TERNS OF THE GLOBE. Per maim in admire Six months Phree months TERMS Or ADVERTISING 1 insertion. 2 do. 3 do. Ono square, (10 lines,)or 10884 75 .... 51 25......,51 50 Two squares, 1 50 - '2 OD 5 00 Three squarely 2 25 3 00 4 50 . . . , - 3 months. 6 months. 12 months. One square, or lees, $4 00 $6 00 $lO 00 Two squares, 6 00 9 00 15 00 Three squares, - 8 00 12 00 20 00 Your squares, 10 00 15 00 25 00 Haifa column, 15 00 20 00 30 00 One column, 20 00 36 00.... 60 00 'Professional and Business Cards not exceeding six lines, On year, $5 00 Administrators' and Executors' Notices, $2 50 Auditors' Notices, 2 00 Betray, or other short Notices 1 50 .0 Ten lines of nonpareil make a square. About eight words constitute a line, so that any person can ea sily calculate alma.° in manuscript. Advertisements not marked with the number of inser tions desired, will bo continued till forbid and charged ac cording to three terms. Our prices for the printing of Blanks, Handbills, etc. are reasonablylow. Vroirssional*Nusintss garb. isyr.' A . ; B: BRUMBAUGH, Hiving iermaneritly located at Huntingdon, offers professional services to the community. Office, the same as that lately occupied by Dr. Luden on 11111 street. - ap10,18613 anPlt. JOHN MeCULLOCH, offers his professional lionises to the citizens of Huntingdon Ticiaity. Mee oo Hill street, one door east of Reed's Lintz Store. Aug. 28, '55. R. ALLISON MILLER, DENTIST, Sloe removed to the Brick Row opposite the Court nonie April 13;1159. - T .' J . 0-BEENE, . J.'- _ • ; DENTIST . - - &V.-removed to Leleter's New Bulldlug4 ,nill.streat, ITuntingdon. July 31,,1867. j A. POLLOCK, fRVEYOR &REAL ESTATE AGENT, HUNTINGDON, PA Will attend to Surveying in all Its branches, and will buy and sell Real - Estate in any tart of the tutted States. Send fur circular. dec29•tt WASHINGTON HOTEL, HUNTINGDON, DA. The undersigned respectfully informs the citizens of Huntingdon county and the traveling public generally that lie has leased the Washington House on the cor ner of Hill and Charles street, In the borough of Hun. tingdan, and ho is prepared to accommodate all who may favor him with a call. Will be pleased to receive a Mar al allure of public patronage. AUG USTUS LETTERMAN. July 31, '67—tf. MILTON S. LYTLE, ATTORNEY AT LA. TV, HUNTINGDON, PA Trompt attention given to all legal business entrnsted to Ids care. Claims of soldiers and soldiers' heirs against the Government collected without delay. sel2'l3o .3kicISIURTRIE, • ATTORNEY AT LAW, °Moo on 11111 atrock 11UNTINCIDON, PA Prompt attention will be ghen to the prosecution of the claims of eoldtere and soldier.' helm, against dm flor ernment.• n 1122,1860 A GEENCY FOR COLLECTING SOLDIERS' CLAIMS, BOUNTY, BACK PAY AND PENSIONS. All who may have any elating against the Government for Bomity, Back Pay and Pensions, can have their claims promptly collected by applying either in person or by lot ter to W. 11. WOODS, ATTORNEY AT LAW; HUNTINGDON, PA nug12,1853 D COLLECTION /0 v P OF K. ALLEN LOVELL, District Attorney of - Huntingdon County, RUNT.INGIiON, PA. OFFICE—In the Brlekt Row, pproalts the Court Rouse Jem.1.1867 SHUN SCOTT, SAXUEL T. lITLOWN, JOHN N. BAILS? The name of this firm has been chang ed from SCOTT BROWN, to SCOTT, BROWN & BA/LBY, under which name they will hereafter conduct their practice aa .A 270 RNE FS AT LAW, HUNTINGDON; TA. PENSIONS, and all claims orsoldiers and soldiers' heirs against the Government, will be promptly prosecuted. May IT, 1866—tf. A 6. CLARKS, AGENT, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in all kinds of ,Mfb.aPA &.TrODIATAOLt HUNTINGDON, PA. Next door to Gm Franklin House, in the Diamond. Count* trade supplied. epl7'67 GEO. INT. SWARTZ, DELL= IN ALL &INDS OF (k . AMERICAN WATCHES, Fine Gold JEWELRY, 'WP 7 =' • , .• &c., opposite J. A. Brown's Mammoth Hardware •tore. As• Watches neatly repaired and warranted. Huntingdon, Sept 18, 1867-Bni A SPECIALTY. A LARGE AND WELL ASSORTED STOCK OF LADIES' AND GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS, AT REDUCED PRICES, Just received at RUDOLPI'S 11 2 2aPaat '22bIELI arg LADIES' DEPARTMENT. In this department, which will at all times receive my strict atteution, I have a well asserted display of Dress Trimmings, Cloak and Samos Trim mings. Dress Buttons, Gloves. Vail., Zephyr Knit Shawls, Nobles, Hoods, Sontags, Hand kerchiefs, Fall Hats. Hat and Bonnet Frames, Velvet Ribbons. Corsets, Hosiery, and latest ptyle Basque from $5 to $lO. . 13-EDITS DEPARTMENT.. . Dicta and Caps, all styles, from 50 oath" to $lO, Shirts, Drawers, Gloves, Neck Ties, Col lars, Hosiery, and every article kept in a first clam Furnishing Store. By molting my bushome a specialty, I hope to sleet 'with such patronage from the public as will enable me to keep continually on hand a large and well selected .stock of first class goods, Whilst keeping up to the fashion In every article, I will also sell cheaper than the ,cheapest. W. P. RIMOLPFI, Opposite Leteter`e New Building. Huntingdon, Oct. 30, 1567. = arrz , lll.> 111 zi-FA W. B. ZEIGLER 'Would respectfully inform the Ladies of Huntingdon and the country generally, that he has just returned from New York and Philadelphia, where ha has pur chased a large stock of goods almost EXCLUSIVELY FOR LADLES AND CIULDREN Ladles' Furnishing Goods, Pane and plain Dress Trimmings, Ladles' Under , garments, Jiderino Vests and Drawers, Corsets, Balms. rate, Hoop Skirts, Shawls, Scarfs, dicods,Bnit of various styles add patterns, Ladies' and .Children's Stockings of all styles and colors, Also, Dress Goods, Prints, Delahaes, Plaids, Al. !mesas, Gingham; Drown and Bleached Atm. lins, Lc. Gents' Undershirts, Drawers, and Stockings. All goods sold at the lowest cash prices, and as cheap Bs the cheapest. OPPOSITE:THE FIRST NATIONAL RANK 'Huntingdon, Nov. 6,1861. EST BLEACI4ED At U SLIT , ' jufralways en hand at CUNNINGHAM f' CAHMON' 'll'`E REST QTJAIJITY OF FRESH mAczErua. at . CUNIVINGHAM d CARAWYS. T 1 ? YOU WANT the BEST SYRUP, go to CI;INNPOILAM 4 cAßmors, .._ - . j Sic • . 1- : - ,Z:.....2- ,7v.q i• • '," , ", • / , - , II . * - :: - q - 4 r: ..,, x- ~, 4, - - imwvii '//''- " - • - ".. ' '-, . I ‘, '4 ,- ''4 = 1 ~ 17: ,‘ .!-* . . \\N: - .\--- - Zy .'r: • • ./.,, , s " '''''' -1-: < ;;: ' , .' " i' ' . \S‘‘ ' \- f•Zit.: : - 4. -.j. -" : --- ;& ;:4 1 - "....- " ---.-- ~ -c- - .P. I- •'' , `"zx ; -,"'; ' , "--- ' .....; .- ''_ ~., ... 1 , ' % 7 .- -7- ..:" ; - - - - : - I':'.. :: .---: -V4 ';'';. ...- . ' ', .= •„ f., ~. ' . .. ~,,-: , . , , i P -- k.,; ,..... , • .:' -. ','. _ _.,,,.., ~...z.O ~ ~ _A . , ) .44,1 / 4 - L ,-i.,„..41 ~ _. . ~., j ... - , • • A .." '' .:-!1 , -, / ''' it $2OO 1 OD WM. LEWIS, HUGH LINDSAY, Publishers. VOL. XXIII. NEW LEATHER STORE. ly a n T HE o n i I n c n e d t that, n e n d e c I V o with t r h e e l a r P r e A e N t N in E t i they have Just opened a splendid assortment of FINE LEATHER, Consisting in part of FRENCH CALF SKIN, KIP, MOROCCO, LININGS, BINDINGS, _ : SOLE, • UPPER, HARNESS, SKIRTING, &C., Together with a general assortment of [FIENDERM,§. The trade is Invited to call and examine our stack. Store on LULL street, two doors west of the Presbyte. Irian church. The highest price paid for HIDES and BARK. C. H. MILLER & SON. Huntingdon, may 1,1867 CHEAP GROCERY STORE. HILL ST., HUNTINGDON, PA. THE undersigned offers for the in spection and purchase of customers a large and asi• sorted stock of Groceries, Provisions, &c. Ho fuels satis• fled they caa be accomodatod with anything in his lino. His prices are low, and his stock fresh and good. Ho keeps the best of SUGAR, COFFEE, TEAS, SPICES, SALT, TOBACCO & SEGARS, BOOTS AND SHOES, HATS & CAPS, &c: Also— HAMS, SHOULDERS; SIDES, MOLASSES, OILS, VINEGAR, FISH, CHEESE, FLOUR RICE, And NOTIONS of every kind. A select stock of DRY GOODS, together with QUE ENS WARE, and all other articles kept in a well regulated establishment for sale at reasonable prices. 5 His store is on Hill ',trout, nearly opposite the Dank, and In the room formerly ono:plod by D. Grove. Call and examine. Z. YENTRIt. Huntingdon, Oct. 8, 1867 J. A. HANAGAR, PMOVOUIATig.I%Eap Railroad street, _Huntingdon, Pa., Would fespectfally for ito the attention of the cittrons of Huntingdon and vicluity to Ida Gallery ou Itellread street, opposito tho Juniata House, Where he is prepared to take all the LATEST STYLES OP PICTURES, at the followSg prices: Including an Sxlo oval Gilt Frame, $1.,50. Visiting Card Photographs, full size, 4 for $l,OO, Ambrotypes, for 25 cents, and upwards. Ills long experience in the business enables Lira to take pictures in every style of the art, at greatly reduced pri ces. Ito keeps aim a) son band a largo ascot tmetat of PLALV AND P.42V - 01' FI2.IMES -IND CASES. 'Pictures Inserted in Lockets, Breastpins, Finger Rings, Ste., in a neat and durable manner. Oil Paintings, Daguerreotypes, de, copied at a reasoua bin pito,. Pictures taken . squally well in clear or cloudy Weather I cordially invite one and all to call and examine spec imens, whether they want pictures or not. Come quick ly, as I shall remain but a short time in the business. The abate Gallery to either for tent, or for sale, with good security. El Apply to J. A. itANia Alt, Photograph Gallery, Rail road etruet, Huntingdon, Pa. janl6.3m JUNIATA STEAM PEARL MILL, HUNTINGDON, PA THIS MILL is a complete success in _L the manufacture of FLOUR, &c. It has lately been thoroughly repaired and is now in good running order and in full operation. The burrs and choppers are new and of superior qual ity—cannot be excelled. And wo aro gratified to know that our work has given entire satisfaction td our custo mers, to whom we tender our thanks. We have in our employ one of the beet millers in the county, and a faithful and capable engineer. Thus equip pad and encouraged, we are determined to persevere in our efforts to accommodate and please the public, hoping thereby to merit and receive a liberal share of patronago to sustain nu in our enterprise for the public interest. Market price paid for the different kinds of grain on delivery. Flour and Chop, on hand, for sale. JOUN K. MeOAHAN & BON Huntingdon, Nov. 2G,1887 NOTICE TO ALL. HILL STREET MARKET, OPPOSITE THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK. RG. MORRISON respectfully in. a, forms the citizens of Huntingdon and vicinity that lea continues the meat market business in all its va• dons branches, and will keep constantly on hand Fresh Beef, Pork, Pudding and Sausage, salt Beef and Pork, Canned Fruit and Vegetables, Spices of all klnds,Catsups and Sauces, Teas, Soaps, Cheese, Salt Lard,Ac All of which he will continue to soli at reasonable prices The highest prices paid for bides and tallow. Thomas Colder, at Alexandria. and March & Bro., at Coffee Run, are my ags nts to purchase at their places. Thankful for past patronage, I solicit a continuance of tho same. R. G. MORRISON. Huntingdon, Oct. 30, 1867. GOOD NEWS FOR MOTHERS. Mothers, are you oppressed tvith anxiety for your little ones? Are your slumbers and booms broken by their cries? Do you awake in the morning Mirefreshed and ap• prebensive? Usti, procure at once a bottle of Dr. Leon's Infant Remedy and you will hare no more weary hours of watching and anxiety. OR. LEON'S' INFANT REMEDY, MIS stood the test of years. Thousands of nurses and mothers bear witness that it never fails to give relief if used in season. It is a mild, yet sure and speedy cure for Colic,Cramps and Windy Pains, and is Invaluable for all comlaints incident to Teething. Sold by Druggists throughout the United States. Ad dress all orders to ZIEGLER & SAIITLI, SOLE PROPRIETORS', N 0.137 Nth. Third Street, Philad'a n0.'27.1y SILVER'S WASH POWDER ,SAVES TIME, LABOR, MONEY. Makes Washing a Pastime and Mon , day a Festival. SOLD RVERYWILERR. TRY ITt Address all orders to the Manufacturers ZIEGLBIt & SMITH, 011intfds and Wholesarp Dyuggists, n0v.21-ly N. 137 Nth. Third Street, Philada, TO THE LADIES? Tho best assoitment of 04;mm:we, Just received this day from New York and for sale at the pheep pull store of WU. MARGIT ;4 BRO. 4 epiphdid anortment of LADIES' DRESS GOODS, FANCY TRIMMINGS AND BUTTONS Just rcseired rids day from New York and for sale cheap at rmnyil WM. MARCE & BRO. HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 1868. Cheaper than the Cheapest! BARGAINS EINEM AdrarrL3lia.c)tli. store WM End of Ilitntingdon, Penit'a We are now offering our im mense and well-assorted stock of Goods, at thoroughly reduced, and unprecedented - low prices; our superior facilities enabling us to compete successfully with the cheapest. • Our stock consists of Groceries, Dry Goods, Notions, Hardware, Queensware, Glassware, Willow and Cedar Ware, Table and Floor Oil • Cloths, Carpets, Rugs and Door Mats, Crocks,Jugs, Stoves, Tinware, Iron, Stee, Nails, Glass, Putty, Oils, Paints, Drugs, Flour, Feed, &c., &c., all in„ grett variety, at prices that will not fail to suit consumers. We are also dealing in all kinds of Coal and Lumber, our facilities in these commodities being superior to any other firm in Huntingdon. We claim them as SPECIALTIES in our trade, in which none can compete with us; We buy all kinds of Grain, Seeds, Flour .and Feed, at the highest market *rates, and give the highest prices in Goods fbr Produce of all kinds. Do not fail to call and examine our stock and prices, as both are sure to please. HENRY & CO., Huntingdon, Pa ME HEAD QUARTERS FOR NEW GOODS. D. P. CW!N INFORMS THE PUBLIC THAT HE HAS JUST OPENED A SPLENDID STOCK of NEW GOODS THAT . CAN'T BE BEAT IN CHEAPNESS AND QUALITY. COME AND SEE. D. P. GW/N, Iluutingdon, October 9, .67.. 1868. 1868. CLOTHING. H. ROMAN. NICK CLOT lIINO FOR PALL AND WINTEIR, JUST 101051VED ♦T H. ROMAN'S CHEAP CLOTHING STORE. For Oentlemenie Clothing of tit, bent material, and made in the beet workmanlike manner, call at IL ROMAN'S, opposite the Franklin house in Market Square, hunting , don, Pa. GLAZIER & BRO., DEALERS IN DRY GOODS, DRESS GOODS, HATS, NOTIONS, BOOTS AND SHOES. GROCERIES, QUEENSWARE, &c., the Washington street, near the Jail }laving purchased our Winter Goods since tho late heavy decline, we can afford to offer superior inducements to buyers. Air-READ OUR PRIORVIML MoeUns and Prints, from 8 ate up, Heavy Unbleached Shootings, yard wide, 16 ate, Heavy yard wido 'Pickings, 30 cte, Bast Winter Detainee, 22 and 25 cte, All Wool Dolainee, 45 to 65 cts, Double width Wool Plaids, 50 cte, heavy Plaid Poplins, $l.OO, Wool Flannels, 28 to 50 cte a yard, Wool Blankets, $3.00 to $lO.OO a pair, Wool Shawls, $1.25 to $lO.OO Balmoral Skirts, $0.25 to sl.sa Other Goode in proportion, Huntingdon, Nov. 6,186 i. THE 0-I_lo_l3_ j'OB PRINTING OFFICE. T"E“GLOBE JOB OFFICE” the most complete of any in the country, and pos sesses the most ample facilities for promptly executing in the bust style, every variety of Job Drinting, such as HAND BILLS, CIRCULARS, BILL HEADS, POSTERS, BALL TICKETS, CARDS, PROGitAWM, . BLANKS, LABELS, &C., &O 0411 XXAMINZ SPZCIALENB or WPM LEWIS' 1300%. STATIONERY & DIESIO STORE. FLOUR I FLOUR The beet Flour, by the barrel or lotailer quantity for Bale atLewhe Venally Grocery. ri ROUND LLUM. AND SALINA TEALS a 4 C:Cn^AYGHA M d` c'eq.??l9:"4". rC4c 0131olre. HUNTINGDON, PA. EVERY LITTLE HELPS —:o: Suppose a little twinkling star, Away in yonder sky, Should say, "What light can reaeh so far From such a star as I ? Not many rays of mine so far As yonder earth can fall ; . Tho others so muoh brighter are, I will not shine at all. Suppose a bright green leaf, that grows Upon the rose•bush near, Should say, "Because I'm not a rose, I will not linger here ;" Or that a dew-drop, fresh and bright, Upon that fragrant flower, Should say "I'll vanish out of sight, Becauso I'm not a shower." Suppose a little child should say, `'Because I'm nut a man, I will not try, in word or play, To do what good I can. Dear child, each star sous light can givo, Though gleaming faintly there ; Each rose-leaf helps the plant to live ; Each dew-drop keeps it fair. And our good rather who's in Heaven, And doth all creatures view, To every little ohild has given Some needful work to do. Kind deeds toward those with whom you Kind words and actions right [live, Shall, 'midst the world's deep darkness,give A precious little light. If there is a civilization to whose merits we aro more generally and thoroughly unjust than to those of any other, it is the Chinese. If there is a historical phenomenon whose wonder ful and anomalous character fails to attract a duo share of our attention and study, it is the persistency of Chi nese national life. The present Em peror of the Flowery Lund is the lineal successor of an almost endless line of sovereigns, running back into times deemed pre-historic by nearly every other race; and ho is charged with ad ministering institutions which grew up on the very ground ho occu-pies— originated, developed, and handed down by the same people that now lives under them. When not a single Germanic tribe had learned to read and write, China had entered upon her modern era. When petty Roman chiefs, whose very existence is doubt ed by the historical criticism of our day, were brawling in an obsqure Ital ian village, the representative man of China was casting in a form which should endure forever the gradually elaborated wisdom of numberless gen erations of his ancestors. When the Greeks, happily settled near to the homes of older systems of culture, wore only preparing the way for that glori ous career on which they later enter ed, the Chinese state had already be come, in the main, what it is now. When the Hebrews were wearily wan dering through the deserts in search of their promised land, tho Yellow River of China had been shut in, and its meadows reclaimed from devasta tion by the same public works which still stand, maintained by the same race, for the same purpose. Through how many hands has the inestimable gift of culture passed on its way to us! How have its chief possessors, one af tey another, been swept away—worn out, as it were, by their efforts to sus tain and advance it ! How worsderful, then, is the calm continuance of the Chinese nation and its institutions! It is easy for us to sneer at Chinese civilization, and cast contempt upon its products; but it is so immeasurably superior to anything that our own an• ewers had attained but a few centu ries ago, that we, who have climbed to our present height upon the shoulders of men alien to our race, would do well to be a little modest. A people who taught the world to make silk and por- celain, who invented the compass, gun powder, and the art of printing; who have produced a literature exceeded in value and interest only by those of a very fow other• races, the acknowledg ed leaders in human history—such a people is too secure in its position to be affected by the taunts of such up• starts as we aro. Undoubtedly we aro right in believing that our culture con tains far higher elements than theirs, and is upborne by a more energetic and progressive capacity ; there are radical deficiencies and incongruities in Chinese character that justify the feel ing of distaste with which we contem plate it; but this neither excuses our wholesale depreciation and disregard, nor takes away the interest of the his torical problem set before us. MAN AND WIFE.—We• have some times heard ministers, in closing a mar riage ceremony, say o "1 pronounce you man and wife." in an account of a grand matrimonial affair in Brook lyn, a few days ago, the papers used the same expression, "they wore made man and wife." We never hear the announcement, or see it in print eith er, but wo aro reminded of a very just criticism made upon it in our hearing twenty years ago, by a certain Theo logical Professor, when he came across it in a work of Dr. Smith, of Charles OP, When be read it he stopped and exclaimed ; "Just as though the man was not a man before he married him. Why not say husigzad and wife? these aro co-relative terms—man and wife aro not," This is a hint for preachers. Let 'Squiresfollow.their own course.— .Exchange. GLAZIER & BRO The above reminds us of a too re cent practice of registering names at hptels. and lady," as if the gent. was ashamed to acknowledge the lady* as his wife—or for some other reason. We also recollect of an acquaintance once who bad but lately been married, introducing his wife as ray womon. -PERSEVERE.- A Wonderful Race. "I'll Take What Father Takes." "What will you take to drink ?" ask ed the waiter of a young lad who, for the first time, accompanied his father to a public dinner. Uuncertain what to say, and feeling sure that he could not bo wrong if he followed his father's example, ho replied, "I'll take what father takes." The answer reached his father's ear, and instantly the full responsibility of his position flashed upon him. If he said, "I'll take ale," as he bad always said before, his son would take it also, and then ? And the Sather shuddered, as the history of several young men who, once promising as his. own bright lad, had been ruined by drink, started up in solemn warning before him.— Should his hopes also be blasted and that open faced noble lad become a burden and curse, as they had become But for strong drink, they would have been active, earnest, prosperous men ; and if it could work such ruin upon them, was his own lad safe? Quicker than lightning these thoughts passed through his mind, and in a moment the decision was made. "If the boy falls, ho shall not have me to blame;" and then in tones tremulous with em otion to the astonishment of those who knew him, he said, "Waiter, I'll take • water;" and from that day to this, strong drink has boon banished from that man's table and from that man's home. That young lad, in this brief utter ance, was really the representative of the generation to which he belongs.— God has so decreed it, that a father is the highest authority in the world to his child. Who does not know that "My father said so" is the end of all controversy with the little ones around us ? Who does not see the parent's tones, and gait, and manners reprodu ced continually in the children, whose nature is now "soft as wax to receive an impression, and rigid as marble to retain it ;" and who watch with a quick and imitating eye those who, to them, aro God's vicegerents ? Would that wo could impress upon the fathers and mothers of this coun try the solemn fact, that the future character - of the children is being form ed by them. That if they aro trained up in the way they should go, when they are old they will not depart from it. But if they become vain, sensual, and degraded, the seeds will have been deposited and the bias given in the early morning of their lives. If wo teach thorn that strong drink is a good creature of God, they will believe us ; and when depending upon our judg ment and truth, they shall have taken it, and it shall have shown itself to be the devil's master piece, and have bit ten, and crushed, and dragged them down to ruin, we may weep and pray as we please—the blame will be our own, and we must not accuse God, or cast reflection upon the gospel. We shall have sown to the flesh, and of the flesh have reaped corruption. God will have visited the sins 'of the fathers upon 'the children. They only "took what their fathers took." If, on the other hand, we banish the fiend when their young and trusting hearts aro most open to our teaching, we tell them that wine is a mocker, that strong drink is raging, and warn them that no serpent is so dangerous, no adders so much to be dreaded, we shall be co-workers with all-merciful and wise God who, to preserve them from taking it, has sent them into the world with a loathing of its very taste. Our children will believe us. They will grow up with their natural instinct for tified by our instruction and example. They mill be preserved from tho poi sonous influence of the destroyer.— There will be a bridgeless gulf between them and the companions who are most likely to lead them into the ways of sin. They will be preserved from habits of extravagance and waste.— They will have no companions but those who walk in the ways of God; no em ployment for their spare time but that which is elevating and purifying, and when we pass to our reward, they will rise up and call us blessed, for they "took what their fathers took." TIIE SOCIAL HORROR.—An untidy woman ! Little soap and much per fume. Plenty of jewelry and a lack of strings and buttons. Silks and laces and tattered under clothes. Diamond rings and soiled collar. Feather and flowers, and battered cap frill. Silk stockings and shabby boots. Who has not seen her ? If you are a per son of courage, enter her dressing room. Make your way through mis mated slippers, tippets, belt ribbons, hair pins, pictorials, magazines, fash ion prints, and unpaid bills, and look vainly round for a chair that is suffi ciently free from dust to sit down up on. Look at the dingy muslin window outline, the questionable bed quilt and pillow cases, the unfreshness of everything your eye falls upon. Open the closet door, and see the piles of dresses,all wanting" the stitch in time," heaped pellmell upon their pegs; see the bandboxes without covers, and all the horrible paraphernalia of a lazy, inefficient, vacant, idealess female mon strosity, who will, of course, be chosen out of a bevy of good, practical, com mon sense girls, by some man who prides himself on "his knowledge of women," as his "help moot for life !" I use the word "monstrosity" advised ly; for even in the cell of a prison I have seen wretched females trying, with woman's beautiful instinct, to brighten and beautify the bare walls with some rude colored print. Thank Heaven, the untidy woman is the 0.X.- caption, not the rule. Would we could say the same of the untidy man.—Zed per. taf-Re is never alone who is in the Company of noble thoughts. TERMS, $2,00 a year in advance. Preservation and Cultivation of Fish. We copy from the Now York " Week ly" the following. It shows the inter est taken by the New England States on this important matter. The Sus quehanna and its tributaries can fur nish more of the finny tribe than all the streams of New England combined, yet our people leave their streams year after year.to be pirated . by fish bask ets, thereby. rendering nugatory the utmost endeavors of those who are try ing'to bring back this delicious luxury to our doors. It is to be hoped that in the - ccming year all such obstructions shall be'plit an end to. A society has - been ferried at Green field,Ms.,to prev,ent the extermination of trout in the neighboring streams. LELA week a, meeting was held at Bostdn under the auspices of the Board of Fish Commissioners to consider the subject of the restoration and propagation of fish in the rivers from which they have been excluded by dams. Hon. Harry Jewell; Speaker of the Massachusetts House of Representatives, presided.. Prof. Agassiz stated'that the subject was one whose. importance could not be over-estimated. It was a matter affecting coming generations, and one which should occupy the attention of our statesmen. "His Words, ho said;•might seem ex travagant, but what is now advocated by the Fish CoMmissions stands intim same relation as the first attempts stood to domesticate bulls and raise cattle. How could the population of this conti nent go on if we "had no artificial pro duction of fetid ? Was it ever consid ered, he asked, that the whole popula tion of this country, without exception, are daily fed by substances all of which are raised artificially? Wo live upon beef or fowl, and upon Vegetables and fruit, no one kind of Which is indigo nods to this continent. All were brought froth the old world to be rais ed artificially here, and more than that, all have died out in their wild state. What is now proposed by the commis sioners, is to add one kind of this sup ply of food for our benefit, that man may feed on a greater variety. Hero he said he touched upon a point which was equally important. It is a varie ty of food taken daily to build up the human frame, to cultivate the brain, and develop° the faculties, which is ad vancing civilization. .The more the variety of food and better adapted to these purposes, the higher our civiliza tion." He further asserted that the Cultiva tion of fish could and should be made as profitable as cattle, fruit, or wheat raising, or any other "branch of agri, culture." The "time will come when every man who has water on his ground will raise fish for his own table, as he now raises: fruit." The general and State governments should take hold of this subject; and give it all the encour agement and assistance required. The professor also argued that sanitary rea sons should impel us to the general cul tivation of fish.' "If there is ono thing of which the American peoplelave a right to coin plain, it is of the uniformity of their diet. Men are most healthy and more enduring in proportion as they: vary their diet and take proper•tfne.to eat, to chew their food. No; creature in the universe requires such a variety of food as man. The fish enters largely into the requisites of the system. 'lt is a kind of food which refreshes the sys tem, especially after intellectual fa tigue. There is no other article of food that supplies the waste of the head so thoroughly as fish diet, and the evidence of it is in the fact that all the inhabitants of the sea-shore the world over, are the brighter population of the country. Fish contain phosphorus to a largo extent, a chemical element which ' the brain requires for growth and health. lie would not' say that an ex clusive use of fish would make a block head a wise man, but that the brain should not be wanting in one of its es sential elements." Col. Theodore Lyman, of the' New England Commissioners of River Fish eries, gave an account of the various kinds of fish which once inhabited the inland streams, and explained how they could be restored. He recommend ed the introduction of black bass, and exhibited the model of the "Foster fishway" to enable fish to pass over river dams at the season of the year when they were formerly accustomed to ascend from the sea in order to de posit their spawn. Col. Lyman also exhibited a model of the plan pursued by Seth Green, of Mumford, Now York, for restocking fish. * * * -He (Mr. G.) last year turned over fifty millions of shad into the Connecticut River, beside realizing $lO,OOO from the sale of fish and spawn. * * * Boston has set an example in this matter which should be followed all over the country. The fish have in late years been rapidly disappearing from our streams before the encroachments of civilization, and the mill-dams and fatal tan-bark threat en to ere long deprive a-altogether of the dint which Prof. Agas . siz assures us is so requisite for theligrowth and health of the brain." Judging frotathe success which has attended Mr. Green's endeavors, parties in this State could raise fish with great profit for the New York market. We hear that an inter prise of this kind is soon to be started in Now Jersey. negi6A very learned man has said, the•.three hardest words in the English language to pronunce are, "I was mis taken." And when Frederick- the Great wrote his letter to the Senate, "I have just lost a great battle, and it was entirely my own fault," Gold smith says : "This confession display ed more greatness than all his victor ies." ta,Laciness travels so slowly that poverty overtakes him. TO SUBSCRIBERS. Those subscribing for three, six or. twelve months with the understanding that the,.paper be discontinued unless subscription is renewed, receiving a pa per marked with a t before the. name will • understand that the tithe, for which they subscribed is up. If they wish the paper continued they will, renew their subscription through the mail or otherwise. tf. tl~ 1111 kinds of plain, fancy and, ornamental Job Printing neatly and expeditiously exesuted at the "0ton" office. Terms moderate. NO. 37. The Rev. Marvin R. Vincent, of -the. First Presbyterian Church in Troy,. has published four discourses upon the value of amusement as a force in Chris. tian training, which ought to have a wider circulation than they are likely to obtain in their present form.' . The author takes up, the cause of cheerful- Christianity, and answers the argu ments-of those who seek to find some thing wicked in many of, the innocent and healthful games of the day. , It is hold to fie innocent for boys to play marbles, but sinful to play •domiL noes; it` is' sinful •to play 'billiards : . • but highly graceful and innocent to 'play croquet. Mr. Vincent fails to see the ethical distinctions here - eipiessed ; he finds it difficult to distinguish between the wickedness of Willi of iron and the good of balls of wood; between mallets and cues, and between,green.-baize and green grass. A Christian house. held must not sit down to_ a game of. whist, according to some authorities, but they can spend ,p. • pious evening over Dr. Busby ; a game , involving good deal of healthy mental exertion is condemned, while the Silly,- "profit less Busby cards - are admitted. 'Mr. Vincent writes : • • • • , "Youth must not dance, but : they may march to music in company, anti 'go through- callisthenic exercises , in volving a, good 'deal more motion than dancing. But if people may march to music and be guiltless, it is very hard to see how' skipping to -music converts the exercise into: sin. It is laid; that the,associations make Abe Aifferenees; but, the advocate ofthis,theory is shut . up to-proving from the associations are inseparable theimasement. No* I ask, in the-name . of common. 'sense, why not devote a little:Christian ,care to separating from its abuses,-and re gulating ini ittr-Conduct, :an , exercise which improves,'the bearing of our youth, lends to relieve dieir awkward. nose in society, and gives them Tune. cent exhilaration ? When our Young. Men's Christian Association, of Troy, furnished their newroom,;hey on the principle that prayer 'meetings and religiousseriodicals, though im portant, in flair 'place, , would not of themselves suffice to • attract - young men from. without. 'They had -tried the experiment in theirlorlorn:romni, under a machine shop in : an Out-Of-the way place, furnished its 'a' miniature: chapel; and a very seedy ono at- that;- and 'the result was that :about . six. months 'ago the association was in fair way to die and make no sign.— Young men would not go to the disk mal hole to spend ,an evening' when morn attractive places aboundedin the city; and I would not if I had been in their place. But the association got it new lease of life.: , ' -It engaged large, airy, 'pleasant rood's, in' a- ceptral.po sition. It . 'kept its, prayer meeting room neatly .and appropriately furn. ished, but it added a large social- par lor, a fine piano - invitingly, open, . s the best current periodicals, secular and. religious, upon the tables, and ,:games of checkers, chess s and, dominoes:dia. tributed about the room. .The - ""young men came in crowds. • - ,They'" were throlim at - once-into contadt, with • the Christian youth of s every church in the city, with the - oity . pastors, with , com mittees to appointed by ;the churches to titke'strangers in -charge, with good music, :religious literature and innocent amusement." - ' We learn from authentic sourees that the - rooms of the 'L'roy Adsociation" bc;- came so popular that `The keepers of amusement of a refined character- Ut tered loud complaints, attempted to bring about a schism in the ranks by sprcading'abroad false reports,: But the cheerul rooms of the • young: men prevailed, and great good is daily ac complished. Mr. Vincent makes soine- admirable hits at the fallacy in the arguments of those who would shut out all amuse ments., , Ho says that some people ei claim "Think of Paul datteiog, or Peter playing DO you think we shall have checker boards in heav en ?" This, he says, is no argument-- it is sheer nonsense,-and most uowor thy.trifling over a serious subjeot.-1 "Think of Paul dancing !"Well, think Of him ! Think of Paul -wearing is swallow-tailed coat_ with brass. but tons ! Tbink'of Peter skating, eating figures of eight; and perlertMag "out er edge backwards." Think of Jelm in a white cravat, or s ,of Bartholomew putting tip Seidlitz powders, or of Tim othy running with a fire engine !, How would they have looked ? "Would you play chess on your death.bed Pro. bably not, my friend. Neither would I put on my boots, or do'a gieat many innocent things," at such a time.—N. Y. Eec. Post. CREAKING SHOES.—Vulcan, it is said, being jealous of Venus, made creaking shoes for her, so that be might hear ber whenever she stirred. , It is a pity that there should be any classical an thority for the crepitus crepidre. In the street, very often in the concert room, and not unfrequently in -the church aisle, the creaking and squeaking. of the people's leather shoes goes far to prove they have no genxine music in their spiritual souls. The effect arises from dryness of the leather in , part, but correctly speakihg, the creaking depends upon-the - sudden compression of the air contained between two Bur faces.of leather.; just as the sound is produced by the clapping of. bands by the air thus set in vibration. Shoes with thin soles, it is said, never creak, and by interposing a piece of , oil:silk. between the . two soles, the eoont4et of their surface may be . so insured. as ,10 obviate the sound, lia„"Will you let me drill you?'sol the crowbar to the rock. "I'll be blasted ifT do," was tkdj , hard reply. ' Amusements,