TERMS OF THE GLOBE P.r mffilim in advance mouths Intne months TEAMS OF ADVTISING Iwiertipu one rpare, (10 line9,)or Two ertnarea Three 25..,. - . ' 3 Months. 6 Months. 10 months. Jae square, or less $4 00 $6 00 $lO 00 two squares 000 000 • 15 OD Arco. squares, 6 00 12 00 °O OD Hour so moo 10 00 ' 15 00 0 5 00 Half a catomh, • 15 00 - ^0 00 30 00 Dne column - '0 00 15 0D.... 60 00 I'rof.:lmin' and Business Cards not corroding six lineer One year, 0506 Administrators' and Executors` Notices, $2.50 Anditors' Notices 2 00 ltstroy, or other short Notices 1. 60 A;-Yen lines of nonpareil nuke a mourn. About eight words colibtinito a line, on that any person can ea r ail~ealaototr In manuscript. • Advertisement., hot marked With tho number of inter tions desired, will be continued till forbid and charged I,IC. c4rdirta . to these terms. Onr pricre for the printing of Blanks, Handbills, etC are aid° increased. G AN OD SD TanCODIUDNITTU.Srt, " R 0 LAMATION.-NOTIOE -OF GENERAL ELECTION TO 111: lIELD TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10th, 18165 Pursuant toast act of the General Assembly of filo Commonwealth of Pennsylvania., entitled "An Act rela ting to the elections of this Commonwealth." npproved the second day of Jule, ifild, I, 0 10011(111 IF, JOHN STON, High Sheriff of the county of Huntingdon, Penns), Innis, do hereby tonic known and give 11011C0 to the electors of the county afoleyaid, that no election will be held in the said county of Huntingdon, on the 2:1 Tuesday offer the first Monday of October, theillg the 10th day of OCTOBCP,,I latch time State, District and County officers will be, elected, In One person to fill the °Dice of Auditor General of the cemmona eat th of Pennsylvania. One person to fill the office of Surveyor General of the common weal fie of Pennsylvania. Two persons to represent the counties of Ilonlittgdon, Juniata. nod Mifflin, In the House of Represeutatives Of the commonwealth of Pennsylvania. One person to fill the Mike of Asocial a Judge of Hunt ingdon comity, One persou to All the office of Sheila' of Huntingdon, Monty., One person to All the office of Treasurer of Huntingdon county One person to fill the °Mc° of County Commissioner of Ituntiogdon county. - person to fill the office of Director of the Poor Of ifuntioplon county. One person to 1111 the office of County Surveyor of Hun. tingtkm county. One person to fill the office of Auditor of Iluntiogdon (*sky. To pnrsiitinCe of mild act, I also hereby make known and give nonce, that Ihn places of holding the nforcitild eye. tint election in the several election districts within the said • county of lion thlgdon, are as follows, to wit Ist district, composed of the ton nehip of Henderson, at - the Union School House 2,t district, composed of Dublin township. at Pleasant School House, near Joseph Nelson's, In sold township. 3d district. composed of eo much of Warriortmark town ship, as it not included in the 14th district, nt the school Louse adjoining, the town net Warvieveloark. 4th district, composed of the township of Hopewell, at Hough and Beady Furnace, bib district, composed of the township of Decree, at the "house of Jantes Lit ingston, its the too n of Saul:burg, In said township. - (lb district, composed of the berongh of Shirlcythurg, and all (hat mat of the township of Shirley not iticiuded within the limits of District No. 21, as hereinafter teen. tioned and described, at the house of David Fraker, awd, 1. In F,hieleyshurg. 7th diatriet,composed of Porter and part of Walker town ship, and so much of West !torus-hip as is included in the following boundaries, to wit: Beginning nt the south-west corner of Tobias Caufmrin's Form on the book of the Little Juniata river, to the tower end of Jackson's narrows, thence in a northwesterly direction to the most southerly part of the tan, owned by !Michael Maguire, thence north 40 degrees Wont to, the top of Tosscy's mountain to Inter. sect the line of Franklin township, thence Moog the sow lino to Little Juniata river, thence down the some to the place of beglo niug, at the public school hottoe opposite the German Reformed Church, in the borough of Alexandria. sth district, composed of the township of l'annk/in, at Oho home of Geo. W. Mattern, in said township. oa t district, composed of 'fell township, at the Tinian ealool 1100.0.0, mew the Union Meeting lonise, fit said lop. 10th district, composed of Springfield township, at the school house, near lingh 3lndtictis. In said township. • 11th district, composed of Colou township, nt tho school Lonna, near Beekiel Corbin's, in .olbi 10‘vosItip. 12111 district, composed of Brady towaship, at the Centro reboot 11OttE . O., in said township. 13111 district, composed of Mortis township, at public school house. No. 2, itt said t;waship. lilt, district, composed of that part of West 'township not iv:ducted In 7th and 2011, districts, fit the politic school house on the farm now owned by Miles Lewis, (formerly owned by James Ennis.) in said township. 1211, district. composed of Walker township, nt the house of Benjamin Meg: thy, itt 3l'Connellstown. nth dhdrict. composed of the township of Tod, at the Green school Moose, in said tomothip. 17th district. composed of Oneida township, nt the house Wt o, D. Bonk in, Warm Springs. ISth district, composed of Croutweil township, nt tho house now occupied by David Emir°. i 0 Orbisonin. loth district, composed of tho borough of Birminglinnt, with the sexto,t tracts of land ~car to nod attached to the samg tow owned and Occupied t:y Thomas 11.01VOTS. :RAM K. Mecelati, Andrew Robesou, John Geminter and tint. Gensinter. nod the tract of land now owned by George and Jelin Sltoeithergor, known its the Porter tract, oltuate iu the township of IVerriorsmark, at the politic s,hool house in saint borough. 20111 district; composlal of the township of Cass, nt the politic school house in Cassrille, in said township. 21st district, composed of the township of Jackson, at the public house of Eduard Utiles. at McAlenvy's Fort, In said township. 122:1 di-trier. composed of the township of Clay, nt the public school (muse in Scottsville. wit district. composed of tho township of Penn, at the public school house in Merklesburg, in said township. 20,1, district, composed awl created a, follows. to wit:— That all that part of Shirley township. Huntingdon cottn. tr. lying bring 'a itbili the following described It /1111- dories. nanloly beginniug et' the interscetiox of UM, nod Shirley towusliip lines with the Juniata river, on the south kidd thereof, thence along s.tid Union township lino for the th.tance of three miles (rem said river ; thence vastivaidly, by a straight line, to the poin t where , the main from iiby's mill to Germany valley. crocus the nnunit of Sandy ridge: thence northwardly along the summit - of Sandy ridge to tho river Juniata, and the." up said ricer ' to the place of beginning, shall hereafter form n separato election d ' I.; that the qualified voters of sold election district than hereafter hold their general and township elections in the public school home In llama Colon, In Bahl district. 2titl, dlstrict.composed of the borough of Huntingdon. at tlmGoort 'louse In said borough. Thoso parts of Walk er and Porter townships, beginning at the southern end of the bridge across the Jon We river at the loot ofMont .-„onaery street. thence by the Juniata township line to the line of the Walker oleo:inn district, thence by the same to the corner of Porter township at the Woodcock. Valley road near Nees school house, thence by.the lino between Walker nod Porter townships. to the summit of the War rior ridge, ammo along said ridge to the Juniata river so us to hie/title the dwelling-house nt Whittaker's, now Fish er's old mill, mid thence down said river to the place of bcgionleg, be annexed to the Iluntingdun Borough elec tion district, end that the inhebitnnts thereof shall au I may vote at all general elections.. 2fith district, composed of Um' borough of 'Petersburg and that part of West township, west o m it north ole line between Ilendersou and West . towtoiltios, at or woo the Warm Springs. to the Franklin township line on the top of Tossey's mountain, to as to Include in the now district elm housesof Davit Weldentith, Jacob Longenecker, Thos. flamer, James Porter, nod John Wall, at the school-house In the borough of Petersbure. 27th district, composed adulate. township, nt then house of lola' reightst, on the lands of Henry Iseoberg.• - • 20th district- Omni - logo , ' of C.Lrbou tow n ship, retell fly erected out-of a part of the territory of Tod towushlp. to wit : commencing eta Chestnut Oak, on the summit 'Ter race mountain, at the Hopewell township line opposite tho dividing ridge, let the 1,11110 Valley; thence south fifty-two degrees, east three !Mildred and sixty perches, to a stone hearten -the Western, Summit of Broad •Tup moontnin •, - thence north six ty-3oven degrees,eaat throe bundre t and twelve perches, to a yellow pine; thence south tifty-two degrees, enstseven hundred and seventy-two porches, to a Chestnut 'Oak; thence south fourteen tl - egree4, cast thrco hundred and fifty one perches, to n Chestnut at the east end of Henry S. Green's land ; thence south thirty-one and a half degrees ' east two hundred and ifinety-four perches, to a ChestnntOak on the summit 'torn spur of Brood' op, on the western side of John 'ferret's farm; south, e xty ilvedegrees, east Moo hundred and thirty-four perches, to x stone heap on thu Clay township line. nt the Brood Top City . Mild, kept by C. Athoond, in cold township. 29.tlIdistriet, composed of the borough of Coal moot, at the' public school house in said borough. I alai make known end give uritice, MS In and by 'the 13th section of the aforesaid act lam directed, that -ev ery person. excepting justices of the peace, who shell hold any office or appointment of profit or trust under the government of the United States. or of this State, or of any city or corPorated district, whether n cammismon ed officer or agent, Who is or shell ho employed under the legislative, executive or judiciary deportment of this State, or of the United States, or of any city or incorpo rated district, and also, that every Member of Congress, and of the State Logic Intore, and of the select or com mon council of any city, commissioners of July incorpora ted distiict, is by law i namable of holding or exercising Rt tho Sable time. the oflico or impend men t of judge, In ele or clerk of any electiou of this Commonwealth, and that no Inspector or Judge, or _other officer of nay soon etection be eligible to any office to bo then v MI for." - • - Also, that in the Otto section of the Act of Assembly, entitled "An Act relating to execittions and for other purposes,' approved April Ifah,lBoo, it is enacted that the aforesaid 13th Boehm 'shall not be ao construed as to prevent any militia or borough calker from serving as pulp, or inspector or clerk of any gensiol or. special election in this Commonwealth." Porsuaut to the provisions coutained in the 67 th section of the net aforesaid, the judges of tho oferesaid districts shall reSpeCtiVely take charge of the certificate or return of the election of their respective districts, and produce them at a meeting of one of the judges front, each district at the Court House, iu the borough df Huntingdon. on 11,0 third day otter the day of election, being for the Present Year on Friday, the 11th of November nest,then stud Mere do and Perfortfl the dotics required by Inivof saldJudges, And iu pursuance of the act of Asssembly nom °red the ' twenty-fifth 'day of .Angost, 1361, said Judges - shall adjourn' to• meet on .the third • Friday after. the elec tion for the porposo 'of counting the Soldiers' Vote. Also, that where sludge by sickness or unavoidable tact dent. - is unable to attend said meeting of J tutees, then the certificate or return aforesaid shall be token in charge by "one of the irispectors or clerks of tho election of said die. trict, and shall do end perform the doties required or told Judge unable to attend. Also, that in the Slot section of Enid net it is enacted that *-every general and special. electiou shalt • he opened letwecn the hours of eight And ten in OM forenoon, end shall continue without ioterraption or adjoornment slo th seren o'clk. fu the evening, when tho polls shall be closed." (Brim under my Mind. at Huntingdon, the sth day- of Sept.. A. D. 1565, cud of rho independence of the Uni ted States, the eighty-mint h. GEO. W. JOHNSTON, Sheriff. HolVe7len rr , s3 e r p r t7 E fi, 'f,5.1 GEO. W. SWARTZ, Clock & Watch Maker At the old stand of Swartz & McCabe, HILL STREET, lIIINTINGDON, PA triylo,lb.n-tot $2 CO . 1 00 j 60 .do. - 3 do. 25 - ¢l B0 2 00.4 .... .2 00 3 00 4 50 WILLIAIVI LEWIS, Editor and Proprietor. VOL, XXI, Cobt. HUNTINGDON, PA. "If a person fcul a person treadingon his toes. Neal a person ask a person how a pc-sou blows." • Is it any body's business,. If a gentleman should choose To wait upon a lady, If the lady don't refuse ? Or, to speak a little plainer, That the meaning all may know, Is it any body's business If a lady has a beau? Is it any body's business When the gentleman does call, Or when he leaves the lady, Or if he leaves at all! Or is it necessary That the curtain should be drawn, To sate from further trouble The outside lookers on I' Is it any body's business But the lady's if her beau Rides out with other ladies, And doesn't /et her know t Is it nny body's business But the gentleman's, if she Should accept another escort, Where he doesn't chance to be? Is a person on the Whether great or whether small ; Is it any body's business Where that person means to call. Or if you fee n parson And he's calling anywhere, Is it any of rocs business What his business may be there! The substanco of our query,. Simply stated would be thin? le it ANT DOPY'S lITSINESS What ANOTIIEWS UTS/tiSSEI LS? If it is, or if it isn't, • We would really like to know Fur we're certain if it isn't, There are sons who make it r) If it is, we'll join the raUle, And nct the nohior part Of the tattlers and deAmers, Who wr o n g the public mart; But if not, Well act the teacher, Until each meddler learns, It were better in the future To mind his own concerns.. MRS. R.'S ADVENTURE. [mu en units EDINBURO 70U.RNAL:1 As it is my intention todestribe one of the most thrilling incidents which over occurred in the existence of any lady moving in the upper circles of society, and as that lady is myself; the public will kindly content themselves with the above heading They will be doubtless desirous to learn the name in full of the heroine of so tremendous a catastrophe — being's female myself, I can easily pardon so natural a curi osity—but I cannot furnish more than the initial letter. My nerves are not what they were previous to the over whelming experience about to be par rated, and I am not equal to the fur ther trial which publicity would entail upon me. r could not receive the thousand and one expressions of sym. Nally which would certainly fllw in it, after such a revelation, from all quarters = deputations from numbers of my own sex and position in life— condolences, very like,from Royalty it self—subscriptions, addresses, a memo rial fund, and perhaps even a monu ment. If the feelings, doing such honor to our common nature in the case suppo sed, should take the very permanent tbrm of expression I have last men tioned—a monument, erected in mem ory of my unparalleled sufferings, it would undoubtedly be that of a -atone omnibus—for it was when travelling in an omnibus that this torture was endured—a granite 'bus, as it seemed to poor, friendless mc, at the time; with driver of black marble (but of him I only saw the boots through the inside window), and with a conductor of im penetrable adamant. I do not belong to a rank of society, , please to understand, which is in the habit of using public conveyance, and far less, 'busses, at all. When I wish to take the air or go n shopping, I, "touch a bell," liko Mr. Secretary Stanton, and observe: The Brougham at 3 or 4, as the case may be, and it comes to the door accordingly ; brit my husband having been less pressed by professional business of late than usual; and the last few mornings being fine, be bad observed. "Let us have no Brougham but Vaux ;" and although I did not quite understand his moaning, I was very well content to accompany him on foot, for it is not always ono can get - a husband to go shopping. lie bad been in my company to sit for a crystal cube portrait to give me on our marriage day.; and all seemed sunshine, as it sometimes does when the greatest Misfortunes are waiting. No sootier bad we left the establish ment in question at Charing Cross, QUERIES HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1865, than it began to rain—ono of those sudden and Violent downfalls, which really seem to be the result of some accident in the main of nature's water works; as though the grandmother of alt buckets, as the Persians say, was emptying; and our cry- was, "Cab, cab, cab," and still they did not come. No two expressions in the human face di vine are perhaps More different than the look of a cabman who wants a faro, and the look of a cabman when he doesn't. In the ono ease, lie is spright ly, intelligent, obliging, eager; in the other, he is morose, phlegmatic, repul sive, as though all the world was in deed the orange to which it was so of., ton likened, and he had squeezed it flat, and there was nothing to ho got out, of it. He takes no notice dories, gestures, importunities of half drown ed persons, for it is his turn now to be deaf to the solicitatieins of his follow creatures, and blind to the signals of human metaphors. Nay ho enjoys the sufferings of the non•embrolla'd, for as my husband quotes from Milton or somedody, "Fair is foul, and foul is faro" with the London cabman. Although observing hitherto these unpleasant characteristics as an unin• terested spectator only, and knowing nothing of_ their hideous attempts at overcharge, and, dreadful language when withstood, except from bearsaw, I have always bated cabmen and their cabs; but I could never have imagiu• cd that any vehicle, either upon two wheels or four, could have filled me with such unimaginable loathing as that with which I now regard a 'Bus. I have said that we could get no cab, and the wet was pouring through my delicate parasol as through a sleeve, when my husband suddenly exclaimed: "Coma; here's a roof at all events," and hailed Notting hill omnibus. "Never !" exclaimed I. "Come along," cried he; don't be ridiculous ;" and while Atill feebly re sisting, I found myself on the step of this—this very mammoth machine. On tho step, by no means inside. The machine, indeed, was large, but it was not large enough: I road afterwards, upon a scroll above the door, the start ling fact, that it was licensed to carry twelve inside; and I am sure they must have been all there besides the passengers. Four fomules were already within; and above the sea of crinoline, the hats and beads of six gentlemen were Visible. My husband and my self, I was given to understand, would make up the party. I will not wound the sensibilities of my readers by de scribing my emotions during my pas sage from one and of the vehicle to the other, Lwill only My that—doubtless from experience of what it was best and kindest to do—every passenger gave my dress a pull as I squeezed by him; and that, when I reached the furthest corner, and sat down (if we may call it sitting) I registered a men tal vow that I would not get out again until everybody else had done so. My husband followed, as the law yers say, "on 00 same side;" and if he had a square inch of sitting room, it was as math as bo had,and a good deal of that was sharp steel. "My dear," said I, perceiving -the expression of his, countenance, "it's no use muttering those dreadful words; I can't help it. I can't make my crin oline smaller." "Well, then,l can't stand it," replied ed be. "I shall get out, and gq the club. I'll tell the cab to put you down at Wcstbourn Terrace." "Oh, my goodness f" cried I, "you are not going to leave me in this dreadful place all alone." "The 'buss passes almost your very door," says he, "you cannotmeet with anything unpleasant; it isn't as though there was nobody in the 'bus to protect. [lt certainly was not.] have you got Some money with you ?" "Yes," returned I, with a sort of eaim despair ; "I have got my purse; for I feel its silver clasp running into me, and hurting me Very' much." "That is all right," said he, without, thinking, I hope, of what he was Bay ing; "but I'm (something which didn't quite catch), if I stand this any longer." The next moment I was alone—that is to say, there were follow creatures all around, but not a drop of sympa thy which could be depended upon among them all. • Hermit never was haif so lane As lie who bath fellows, but friends not one, and this is especially true as lady of quality in a crowded omnibus. For some little time the novelty of my sit. nation prevented my feeling bow for. leriv I was. The rattle of this species of vehicle Is not to be described by mere words, and is of a character to confuse the intelligence of the most collected. I suppose the class of per sons who use 'busses delight in thin rongb rnrmic, or they could surely in. -PERSEVERE.- sist upon its being stopped. Close bo. side me was what I took at first to be some anatomical curiosity in a glass case but these wore the logs of the dri ver, seen through a window, as above mentioned; this spectacle also affords, I suppose, Some_ pleasure, or it would surely bo:excluded from the view of the passengers. Ever since my bus band's depat:ture, the cab had flirter ceased to exclaim in an excited and irritable manner, "Rilloke," "Rilloke !"* by which artful exclamation, as I sub. sequently made out, ho was striving to lure some other person to occupy the superflees I have already alluded to; but in this infamous purpose I am hap py to say he did not succeed. Altbo' unahle.Wleok out of the window (ex cept at the legs of the driCer,) by rea son of intervening opaque kodies (the size, by the by, of all my fellow pas sengers, was stupendous, although con tinued travel in such conveyances would, I should have imagined, pro duced tenuity,) I was yet enabled to calculate by the time consumed that I must be getting near my destination. One or two persons having loft the ve hicle, I began to think that I might be able to extricate myself without much (Infinity. So I felt for my purse, and by exertions, which I may fairly designate as superhuman, man aged to get it out of my pocket. First I felt in the gold department, simply because one's fingers always do get there when one wants the silver one. One never carries gold when one goes out with one's husband shopping, for obvious reasons, and therefore I was not surprised to find none. Then I felt the silver department and a shud der shook my frame, for there was no• thing. However "1 always carry stamps—and the man would surely take twelve stamps instead of four pence. Alas, that very morning 1 bad given my sister all my stamps save ono to put on a quantity of charity circu lars she was posting, and that one she had laughingly refused to take, upon the ground that it bad no. am_on_it,... and looked as if it bad been used be fore. That doubtful stamp was all that I now found myself possessed of in the way of legal tender. Hot and cold, pale and flushed, fever dry and damp with the dews of terror, all these physical changes took me, one after the other, while, mentally, my reason was shaken to its very cen tre. I had never been in the position of an unprotected female before. I scarcely knew what it was to be with out a coachman and footman within call. As to being alone and penniless ; I could scarcely picture to myself the horrors of such a situation. At this moment, over the shoulder of my op posite neighbor, I beheld a prison van pass by, as though it had been sent me for a sign. A little later, while I was still devising scheme after scheme of escape, dismissing one after the other as impracticable, a mob of people ob structed our progress, the figures in the foreground of which were a police man and a lady elegantly dressed, the latter of whom had been taken up for shoplifting. "Sarve hey right, ma'am," observed the only member of my own sex now left in the vehicle; and the uneompros mising way in which she said it shat tered in an instant the resolve I had formed of asking her—for the love of all she held sacred—to lend me a four penny bit. I felt certain she would see me borne away to prison or the hulks, or whatever dreadful destina tion my circumstances might earn for me, without a pang of pity. I fancied I remembered the very words of some penal statute specially directed against persons who obtained a ride in a pub lic conveyance under false pretences— the last three words in particular were impressed upon my memory-. How 1 many days would elapse, I wondered, before I should be permitted to coon• municate with my husband ? As for asking a strange gentleman to lend me fourpence, I was sure I never could do that. I felt, to begin with, that should scarcely be able to make myself heard in the. turmoil, and that he would eiterate,'What, mans?' and make me repeat the request a do zen times. And now we are getting awfully near the terraee for which I was bound. Wo passed through West. bourne Place, where there wore many tradesmen's shops, with which I dealt; and perhaps I could hare persuaded the conductor to step with me into the grocer's or the hairdresser's Lind so got paid; but I dared not lot these people know that I over traveled in an omni bus; it would got all over the neigh borhood; no—anything was better The exclamation which our fair corres pondent describes must, we think, have bepu intended for Royal Oak, a public house in Bayswater, which is a great halting place fur omaibusses. •'.' ( '.:,..; 1, than both a dieelosure as that. Past the gleaming shops we rattled and into the familiar terrace within a stone's throw of my happy home. "The lady for Westbourne Terrace," cried the conductor, stopping the hide and flinging opon the door with a crash. "Never mind," said I feebly—' er mind, my good man ; it's of no con sequence; I'll go on a little further." "Just as you please, ma'm,"return ed the conductor, and looking at me rather queerly; "there's no boxtra charge to the journey's end:" "Thank goodness for that;" mar inured I, "I cannot, then, bo declared a defaulter to a greater extent than fourpence. The offence is not increa sod by my sitting here; and surely procrastination is better than immedi ate peril. By waiting until this horrid machine stops I shall have an oppor tunity of private conference with this man, and my passionate appeal may move him." Not, however ; that I had much hope of this; for he was a hard and shining man, upon whom the rain seemed to have no effect beyond ma king him shine the more and tears would probably be oven less regarded. After I had observed that "it Was of no consequence Where I got out," the other passengers all fixed their eyes upon me furtively, and although evi dently strangers to ono another, ex changed meaning looks among them selves. I knew very well what they were winking about. They concluded I WAR out of mind; and when I thought of the dear children at home, flattening their 'lases against the drawing room window, in hopeful expectation of their mamma's return, and of the loose mo ney that Was lying in my dressing ease, any smallest coin of which would be worth forty times its weight in virgin gold, if it was only in my pock et instead of there, I felt that I was very near going mad in reality. Alm oner, these wretches all got out, one' after another; and I heard the= eon vehicle, doubtless to toll his friend the driver what a queer faro they bad got inside, who was determined to have her Money's worth by going as far as it would take her. - For a moment the idea of taking the opportunity of the door being loft unguarded, crossed my mind, but Ire membered how very dangerous I had always heard it was to attempt to leave a carriage while in rapid motiOn: J put aside that unworthy scheme with honest indignation. We were . now going very fast, and thereby I learned by experience why it is that they pack people into omnibuses like figs in a drum. If this were not done the inmates Would be tossed violently from side to side, as I was, like parch ed peas in a frying pan. Lalso ]earn• ed for the first time, on this occasion, how very far London extends" west, and what a • number of—l dare say respectable—persons live on the wrong lido of WeStbourno Terrace: At last, amidst a neighborhood whichappeared to have been built the day before yea.- terday, the machine stopped in.front of an unfinished public house, round which all the disreputable persiians who could be gathered together in so out-of the-way district, - izppearCd to be collected. The moment of confusion had arrived, and I was unprepared, by this time, to address the court,--I:meati the conductor----in mitigation. I stood on the step, and laid my laced parasol upon his arm in order to emphasize the statement that my husband bad forgotten to leave with the the amount of fare. "The gontleman," . said I, "who got out in I?egont Street." "All right, mum," interrupted the man, touching hie hat, lam bound'io say, • with civility and discernment. "le paid for you, 'cos ho said it would save trouble." I thought I - should have faiintee with joy. Savo trouble ! He had pre served my reptitatieh, my liberty, my rvery life, perhaps ! I never felt so trn 7 ly glad that I was married, never so thoroughly appreciated the advantages of a husband. It was fortunnate that this feeling overwhelmed all others, or I do think, in the first bsrst of grati cede have embraced that bard and shining man. Instead of that, hoW ever, I merely observed : "Can I gek a cab? I want to go to WestbournO Terrnce." "Well, upon my life !" exclaimed he slapping- bis log. non turning to tho reddest of all the red - -nosed throng around us, he added, "Sem, bring your cab up; here's a faro." While the cab was being brought up, I once more retired to the interior of the machine, and beard the conduc tor explaining to his friends the pecu• liar idiosyncrasy of the lady inside. "Mau and boy," said be, "I a bin TERMS, $2,00 a year in advance. with 'busses thirty years ;.butl. never seed nothin like this. Now, she's a going back, and you may depend up-. on it she'll be hero again."' (I shudder ed) "before the day's out. She's what they call_ a manymoniae. There's been nothin like her, in a public conveyance, since Mr. Hunt"— ITere theyohicle arrived, and I made my escape; but I quite : agree with what that conductor was about to ob• servo. nothing so torriblo has occur ed in a public conveyance since the criminal alluded to poisoned a . : whole cab full of pcoplo, as that adventure of, mine in:slio.Nottiogilill 'Bus: "130 V "I Dozer CARE."---Yes you do t and there's no use in trying to deceive yourself 'with the sophistry 'of these words. • . The best and noblest, the truost,and most generous part of your nature does ears for the Unkind, cutting words you have uttered to one you' loved, limo ments of pique. Yon may carry yourself over. so proud and defiantly, you may newer drop by word or look the dew of sweat healing on the wound you have made in a nature as proud, , us sonar. tive, and etacting as your own; but to your honor, be it' said; you are better than your words, and away down in your heart lurk shame and repentance and sorrow for them. . You may carefully hide.them . both, and in a little while they will be gone, for oh!. it is very easy -to make one's self bitter,.and - proud, and cold--•very bard to keep ono's self sweet, mellow, and Charitable; bin there; must be some plan, and seine struggling before you can do a moan, ungenerous thing to a true friend, and have your heart endorse your "Ldon't care I" And how often these words are ut, toted, when conscience sternly refutes them; and how often they harden the heart, and keep the feet in the way of evil. Be careful, reader, w hen you say, I. don't care.!"_.- • NEVER GET • ANGRY.—It does no good. Some sins hare seeming com pensationler apology, a present grati fication Of some sort; but anger has none. A man feels no better for it . -- It is really a torment; and when the storm of passion has cleared away, it leaves hint to see he has made himself a tool in the eyes of others. Who thinks well of an ill natured man, who . has to be approached in the most cau tious and guarded way? Who wishes him for a neighbor or partner in . IMsi: Hess? Ile keeps all about him in the same state of mind as if they were liv ing next to a hornet's nest or a rabid animal. And as to prosperity in busi ness, one gets along no better for get , ling angry. What if business is per plexing, and everything goes by con• . traries, will a fit of passion • make the winds more propitious, the grounds more productive, and markets more favorable ? Will n bad temper: dravi customers; pay bills and, make credi tors better natured ? An angry'man adds nothing to the welfare of society. Since, then, anger is useless, needless, disgraceful, without the least.:apology, and found only in the hosoM of fools,' why 'should it be indulged in at all I' ,phi-" Sweet are the uses of adversi ty," wrote the poet. These uses are thus summed up by Punch with phil osopliy ns well as wit :---- You wear out your clothes. You are not troubled with visitors. You are exonerated from making calls. • Bores do 'not bore' you. Tax-gatherers hurry past your door. Itinerant, bands do nut play opposite your windows. You avoid the nuisance of serving on juries. No ono thinks of 'presenting you with a testimonial. No tradesman irritates by asking: Is tbero any other little article, you wish to.day, sir?" Imposters know it is no use to blood you. Yon practice temperance. You swallow infinitely less poison than others.. Flutterers do not shoot their'rubbish into your Oars. • You are savolmany a debt, many a deception, many a headache. And lastly, if you have a true friend in the. world, you are sure,, in a very short space of time, to know it. IMPOILTANT TO SOROITUM Grtowpts;--- As the season is at hand to gather the cane, all engaged in growing it must attend to it as soon as possible. The wet weather causes shoots to grow out of the stall; which will injure it and have a tendency to give the molasses 'an unpleasant taste. It should be cut befere frotit. Strip the blades off, cut close to the ground, cut top off at sec ond joint and tie in bundles eartvenionf to handle, and haul to the Gki,JOJE3 I aoi3 PRIMING_OFFICE. Tifi L E GLOBE ;JOB OFFICE" 1•! the moat completo of any in the country, ea 4 PO" seeeei tleo meet ample &Witten for pinmptly ezectitthetit the beg style, every yorioty or Joh iltatttig, eudi _ - HAND RILLS, PROGRAMMES,,- - BLANKS,, • - • - BLANKS ' POSTERS CARDS, CIRCULARS,' BATA. TICKEI`S, LABELS, &C.; ia; th NO. 15. CALL ATD EX atha SiSCHLENBOP v9air * L0'15' . 13 . 90C., STATIO::IIItir.k ItOSIC BiOR/1 DINTS ON' I winter in the Country Gentionna stiy*' keep from 100 to 2bO foWlifi, of the Black Spanish breed, and keel- them confined the year , rotind, but` disease is not known among , tlieik' and Lean assure you that 'they &ilia- - ly as well 'as those kept by otheii who believe that fowls cannoi . d . O its' well unless' they aro kePt seratehirig: My yard" is only 25' bY 12 inches deep withrleaehedashes and - sand. I have a - large box, containing some thirty bushele of burnt sliellstilid bones, :which the -fowls liave frcia46: l .. teas to, and When•the tog bee'difiee dry, I take -it Off• and knit arotira my 'grape ,vines, My gardenor raises' 600 bead of cabbage annually; which' are fed to them during,the Win*, and,) . in Summer he 'gives_them"lettuosi; they want. I have u contract for TO beef heads weekly, and give there pleri;`' ty of sour milk, in addition tO Of„ which they have free access to a tniF.-, turn of corn, oats; wheat and barley - whicli:is kept in'a bin : hoiding spine 40 , i bushels, so constructed as to' regulate itself, and not alloW fowls , grain or scratch in it. My ,watering:-. trough is also. constructed. as:only 'to admit the head of the foWle, and is ways full of pure clean water', Which .4', of more importanee.thati anything el.Se, •: .. in loving poultry healthy: t• 'IA barrel of limo, a bucket , antl a brush, are indispensable o.itiel'espi poultry house, and siIiFMIC he' US l err , every, rainy daY (and, : often • during • such a drouth as we have•liadiately,y,: whitewashing °Very th lig but th ciori' and use the limo' duet- on that. But wash "the- floor first. have tried'ali• , your vermin preventives, and every body's else,but never succeeded•in keep init my fowls free until I folindsireni,- - edy by experimenting. "The nests are so constructed 0,8 be all taken apart in two min II tes are perfectly smooth inside and niit;' , and once in every two months I hiNyi 4:I3g,TMVA*I9 :I- 4111htc, wa fra d cflift thoroughly coated with common whale oil, rand have never yet seen a 'single , louse near them, nor can one be fOurid near my promises. The oil wo with a small brush, and it can be relied,.‘ upon as a sure preventive against Vet.: min on fowls." - • IVIIAT DID HE BAY, TADI/4, old Mrs. Call was very hard of hearing;i being somewhat advanced in ye4V4i,' Her daughter - Lydia was a;bouncing lass, who laved ti." good frolic and knew well how to get one. up'. Lydiaty4A . arranged a junket, and the young man and maids wers all on han4 Among the rest wo.s the General—one of 'en)i-, In the midst of the fun, in popped' b' :c deacon—, to see how the I.iidovt: fared. This was a, wet blanket,totho.,, merriment, aad the deacon held on_till, Lydia was out of. all patience. Wt. , ' wished ho would go, and hy.and:lo` tit?: gets up to ,depart. , "Oh, Deacon" said mother Oath-. "don't think of going,before tea. do stop to, oat." ; , •:, The geed Deacon, so strongly,urgekl: replied : . . 'Toll, : I rather think I 'folks will -not - expect me home,- 01 dark." "What did he say, Lydio ?" faked: the widow. Lydia had a ready answer.. • "Re sayshe' Will not, to day, snothoi',. as the folks oxpect Wort) dark.--Why, how deaf you aro,.motli• °'o,b, well, setn'e Ot,lier day; Defascel, won't you ?" said mother Call, ad ait(t, showed the Deacon out. • • . "Smart girl, that," said the (AV iYee,•. COD, ns 1)e trudged along, home. "Shell; find her way throug4, THE FARMERS, BAROMiTES.--:-Taia common gls.ss' , Pickle bottle; wide mouthed; fill it' within three inches of the top with Water; thou- take corn-, • mon Florence oil flask removing the straw- covering and cleansing th,O thoroughly;; plunge the`neck of: flask as far as it will go, .and the bars.. oraeter is &owlet°. In fine weather: the water. will rise into the neck of the flask even higher than the mouth oil the pickle bottle, and in wet andwin-- 'ay weathor it will fall to within an : inch of the mouth of the, flask. Before a heavy gale of . win'd, the water ha's; been sosii, to leave the flask altogethet at least eight hours before the gale' name to its height. The invention was made , by a Llerman, and column. nicated to a London jbtfrnal. • rES,„„A spendthrift said !"Fivo years ago I was not worth a farthing in the, , world; now see Whore am through my own exertions." "Well, where are you ?" inquired, a neighbor. "Why, owe more,than,a thousand pounds l , The euro of luxury is poverty FORMA WED BILL HEADS, WI