase "Eat and drink their own damnation." He reads it "con demnation" A voice is hoard ener getically exclaiming "Damnation !" The whole church is startled. But it is not a profane epithet they hear—it is the voice of the Bishop in rebuke of the officiating minister. —While Father Taylor was giving one of his temperance lectures, a well known drunkard, feeling touched, commenced hissing. Instantly Father Taylor turned the attention of the largo audience to the insolent rowdy, , and then forcibly said as he pointed to his victim, "There's a red nose got into cold water, don't you hear it hiss 7" —An honest German in Philadel phia, listening to an account of a mar ried woman's elopement with another man, the othor day, got greatly. exci ted over it, and spluttered forth with the greatest vehemence: "If my vife runs away mit another man's vifb, I will shake him out of her proochos, if she bo mine own fader, mine Gott !" —"Thank Heaven the war is over," was the fervent ejaculation of a good old lady of Danville; "and may our court house never be burned down again, for• that, was the cause of this whole war. They wanted to tax the South to build it up again, and the South writild't be taxed, so they went to fighting." —''Stuttering Ben," who was toast. ing his shins, observing that the oil merchant:was cheating a customer in oil; called out to him, Jim, "I can t-tell you how t-to s-sell t-twico as much as you d-do now." "Well, how F" groaned Jim. "F-fill your measure." • —We are enabled to state positively that all the jokes relating to crinoline are not used up. For instance, why do ladies wear such extraordinary things as crinoline ? Because all the heavenly bodies move in eccentric cir cles. —Nobody likes to bo nobody, but everybody is pleased to think himself somebody. And everybody is some body; but when anybody thinks him self to be somebody ho generally thinks everybody else to be nobody. —There was a wicked boy who, when he was told that the best cure for the palpitation of the heart was to quit kissing the girls, said: "If that is the only remedy for palpitation, I say lot her palp —An exchange has it, that a young man who went on a bridal tour with an angel in muslin has returned with a termagant in hoops. Encouraging to batchelors—vary. mourn for my bleeding coun try," said a certain army contractor to General Sheridan. "So you ought, you scoundrel," replied-Sheridan, "for no body has bled her more than you hive'. —An old sailor says that the cable is the longest yarn ever spun over the Atlantic. This .is the reason, proba bly, why "imperfect insulation" cut it short. —A skeptic thinks it very extraor dinary that an ass more talked like a man. Isn't it more extraordinary that thousands of men are continually talk ing like asses. —Artomus Ward recently caused considerable embarrassment to the tax commissioners by returning his income in "wax figgers." '• —Don't snub the poor negroes.— You have only to look in their faces to see bow awfully they have been snubbed by nature. —Love in men is like the distemper in dogs. Neither men nor puppies are worth anything until they have had it. —ln spite of all that some people say against dancing, it is unquestiona bly a merry toe•rious arrangement. —What did Lot do when his wife was turned into a pillar of salt ? Took a fresh one, of course. —At tho circus, women jump clean through hoops. In society they jump into them and stick there. —When a DIA nwith a scolding wife was asked what be did for a living, ho said that he kept a hot house. TERMS, $2,00 a year in advance. A - Girl that Would Marry and Why, Mr. Watts had by industry and ec onomy accumulated a large prOperty. He was a man of rather superior mind and acquirements, but unfortunately. became addicted to habits of intemper. ance. Naturally fond of company, and possessing superior eonvereational powers, his company was much sought, and he became eventually a sot His wife was a. feeble woman, without much decision of character; but an only child was the reverse, illustrating one of those singular laws of nature, that the females oftenest take after the father in character and personal peculiarities, and the males after the mother. - Mary was well aware of the conse.. puences that would inevtablyfollow her father's course, and had used every exertion of persuasion and reason in her power, to induce him to alter lifs habits, but without avail; his rosoln tions and promises could not withstand temptation, and he pursued his down ward course, till the poor girl despair ed of reform, and grievously realized what the and must result in. • John . Dunn was a young man from the east, possossed of a good education, as all our Now England boys are, and their indomitable industry and perse verance, and was working on tho'farm of a neighbor by the Month. Mary, on going on some errand to the next house, mot him on the road with the usual salutation"—Good morn ing, Mr. Dunn." "Good mornin g , Miss Watts. .How is your health ?" ' "Well, I thank you, but to tell the truth, siek atheart." "Pray,: what is the troublo?" said John. "What can affect you, a cheer ful, lively girl like you, possessipg everything that can make you hap py?" "On the contrary to make mo mis erable;'l'am almost weary of life. But it is a subject I cannot explain to you; and yet I have sometimes thoUght might." • "Anything that I can do for you, Miss Watts, you may freely com mand." • "That is promising more'than you would be willing to PerforrO'But to break the ice at once; do you want a wife?" "A wife! Well, I don't know. Do you want a husband?" "Indeed I do, the worst way. 1 don't know but _pin may think 'mo bold, and. deficient in that maidenly modesty . becoming a . woman ; but if you knew my situation, and the af' fiction 1 suffer, I think it would be some excuse for my course." - "Have you thought of, the conse quence?" said John—"my situation— lam poor—you are rich-I am a stran ger—and—" "Indeed I have; I am almost crazy. Lot me explain—you and every ono also know the unfortunate situation of my father. His habits are fixed be yond amendment, and his•property is wasting like the dew before the sun. A sot of harpies aro drinking his very heart's blood ; and ruin and . misery are staring us in the face. We are almost strangers, it is true; but I haftbser- Vett you closely. Your habits, your industry ,and the care and prudence with which you have managed your employer's business, has always inter ested me." , !And yet, my dear young lady, what can you know.of me to warrant you 'in taking such an important . step?" "It is enough for me that I am !antis fied with your character and habits, your person and manners. I am a wo man and have eyes. IVe aro about the same age; so, if you know me and like mo well enough to take me, there is my hand!" "And, my dear Mary, there's mine with all my heart in it. Now, when do you desire it to bO Bottled?" • "Now, this minute: give me your arm and we will go to Squire Benton's and have the bargain finished at once.. I don't want to enter our house of distresei again until I have one on whom I can rely,.to control and direct the 'affair& of my disconsolate home, and to support mo in my deterinina.l tion to turn over a now leaf in - our domestic affairs." "But not in this old hat and in my shirt sleeves, Mary?" "Yes, and.in my old sun bonnet and dirty apron. If you are content let it be done at onco. I hope you will think I am not so hard pushed as that conies to; but I want a master. lam willing to bo mistress; T will then take you home and introduce you as my own dear husband—signed, sealed and delivered." "So. be it—permit me to say,. tbstt have always admired you from the first minute I saw you, for your beau- THE a-D033311 JOB PRINTING OFFICE, ie rpHE “GLOBE .1 . 013 OFFlCE.'_'the moat complete of any the icinote:v;iiMi Pee acts. Oho meet:ample:ll°lllth., for, piotot4ll, ooecottoit the bat style, every splay of Job Printing, inclie.s iIAND DILLS - ' •.• : " ' • - BLANKS, • - • • • : •poBTEAS„ GARBS, CIRCULARS, BALL TICICETS, LABELS, &C, NO. 10. CAL AFC PIikTNE PPPCIPIPN2 OP WOOS, .AT LEWIS' BOOR, STATIONERY IMISICIETORY tyn,nd„onergy,and ip(lnstrioun,analabla deport Tent" • - , "Now John; if that , is sinew', this is the happiest moment of my life, and I trust our union Will be 16ng and hap py. I am,' the. only one .1 toy „father hears to; but, his resolutions aro like ropes of land..l-can, manage him on all other subjects; you must take charge of his business, and have sole control; there will be 'no difficulty—l am confident of the result." Thy were married, and .a more hap• py match never was consummated, Everything prospered; houses and . barns were' repaired, fences and gated wore regulated, and the extensive fields smiled and flourished like, all Eden. The unfortunate father in a few years sank, into a drunkard's grave. Mary and John raised a largo family, and they still live, respected and .Wealthy—all from an . energetic girl's resolution, forethought and °our , A GREAT Mrsvar.n.—The old preli: . erb of "Circumstances alter- eases," had a spicy illustration the othei day' at a Boston. hotel," and two parties; ono from this eity,and the other of toi ton, participated therein'. A yOung man, who is the least bit feminine in his appearance, parting his hair in the; middle, etc., went to Boston, and While in that city, was 'taken with: seiete fit of eholic. Stopping at £i hotel he put himself to hod, and sent, fox' a stolen. The doctor came, felt of ide patient's pulse, examined his Stomdob, and inquired solemnly if, his . habits• were "regular;" . to which the stung man,'somewbat surprisedoanswered in the affirmatiCe. The dectOrthen tiously and politely informed his pan tient that his symptoms Marilfeste4 smile probabilities of an increase of the census in a short time The snrpriec4 of the chelie stricken young ,man at this sing,ular annobncenient was only equalled by that of the doctor when he discovered the true sex of his pa. tient. "Circumstaneee alter cases," always.—Springfield . •.... Every man his own gasiniake is likely to be a poseibility•in any up= pie growing country. A discovery ,bas been made in one of the French departi manta that the residuum of tha cider press can be utilized by With only 200° (centigrade) of tem perature a gas is produced that wilf burn without smoke or smell, and with' a power of .illumination, superior to' that of common . gas, to make.which from oil requires 3.,00.0?: The cost cif the former, meanwhile, is only-ono= fourth that of the latter, and the'light coal which remains has also its uses and an- appreciable value. The waste heat of our ordinary gas.works'dould be ,profitable put to the'riew distilla tion, but portable works have bean contrived especially for this pnrpoits, and can ,be owned by the most moder ate establishments of town or country: There is evidently a convenient amerce of mechanical power also. • LawEs' LEI - T.—The editor ofa pas . per in Providence ktely informed. his readers that-the ,ladies always pulled off the left stoekinglast.- This, as may be supposed,, created some stir among his fair readers, and, While in positive . terms they denied the statement, they . at the same time declared that he had no business to know it, even it' sucli was the fact; and pronounc6d hit& no gentleman. lie proves it, hov;reven, by simple argument: "When' .ono stocking is pulled off and-anotliof left on, pulling off' tl:ns is pulling Off. tho. left stocking last." • air The number of battles fOugid during the late war, is rgilien' by eA exchange, who, we think, unchNtates the number, at two,hundredfifty4 two, Of these, the soil of irginra drank the blood of. eighty-nine, TOEI% nessee witnessed thirty-seven,Missouri twenty-five, Oeorgia tvierve; Seuth Carolina ten, North Carolina eleven,. Alabama seven,Florida foie . ; tuoky fourteen, the Indian Territory and New Mexico one each:A:ago the Wava of war rolled into a Noithern State, and broke in the gresi billow of Get tysburg. Of the battlei enumerated, sixteen were naval achieVemente.- n0..1t has boon . tinfteitated: at the Treasury Department. thitt ;Clio frac tional currency, of all denominations has been' countinTeited oicopt the notes last printed. It has also • been ascertained that the legal tender notes of about, every denomination which were printed in the city of New York have also boon counterfeited. It is denied at the _Department that there are any counterfeits of the currency of the National Banks. AIM-The Grand Tury of Franklin county have found true bills Against• the rebel General McCausland and ors who wore concerned in the dos truction of Chambersbnrg last summer, and in pillaging on the border of the State during the War. Governor Cur tin has signed requisitions on' the G6v vert:ire of Old Virginia, West Nirgiti; is and Maryland for, the rendition of the guilty parties to Ole authorities of, this commonwealth, alld officers have been sent to those Stales to make the arrests, BILL HEADS,