TERIAS OF THE GLOBE Per annum In advance 91% mounts three months TRIMS OF ADVERTISING 1 insertion. 2 do. 9 do. One square, (10 lines,)or less.s 75 $1 25 $1 50 Two squares 1 60 2 00 3 00 • Three squares 2 25 3 00 4 60 - 3 months. 6 months. 12 monthei Ins sqitro, or tag 44 00 $0 00 410 GO Two squares, 6 00 ...... .... 0 00 15 00 Three squares"... 8 00 12 00 20 00 Your squares. - • 10 00 15 00 ' - '5 00 Half a column, 15 00 'AD 00. ..... —.30 ,00 One column, 20 00 '5 00.... ..... .60 00 Professional and Business Cards not exceeding six lines, One year, e. 5 00 Administrators' and Executors' Notices, $2 50 Auditors' Notices 2.00 Estrity, or other short Notices 1 50 illir`Ten lines of nonpareil make a square. About eight words constitute a line, en that any person can ea. ally calculate a square in manuscript. Advertisements not marked with the number of inser tions desired, will be continued till forbid and charged sc *cording to these tern.. Onr prices for the printing of Blanks, Handbills, ate. are also increased. PROFESSIONAL . BUSINESS CARDS M=l The name of this firm has been clang ea from SCOTT & BROWN, to SCOTT, BROWN & BAILEY, under which name they wilt hereafter conduct their practice as ATTORNEYS LAW, .1777.NTINGDON; PA. PENSIONS, and all Claims °roadie!, and volition' heirs itgainat the Government, will be promptly prosecuted. bay 17, 186,5—tr. K. A. LOVELL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, lIIINTINODON, PA .Prompt and e.lreful nttentiou will bo given to tho .collection (doll claims against tho Government for Bock Pay, Bounty, Pension., &c. OFFICE—With J. W. Molten, Esq., in the brick row, nearly opposite the Court House. ne,3-6,ne IV. A STEPIIENS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, HUNTINGDON, PA OFFICE.—In Treasurer's room in Court House—up stairs. Huntingdon, Dec. 15, 1563. T J AW ASSOCIATION. The nndereNned have aesoclated themselves together In the practice of the law in Huntingdon, l'w oMco in the one now, end formerly occupied by J. Sewell blew urt, action:lll - tithe Court House. - A. W. DENEDICT. J. SEWELL STEWART. July 20, 1864 D. CAMPBELL, ATTORNEY AT LAW PIIINTINGDON, P.A. Mice la the Brick Row, nearly opposite the Court House. [April 15, 1803. GEO. W. SWARTZ, Clock & Watch Maker, At dm old stand of Swartz k McCabe, HILL STREET, HUNTINGDON, PA my10,1805-Gm .30zr..cJiazamiga Hotel, HUNTINGDON, PA. WM. C. McN ULTY, PROPRIETOR, Formerly dna Fraulellgt Rotel, Clumberaburg. TERMS LIBERAL. y. THE. JACKSON HOTEL, HUNTINGDON, PA. lIENRY SMITH, Proprietor Huntingdon, Aug. t 23, 1665. .A.:l3.crtlezllelcur. TORN u E G A H A N to informs the pnblic that he has taken oats license to try sales at any place in the Mit Congressional district. Sidc es s him at Itiddlesburg, Bedford county, or Post master at Jpmes Creek, Huntingdon county. lie26.3en RALLISON MILLER, . Er t :t..-74 pE YTIST, Hes rerriwreA to the Brick Row opposite the Court House Apri113,1159. T • E. GREENE, DRNTIST. ige• tj Office removed to opposite the store of D. P. esin, in the square, Ai❑ street, Huntingdon, Pa Apr 1113,1884. • -It. D. P. MILLER, Office opposite Jackson Home, offers his scrvico to citizens of Iluntingdon and vicinity. nol-6ms DR. JOHN McCULLOCH, offers his professional service. to the citizen. of Huntingdon and vicinity. Office on Hill street, one door east of Reed's Drug Store.. 21, Q . B. SMITH, Dealer in Drugs, ➢ledi- LT. rloee, Poriumery, Dye Stuffs, Oils. kn. Also—Oro cedes, Confect( ofieries, &e., Huutingdon,'Po: TAMES A. BROWN, tir Deakr In Hardware, Cutlery, Paints, Me, ke., Hutt Ingclun, Ps. IT ROMAN, LI, Dealer in Ready Mule Clothing, lints nod Caps, Loots And Shoos, &c. TA P. GWIN, . Dealer la Dry Geode, Groceries, Hardware, Queen. ..n e, Hats and Caps, Boots and shorn, Le. E. HENRY A; CO., Wholesale and Retail Doalers in Dry Goods. Groceries, Hardware, Qucenawaro, •ad Provisions oral( kinds, Huntingdon. CI LONG- & CO., Dealers in Candies, . Nato, Family Grocarie; Lc., Iluntilipiou. Pa. -ENRY STROUSE A; CO., Itarkles burg. Pa.,Dealors in Dry Goods, Orr Fries, stn. WM. AFRICA, Dealer in Boots and Shoes,in the Huntingdon, Pa. T EOPOLD BLOOM, lluntingdon, Pa, _E./Dealer in Ready Made Clothing. Ilata, Caps, &c. IEORGE SIIAEFFER, Boor nod ‘_A Shoe Merchant, fluntingdon, I's. JOHN 11. WESTBROOK, Dealer in Boots, Shoes, Hosiery, Confectionery, Huntingdon. YENTER, Dealer in Groceries and Liorrolialon? of all kinds, Huntingdon, RiS. Q DION COHN, Coffee Run, Dealer in F s j Dress Goode, Groceries, Wood and Willow Wet. 4 - B. SIIONTZ & BRO., Marklesburg, Dealers In nearly Made Clothing, Jewelry, &c. DIPSON, ARMITAGE & CO., • 3Deatera in Boars and Stationary, Huntingdon, Pa. DONNELL & KLINE, • .1' iIOTOG lt A PLIERS, Huntingdon, D R. WM. BREWSTER, Huntingdon [Cures by Elictropathyd U r ilers in Ready .. G ae T a lVN o l th A in Il Clothing, ltin C O., C t lIEN itY AMA NIGALL, Proprietor of layery stable, Washington street, Huntingdon. BM. GREENE, Dealer in Music,mu .sical Instruments, Sewing, Machines, Huntingdon SHOEMAKER, Agent for the Ma Scar Liniment, Huntingdon!, Pa. A P BRUMBAUGII, Agent for the 'Victor Cone Mill, &C., James Creek, Mont. co., Po AVM: WILLIAMS, ' Plain and Ornamental Marble Manufacturer WM. LEWIS, Dealer in Books, Stationery and Idueical Inatra aIeWA, nUtairlooll, Pa. BILL POSTER. Tire undersigned oilers iris services to business pen end othere desiring circulars distributed or bundb ills Rested. 11 hectic be Seen at the It LODE ollice. I=IOEEI BUSINESS MEN, TAKE NOTICE! It you want your card neatly priottd on cuvet tepee, call at LEWIS' 1100. ! k" AND STA TIONERY STEDR. BLANK BOOKS, Of VARIOUS SIZES, for isle at .0 BET'S' BOOK , . ~. HUNTINGDON, PA., \VEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1865. [For the Globel Chapter on Wimmin & the Wurid, MISTER EDITUR ackordanco with yuro kall fur infirmashun frum the kountrey allow° me, yuro umbel servent, to submitt the follerin frum experonse. Wimtnin air never satisfido with miff, or with wet tha hey ana mower then men ; tha air no suner gratifide in wun wish then another pops inter thare purty beds to tezo an torment. The more tha git, the more tha must hey; a nu gown begets a'desier fur a nu bonet ; and these towgothur forme the foundushun fur a host of eekpen siv ficksins an fulish flippergigs. Wen tha wonce git started, an attempt to halt them is like holdin a kat by the tale, the more we hold the more tha squaul. Their morbid apetito is a con stitooshunal disose, inhairited frum the "muther uv awl livin," who ate herself owt of hum, happynoss an Eden, inter a glumy wilderness uv wo, wannt an retchidness and wile kats. Wot a pity it wuz that Mrs. Eve kouldn't hey bin satisfido with the pure an legitomato pleasures of pairodice without trespas sin or. the little that wuz furbidon ! She had evry thing pessary to make her happi—inkludin abusband, an no trousers to patch. All that mortal in her sitiashun resonablee denier wuz hers to enjoi. Natur supplide all her nessary wants an furnished okstras in supurabundenee. She hed nuthirg to du but geather flours, twine remits, wove garlaus, an form lay -note to plez her gudo an nobel spowse. She hod no hous to kepo in order, for the blew rufed ski wuz their unly an suffishent shelter, wonco neethur rane, bale, sno nor slete desended; nur wur the wins of hevin ullowd to handel her delikato person ruffiy. Havin no moles to pro pair, Adam couldn't find fault with her cookin, nor skold about dinner not be in redy in soson, no beds to make in the mornin, no dishes to IVIIBII, no room to swope, and no stockins to darn— how could she, my readers, be other wise than happi ? For her a porpety ual spring raned in Eden, breathin its bamy odors thruowt the whole dough• . main; for her the rozo blossomd thorn less, merrio bards sung their melodeus madrigals in every grove, an nature semed to take partieklar panes to hey everything as 'it should be—done up brown. Sorro was then unborn, kart) hadn't corn inter the world, au trublo never entered the gaits of pairodiee. Velvet footed time, treding upon mos sy banks and beds of yilets, trotted by with a noiseles step, the golden wingd minuits flitted past like butterflies inn June, an the dancin bowers went law fing by as merrilee as a lot of brite ido lasses "jist lot lose frum skule." Yet for all these, discontent dwelt in the garden, growing duly fat by sillee in ' dulgence. My readers, to please the palate of Mrs. Eve there. gru spontaneusly, in Eden, pares, plume, mellins, grapes, figs, cherrys, dates, and all Itines of delishn berrys; of all these she partuk freely, an without fear of there dooing, dammage either to her physiCal stem ack or moral maw. In there midst studo the tre of nolloge, an from its bonden bows hung the forbidden apels . in enticin abundance. She looked up on them an saw the 'WM fare to be hold, but never thought of tenting em till sho saw ritten upon the trunk of the tree "Turns NOT, TASTE NOT." At that moment she began to gro uneasy an hanker after the apols. Tha lookd more melow an lusshus than ever, au hey a bite at them she must, lot the konsequenso be wot it mite. So she got the devel to giv her a boost inter the tree, an up she wont like a posum after persimins. After etin her full, she selected half a dozen of the biggest an best and trudged off to Adam, with a request that he would alsow etc and pass his opinin on the piping, warupon ho pronounced theni good, first reit, an itnmedately made way with the lot. Sono they both begun to feel bad awl over. The felt as thow the had boon doing wot tha ort not to have dun.— The saw that the wore naked and wer for the first time ashamed of it. Weth er it was-the man or the womin that first made the discovoray I have no mottos of asertanintt. As a beginning of there punishment the were obliged to go to work. So the turned tailors and sowed fig leaves together to make aperns. Eden sune lost all its luvly ness; the flours faded, the birdies quit singing, the skye lowered and glume encumpaced the unhappee pare, The wandred arm in arm to and ft•ow in sereh of peen, jist like the rebel con).- mishunyers wandered across our lines in front of Petersburg last winter in scrch of the same article, and • like the comishunyers the found pothin hot a flamin cord, fast driyip thorn from pa yodice an happiness inter a world of ! toil troble anckziety, sin and corroh ; , • -PERSEVERE.- for them to peepul with a wicked and sickly projiny, and tha hey dun it. Isn't it an awful pity that owor long dead an lamented proginitross shud hey ruined awl mankind fur a paultry apel ? Wot evil she hes ontaled upon us by her fulishness I Instod of enjoin a hevin upon earth as mite otherwise hey bin the case, hero we air, struglin about in the midst of death, diseese, krimo wickednes of all kines, pane, discontent, old batchelers, an other evils, vice, great, melancoly, old mados, and sich like miseries. Hero we air, wurthless dregs of mortality, the last runings of the keg of. wholiness, and growin morn vily eery clay. Here we air, made up of the fay ends, clipping an refews of such moral stuff as used to be put into people in dais of your. Here we air, suckin happiness through a gage quill, an misery thru an eve spout, powkin over a barril of chawf for a cuple grams of weat, fishin hawf a day with a wet jackit an a hungry belly for a mess of trowt, an comin to hum with a solitary cat fish, working like a win mill for the public good an then wislin for reward, seeking glory and findin it at the lore of the tome. 0! how I morn the fall of our first pairients I Wen tha fell, what a fall was tharo It was like an anjil fallin out of hevin into a fish pond. It is trno there air a few particles of plesur to be picked up in our terrestrat wanderins, but tha air of leetle conse quence. Sorrel) sumtimes lies down to slope amid the flours of joi ; but she is sane wakend by the jarrin footsteps of aflicshun. Altogether the wurld is in a sad picle, but I hope an trust that the time will ovenlynally come wen it will wear off a good porshun of its ocumulated rust, an exhibit sumthing of its riginal briteness an pureity. Frum yyredisconisulate PHINEGAN MORE ABOUT TUE DRAFT. -Dr. Roth rock, near the conclusion of his report with respect to the drafts in this dis trict, writes as follows concerning the tricks of the lads who would "go for a sojer:" "In examination of substitutes and volunteers, we had more trouble with boys, not more than 14 or 15 years of age, than any class of men. They were frequently brought from a dis— tance—always chiming to be 18 years of age. They were so well drilled by the brokers having them in charge, that they would force a very full in spiration, strut about as erect as old soldiers, and go through every process of examination with as much activity as a set of lofty tumblers. They were taught before coming here that in this case there was no wrong in pretending to be several years older than they re• ally were. Slre rejected many boys who were over tbc - minimum standard, because they wet a undeveloped in bone and muscle, and evidently not over 15 years old. No reliance could be placed on the word of themselves or those in charge of them as to their ago. They presented every variety, from the stripling boy of 14, to that of full de— veloped puberty. "Again, old men over 50 years of age, came with their hair dyed, and in some cases with artificial teeth insert ed, claiming to be aliens and under 45 years of ago. These frauds were so easily detected, that I believe we were not in any instance imposed on by this class CM:111 "Of the mon examined, the number of Pennsylvanians largely preponder ated over all others combined, and in my opinion, they presented the great est physical aptitude for military ser vice. A very large proportion of Pennsylvanians furnished by this dis trict certainly cannot be excelled in symmetry of form, physical endurance and intellectual development by any equal number selected from any nas tionality. This is accounted for by the habits of industry, sobriety and frugality, with the fostering care of our common schools, for which Pennsyl vania in general, and this district in particular, are proveibiaf." ENGLISH IGNORANCE OF AMERICA.- Those who took the pains to peruse the speeches recently made by Sir Morton Peto and others of tho English capitalists' party, and who observed the simple *cinder expressed by them everywhere at everything they saw, can appreciate the profound ignorancO of oven the . most intelligent claSses in England concerning everything in America. Those gentlemen had had large amounts of their capital invested in this country for• years, had had it invested in the very way which, of all others, was most likely to make them familiar with our material character istics and development and, moreover, had been friendly to us during the wai, and, therefore, all the fnore likely to bo well informed about us; arid yet Christopher Columbus was not more astonished by what ho saw upon tho continent of America in 1492 than Sir Morton Peto and party were at what they saw iu 1865. Wanted--A New Method of Doing Honor to Distinguished Men. The Boston Advertiser thinks that any body who Will intent for use in this country a new method of doing honor to distinguished men, performs an act of humanity towards a deser ving but suffering class, and will do something to save the people of the United States from making themselves ridiculous before the world. At pres ent the methods in use appear to be three. The first of these is to sot the man whom we delight to honor in some public place where all corners may shako his hand. Now, handshaking, beyond the half dozen men whom the recipient of honors is glad to see, is an utterly insane process; beyond the first five minutes it becomes a labor ious process, and after the first fif teen minutes it is torture under which the strongest constitutions break down and before which the stoutest hearts quail. Moreover any man is supposed to have a reasonable choice as to the sort of people with whom he shall be brought in contact. Few of us think that even the Roman was any too fas tidious, who when before meeting his fellow citizens 'as a candidate, "bid them wash their faces and keep their teeth clean." But it is literally the "great unwashed'wbom we thrust upon any great man when wo sot him up in Fanouil Hall or in the City Hall of New York, to try his endurance by the pump handle process. The second method is to have a ser enade by appointment with a brass band and an enthusiastic street mob, and vociferous cries of 'speech, speech,' and unlimited champagne afterwards. Now a serenade in the stilly night by Romeo with his flute, listened to by Juliet at her window, with no bystan ders or dogs upon the lawn, is one thing;but this entertainment under gas light, with all the crowd and confusion and tumult of a city fire, is quite an• other thing, and not to be recognized from its name. To the object of the demonstration this speech making on the balcony, with the certainty of be• ing reported in the morning papers, is severe penance; while the scene in the supper room afterwards is alit to be simply disgusting. And finally, when we would do She thing with especial elaboration, the approved method is to have what is called with no appropriateness a "re ception," such as was extended to Gen. Grant in Now York the other night. Policemen with their clubs are usually the masters of ceremonies on such oc casions; detectives in plain clothes observe the movements of the spoons and forks; those who got out of the crush with their clothes whole upon their backs esteem themselves happy, and those who cannot get in are found to be happiest of all, the distinguished guest undergoes the extremity of corn pression and hustling in addition to the handshaking process; every ele ment of social enjoyment is squeezed out of the affair; and the result of it is that local dignitaries see themselves announced in the newspapers as the committee and managers and guests of an entertainment, about which everybody talks for a day and at which the better part of the commu. nity laugh with contempt. Absolutely it is to these methods that the people of this nation are redu. laed, when they would testify in a public manner their regard for a man whose name excites in every breast senti• ments of admiration, respect and grati tude. So clumsy are their efforts to articulate their feelings, tot it is only by subjecting him to the maximum of personal annoyance in the given time, that . General Grant or any hero can be duly assured that his countrymen honor his character and recognize his deeds. Is not American ingenuity ad equate to the task of contriving some other sort of public demonstration, which shall save us from the discredit and ridicule which so properly attends the essential and stereotyped vulgarity of the methods now in vogue? --- EMZI mr. The editor of the Now Castro (Pa.) Courant being absent, the "devil" assumes charge, and thus apostrophi• "The improvement in the genera appearance of this number of the pour ant is owing to the absence of the editor "N. B.—When in the course of hu-- man events it becomes necessary for us to forsake, for a brief period, the 'ink kog' and 'roller,' and take our place in the chair, editorially, a dge respect for our vanity makes it incum bent on us to give the following notice, to wit : as follows : During this week all editorial favors, such as wedding cake, boquets, cigars, specimen whisky and other summer drinks, turkeys, and all the et ceteras that are part of the emolumentS Of our now position,should be sent to the "DEVIL." That young man is on his Way to fame, and will undoubtedly, in time, be one of the most shining lights of the profession: TERMS, $2,00 a year in advance - I[From Philadelphia Public Ledger.] Lafayette College Endowment. Why is it that the State Colleges do not seem to grow so fast into public confidence, or in the number of stu dents, or in the amount of donations and endowments contributed for their support, as those schools under the control of some religious denomination? There is Lafayette College in this Stato, which is not yet a full genera tion old, and which was, we believe, first started in this city by Rev. Dr. George Junkin, and then removed to Easton as a Manual Labor School, is now, in addition to Princeton, becom. ing a most important and flourishing Presbyterian College. The present President, Dr. Cattail, though quite young, is full of energy, and wonder fully successful. Some time ago We alluded to the fact that Mr. Pardee, of Ilazelton, a gentleman of great wealth, had contributed $20,000 to this institu tion. Other gentlemen joined, on con dition that the subscription should reach $lOO,OOO. About 840,000 of this sum is still wanting, and Mr. Pardee has now come forward and tendered another 8100,000 to found a Scientific School, provided that the $40,000 is made up. In addition to this another gentleman has given $lO,OOO to erect a building for the pursuit of Natural Science. Rev. Dr. Green of Princeton, delivered the address at the laying of the corner stone of this building—a very able address indeed, extracts from which we laid before our readers a week or two ago Its faeulity is an able one, the venerable Professor of Natural Sciences especially having a high reputation, both at home and abroad. He has stuck to the institu tion in dark hours, when its prosperity seemed almost hopeless, and but $4OO a year each was all that could be given to the professors. Now he lives, in his old age, to witness a very great change in its condition and prospects, and his own department especially endowed and contributed to in a manner that a few years ago would have been. un- beard of even at Harvard or Yale. • We feel sure that the facts of the case need but to be mentioned, espe cially to the highly respectable and wealthy denomination under the care of whose Synod this College is placed —the Synod of Philadelphia—to secure the immediate raising of the sum that alone is wanting, about $40,000, to se cure the magnificent endowment now proposed by one of the broadest minds and noblest hearted gentlemen of our State—one who, though not himself educated in a college, or a member of the particular denomination to which this college belongs, has thus invested a portion of his wealth, from a deep respect for the wise and safe plans on which it is founded, a sense of its value to the State, and a high personal es teem for its excellent, energetic and truly pious President. If this plan is carried through, as no doubt it will be, that institution will have a property in buildings, grounds, professors' houses, college buildings and endowments of $250,000, without a cent of debt. But our reason for calling attention o this act of munificence is further to inquire why something similar should not be carried out in regard to the University of our own State, located in our own city? It is cheering to see how much of the accumulating wealth of our citizens is being bestowed on the endowment, of seats of learning. We spoke the other day of the munifi cent gift of half a million of dollars and an estate of sixty acres of land, given by I-lon. Asa Packer, to found the "Lehigh University," and of $lOO,- 000 raised for the "University" of Lewisburg. Why should not some of those gentlemen of wealth Whose sons have been, and aro being, educated 'ti the University in our own city, donate pecial funds to found professorships and schools in connection with it, that shall malfo it, especially in its course for under graduates, a perfect n 1 0. 40 1) worthy the chief city of our magnifi cent State. Will not the alumni and rustees take this matter up, so that parents and families may be brought here, and not forced to live elsewhere, who desire to give their sons the most perfect education the country can af ford, under their own eye. FLOWERS IN THE WINDOW.—There is nothing more attractive to the eye of the outsiders than the plants and flowers in the windows of houses dur ing the season When ga . rdoq culture is out of the question. Here every one, without regard to circumstances, may have a miniature greenhouse, with all its luxuries and a few of its inconveni ences. The expense is not worth man. tioning, and the labor is a pleasure to all who love these most loveable beau ties of Nature. In many of the public schools of New England, the - female teachers and larger seliplara-Cultivate many flowers through the year, .eifhei ju doers or out, - , . . _ Q - 2,4033M JOB PRINTI OFFICE, T " moat JOB :OFFICE!! is the at complete - of any In the country; and po. emu; the most ample facilities for promptly exeopilpf is the best style, every variety of Job PriniWg, ecdlt HAND BILLS, • pROGRAADIES. BLANKS,' POSTER?, 'BARDS, CIRCULARS, BALT, TICKETS, LABELS, &C., &C., AR NO. 25. CALL AND BUMP OPECIIIKINO OP ROAR AT LEWIS' BOON. STATIONERY & MOSIo STORE Letter from Mrs, Enool r n • Mr. Carpenter, the artist, whq has been publishing in the Independmt his personal recollections of President, Lincoln, gives, in his last contribution the following extract of a letter fronu. Mrs. Lincoln : "Truly," writes Mrs. Limo,ln, "no sorrow has been like unto mine." am as broken-hearted over this over whelming affliction as when the terri ble tragedy first occurred, and, of course, realize it far moiT. I have lost the most loving and devpted othus bands, and ray dear boys the-best fath er that sons were ever blesied with. 'Until God's love shall place me by his side again,' I shall know no peace, or alleviation ofmy grief. Knowing him as you did, I am sure you can pardon and appreciate a wife's great sorrow over so untimely a loss ! * * "How I wish you could have beea with my dear husband the last three weeks of his life. Raving a realizini sense that the unnatural rebellion wee near its close, and being most of the time away from Washington, where he had passed through such conflicts of mind during the last four yeare— e feeling so encouraged, he freely gave vent to his cheerfulness. Down the Potomac, he was almost boyish in his mirth, and reminded me of his original nature,. as I remembered him in our own home, free from care, surrounded by those he loved. "That terrible Friday, I never Saw him so supremely cheerful. At three o'clock ho drove out with me in the open carriage. In starting, I asked him if any one should accompany us ? He immediately replied; 'No 'I prefer to ride by ourselves today.' During the drive be was so gay that I said-to him, laughingly: 'Dear husband, you almost startle me by your great cheer fulness.' Ho replied: 'And well I may feel so, Mary, for I consider this day the war has come to a close,' and theft added, 'We must both be more oheer ful in the future. Between the war, and the loss of our:darling Willie we have been very miserable.' Every word he then uttered is deeply engraA ved on my poor broken heart. In the evening his mind was fixed upon hay; ing some relaxation. *- * * I firm-, ly beleive that if ho had remained, in. the White House,on that night of dark.' ness when the fiends prevailed, he . would have been horribly out to pieces. Those fiends had too long contemplated this inhuman murder to have allowed, him to escape." LABOR SAVING-LABOR Labor saving'implements were once', thought to be destructive to the inter. eats of the working• man, just in. pro portion as they saved the drudgery : of labor. This seems reasonable at first, • but a little thought will correct the er; ror, How then do the farm laborers, thrown out of work by the introduc tion of improved implements, ultimate ly find work ? Plainly by the increas ed amount of tillage which horse pow er, machinery and tools make possible in the country. 'ln a section where% all the soil-is under cultivation of sorne , kind, it will lead to more thorough sys-,‘ tem of. farming. In the case of our' own country, it leads to the faster-ex , ; tension of civilization westward,the pid subjugation of wild lands, and the, better cultivation of that already un der the plow. For instance, the West-. ern grain grower, who now devotes, soventy.five to one hundred and fifty acres to corn and other grain crops, to the meager fabilities of thirty years ago, could not have managed- one, fourth that part amount in a similar: manner. This increase, of agrimature not only keeps geed the original num ber of farm lahorers,hut creates a new, demand fdi 'laborers in every oihe field of industry , . , Tibrkships- - 64 . 3diraik, roads are required for transportation; more manufacturing establishments, more mechanics to construct those,a,ndi men to manage them, more miners, machinists, ,etc. In fact, thb whole bo:, , dy politic thus receives vital refresh,. ment from every really labor-savi ng, invention. This is a forcible illustra.; tion of the fact that whatever fairly: advances the interests of ono class, be comes a benefit to all the classes in the, community. AN ENGLISH 51113.4:114N'S British force is about to invade Boot-. an, and has been put in light march, ing order for this expedition, •which, after all is but a short ono compared with Sherman's great march. Sher:: man's veterans . will road with interest of the preparations. !‘The force is toConsist of two wings of British infantry, six regiments of native infantry, ono thousand drilled cdolies, 'two batteries of artillery and two companies of sappers and miners, or about nine thousand men in all. A. great effort is being made to limit the number of camp followers, only one servant boing allowed to each officer, but the number of bullocks, mules anti yaboos required to carry ambulaneesi, water, foytwo, ammunition and provis ions Tor'Aff.osn days will be enormous, and every pair of animals will require one man. Tents are . forbidden, .94 the whole force is bp'enter.l3ootati as far as nu Indian force can,stripped for action. Extra blankets 'will be env, plied to. the men, but, that set be all the precaution take - ff against the cold,'whieb, by December, will be bit- ter• on the,bilis BILL HEADS, EMINEI